Texarkana Gazette

Late slump pulls Wall Street lower; gold sets another record

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Stocks pulled lower on Wall Street Tuesday following a mixed set of earnings reports from dozens of big U.S. companies.

The S&P 500 fell 20.97 points, or 0.6%, to 3,218.44 after a last-hour slide erased a small gain from earlier in the day. Caution across markets also helped send Treasury yields a bit lower and gold a bit further into record heights.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 205.49 points, or 0.8%, to 26,379.28, and the Nasdaq composite lost 134.18, or 1.3%, to 10,402.09.

This week marks the heart of earnings reporting season for the S&P 500, and several big companies gave results that fell short of analysts’ already lowered expectatio­ns as the pandemic stole customers away and increased some costs.

3M was a particular­ly heavy weight on the Dow after dropping 4.8%. The maker of N95 masks and various other products for consumers and businesses reported a profit for the latest quarter that fell shy of analysts’ expectatio­ns. It said sales trends have been improving this month, but it also said there’s still too much uncertaint­y to offer forecasts for future performanc­e.

On the winning side was Pfizer, which climbed 3.9%. It reported a profit for the latest quarter that topped analysts’ expectatio­ns, even though it was down by nearly a third from a year earlier. It also nudged up its profit forecast for the full year after announcing the start of a late-stage trial of an experiment­al COVID-19 vaccine that it’s developing with German partner BioNTech.

The Federal Reserve also began a two-day meeting on interest rates, with an announceme­nt scheduled for Wednesday. Investors largely expect the central bank to keep short-term rates at their record low, but they’re also looking to hear what it says about how long they may stay there.

The Fed helped launch the stock market’s recovery in late March after slashing interest rates and promising to buy Treasurys, corporate bonds and other debt to prop up the economy. On Tuesday, the Fed said it will extend the lives of seven of the lending programs by three months through the end of the year, an acknowledg­ment of the severity of the recession.

The S&P 500 is back to within 5% of its record set in February, after earlier being down nearly 34%.

Massive aid from Congress also helped that turnaround to erupt, but a big part of it is about to expire on Friday: $600 in weekly unemployme­nt benefits. Such support has taken on more importance as a report last week showed an unexpected tick higher in the number of workers filing for jobless benefits. Rising coronaviru­s counts across the Sun Belt have pushed many businesses to close down again.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note edged dipped to 0.58% from 0.60% late Monday.

Gold, which has rocketed this year on worries about the economy, rose $13.60 to settle at $1,944.60 per ounce. It earlier touched $1,974.40 to set an intraday record for the most actively traded contract for the second straight day.

Benchmark U.S. crude oil lost 56 cents to settle at $41.04 per barrel. Brent crude, the internatio­nal standard, slipped 19 cents to $43.22 per barrel.

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