The Oklahoman

Wobbly Wall St. holds in neutral

- By Stan Choe, Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

NEW YORK — Wall Street held at a near standstill on Thursday, with indexes split as caution about rising coronaviru­s infections in hotspots around the world washed over hopes for a coming economic recovery.

The S& P 500 edged up by 0.1% after flipfloppi­ng repeatedly between small gains and losses through the day. Earlier, stocks slipped in European and Asian markets, while Treasury yields faded in another sign of increased caution.

Slightly more stocks fell in the S&P 500 than rose, but the index ended up adding 1.85 points to close at 3,115.34. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 39.51, or 0.2%, to 26.080.10, and the Nasdaq composite rose 32.52, or 0.3%, to 9,943.05.

Markets worldwide have been showing more apprehensi­on following a tremendous rally for U.S. stocks that began in late March and reached nearly 45% at one point. Surprising­ly strong reports on U.S. retail sales and employment have built hopes recently that the economy can pull out of its recession relatively quickly as government­s ease up on lockdown orders.

But discouragi­ng numbers on the coronaviru­s in various U.S. states and elsewhere in the world have dented the optimism. Even if authoritie­s don't reimpose widespread lockdowns to slow the spread of the virus, the fear is that consumers and businesses could get frightened and pull back on spending. That would damage the fragile improvemen­ts that the economy seems to be developing.

“The question and the challenge for those of us who are watching the virus is what will it do to corporate earnings, and will localized shutdowns make the economic recovery even slower than it already is?” said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. “We've had a good snap back, but it still leaves us short of where we were before.”

A report on Thursday showed that the number of U.S. workers filling for unemployme­nt benefits eased for the 11th straight week, down to 1.5 million from nearly 1.6 million. Economists, though, had been expecting a larger decline.

The number of workers who continue to get unemployme­nt benefits also fell slightly. That's an indication that some employers have begun hiring workers again. But there, too, the improvemen­t wasn't as healthy as economists had forecast.

“It seemed like the worst was kind of behind us,” said Keith Buchanan, senior portfolio manager at Globalt. “At the same time, in the background, is this pathogen that doesn't read anyone's Twitter feed, doesn't read economic data and doesn't know optimism or pessimism.”

“The volatility is the market just trying to digest it all,” he said.

One source of support seems to remain constant for markets, though: tremendous aid from central banks. The Bank of England on Thursday increased the size of its bond- buying program to keep interest rates low.

A day earlier, the chair of the Federal Reserve said it will continue to keep interest rates pinned at nearly zero, as well as purchase bonds in far- ranging corners of the market to support the economy. Huge, unpreceden­ted programs by the Fed and Congress in late March were what helped the S&P 500 halt its plunge of nearly 34% when recession worries were at their height.

The S&P 500 has since shaved that loss to 8%, with recent leadership often coming from companies that would benefit most from a reopening economy.

Such stocks bounced up and down with the overall market Thursday. Cruise operator Carnival fell to an early loss of 6.8% after it reported a net loss of $ 4.4 billion for its latest quarter. But it later recovered and briefly turned positive before finishing the day 1.4% lower.

Stocks of smaller companies have also tracked with investors' expectatio­ns for the economy, and they likewise swung up and down Thursday. The Russell 2000 index of small- cap stocks ended the day virtually unchanged, up just 0.54 points to 1,427.08, after earlier bouncing between a gain of 0.9% and a loss of 1%.

In Europe, Germany's DAX lost 0.8%, and France's CAC 40 fell 0.7%. The FTSE 100 in London dropped 0.5%.

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 slipped 0.4%, South Korea's Kospi lost 0.4% and the Hang Seng in Hong Kong dipped 0.1%.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury slipped to 0.69% from 0.73% late Wednesday. It tends to move with investors' expectatio­ns for the economy and inflation.

A barrel of U. S. oil for delivery in July rose 2.3% to settle at $38.84. Brent crude, the internatio­nal standard, rose 2% to settle at $41.51 per barrel.

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