The Mercury News

Interest rate cut doesn’t help market turbulence

Investor worries over challenges of Covid-19 continue to drive decline

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK >> Fear and uncertaint­y continue to control Wall Street, and stocks fell sharply Tuesday after an emergency interest-rate cut by the Federal Reserve failed to reassure markets wracked by worries that a fast-spreading virus will cause a recession.

The Dow Jones Industrial average sank 785 points, or 2.9%. It had surged 5% a day earlier on hopes for aid from the Fed and other central banks.

While the cut gave some investors exactly what they had been asking for, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell acknowledg­ed that the ultimate solution to the virus challenge will have to come from health experts and others, not central banks. Some traders are also questionin­g whether more aid is on the way to stabilize the market, while others called the Fed’s move premature to begin with. For more than a few, the Fed’s steepest rate cut since 2008 recalled the dark days of the financial crisis and only added to the dread.

Through it all, markets are still faced with the same quandary that has sent stock prices tumbling 11% since they set a record just two weeks ago: No one knows how far the virus will ultimately spread before authoritie­s can get it under control, and by how much companies’ profits will be shorn because of it.

That uncertaint­y led to jagged trading across markets on Tuesday. Stocks rallied briefly in the morning following the Fed’s surprise move, but it took just 15 minutes for the gains to evaporate. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell below 1% for the first time in history as investors ratcheted back expectatio­ns for the economy and inflation. A gauge measuring traders’ fear of upcoming swings for stocks jerked wildly up and down through the day.

After popping to a 1.5% gain shortly after the Fed’s announceme­nt, the S&P 500 swung between modest gains and losses for about an hour before turning decisively lower. The index ended the day down 86.86

points, or 2.8%, at 3,003.37. It pared a loss that reached 3.7% in the mid-afternoon, and it marks the eighth drop in the last nine days for the index.

The Dow had jumped Monday to its best day in more than a decade on rising anticipati­on for coordinate­d support from the Fed and other central banks. Even before Tuesday’s announceme­nt, traders were convinced that the Fed would cut rates by half a percentage point on March 18 at its next meeting.

But doubts are high about whether the medicine provided by central banks can be as effective this time around. Lower rates can encourage shoppers and businesses to borrow and spend more, but they can’t reopen factories that have been shut or recall workers out due to quarantine­s.

After the Fed’s announceme­nt, Powell said the Fed recognizes the fast spread of the virus is a risk for the economy, and he cited concerns from the travel and hotel industries. Powell said that since last week, when several Fed officials had said they saw no urgent need to cut rates, “we have seen a broader spread of the virus.”

Markets are likely to remain shaky until investors get a sense of what the worst-case scenario really is in this virus outbreak. Stock markets have been on edge for nearly two weeks, following earlier trepidatio­n by the bond market, as the virus spreads beyond China and companies across continents and industries say they expect it to hit their profits.

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