The Oklahoman

Most of Wall Street wilts amid COVID worries

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

NEW YORK — Most of Wall Street wilted Thursday on worries that the economy's recent improvemen­ts may be set to fade as coronaviru­s cases keep climbing.

The S&P 500 lost 0.6%, with three in four stocks within the index falling. The sharpest drops hit oil companies, airlines and other stocks whose fortunes are most closely tied to a reopening and strengthen­ing economy. Treasury yields also sank in another sign of increased caution.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 361.19 points, or 1.4%, to 25,706.09, while the 17.89 point fall for the S&P 500 to 3,152.05 was just its second loss in the last eight days.

Smaller stocks sank more than the rest of the market, which often happens when investors are downgradin­g their expectatio­ns for the economy. The Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks lost 28.48, or 2%, to 1,398.92.

The Nasdaq composite was an outlier as investors continue to bet big tech-oriented stocks can keep growing almost regardless of the economy's strength. It added 55.25, or 0.5%, to 10,547.75 and hit another record.

“The broad equity market is navigating through a zone of uncertaint­y,” said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U. S. Bank Wealth Management.

“There are ample reasons for caution,” he said. “Clearly there's uncertaint­y surroundin­g the impact and duration of this virus.”

Thursday's headline economic report showed that a little more than 1.3 million workers filed for unemployme­nt claims last week. It's an astounding­ly high number, but it's also down from 1.4 million the prior week and from a peak of nearly 6.9 million in late March.

The improvemen­ts help validate investors' earlier optimism that the economy can recover as states and other government­s relax restrictio­ns put in place earlier this year to slow the coronaviru­s pandemic. Such optimism helped the S&P 500 rally back to within 7% of its record, after earlier being down nearly 34%.

But economists point to a troubling slowdown in the pace of improvemen­ts, including moderating declines in the four-week average of jobless claims. Further gains for the job market are going to be more difficult, said Patrick Schaffer, global investment specialist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank. The U.S. unemployme­nt rate is currently 11.1%.

“The initial jump was the easy part,” he said. “The reality is the labor market continues to face enormous headwinds.”

Investors are worried that worsening infection levels across swaths of the U.S. South and West and in other global hotspots could derail the budding recovery. Some states are rolling back their reopenings, while others are ordering people arriving from hotspots to quarantine.

“When the restrictio­ns were relaxed in the beginning part of June, you saw parts of the tangible economy do really well,” Schaffer said. “A lot of that has been unwound as we've seen a resurgence in case count and some restrictio­ns being put in place.”

Markets have been quick to react to infection and hospitaliz­ation rates in Florida and other big Sun Belt states in particular. Thursday's losses for stocks accelerate­d after Florida reported the largest daily increase in deaths yet from the pandemic, with its cumulative death toll topping 4,000.

Such concerns helped push Treasury yields lower. The yield on the 10-year note, which tends to move with investors' expectatio­ns for the economy and inflation, sank to 0.60% from 0.65% late Wednesday.

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