The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Wall Street drifts near record high

-

NEW YORK. – US stocks were drifting near their record highs last Friday, following a sober reminder of how many jobs the pandemic is destroying, as Wall Street balances expectatio­ns for the economy’s potentiall­y brighter future against its current pain.

The S&P 500 was 0,3 percent in morning trading after President Donald Trump acknowledg­ed late last Thursday that he will be leaving the White House later this month. With Democrats soon in control of the presidency, Senate and House, investors are anticipati­ng Washington will try to deliver even more stimulus for the struggling economy. That’s layering on top of expectatio­ns already built up for the economy to get healthier as coronaviru­s vaccines roll out in 2021.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was swinging between gains and losses and was down 11 points, or less than 0,1 percent and the Nasdaq composite was 0,7 percent higher. All the major US stock indexes set record highs set a day before. A much weaker-than-expected report on the jobs market underscore­d the stakes for the economy, and analysts said it adds more pressure on Congress to act. Employers cut 140 000 more jobs last month than they added as the worsening pandemic led more businesses to shut down, the Labour Department said.

It was the first month of job losses for the economy since April, and it was much a worse reading than the modest growth that economists were expecting to see. Such pressure is rising on economies around the world as the pandemic accelerate­s.

Treasury yields zigzagged following the release of the jobs report, but they remain on an upward trend. Expectatio­ns for increased borrowing by the US government, more stimulus for the economy and the possibilit­y of higher inflation have carried the yield on the 10-year Treasury to 1,09 percent.

That’s up from 1,05 percent late last Thursday and 0,90 percent early this week.

Stocks of smaller companies were once again rising, and the Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks was up 0,2 percent. They are up 6,4 percent this week, quadruple the 1,6 percent gain for the big stocks in the S&P 500.

Smaller stocks tend to rise and fall more than their bigger rivals with expectatio­ns for the economy’s strength.

And many investors are expecting Washington to soon try to send bigger cash payments to most Americans, spend more on infrastruc­ture and provide other support for the struggling economy. The expectatio­ns began building shortly after November’s elections, and they accelerate­d this week after Democrats won two Georgia runoff elections for the Senate.

They will give Democrats a majority in the Senate, with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris providing a tie-breaking vote amid a 50-50 split with Republican­s. Democrats already controlled the House, and Democrat Joe Biden is set to take the presidenti­al oath of office on January 20.

Another encouragin­g thing for many investors is that Democrats will have only a thin majority in the Senate. In the optimistic case for Wall Street, that could give them enough clout to push through more stimulus for the economy but not enough to raise tax rates sharply and toughen up regulation­s so much that they significan­tly damage profits for companies.

The S&P 500 was up as much as 0,5 percent earlier last Friday, but it briefly flipped to a tiny loss as the morning progressed. Financial stocks gave up some of their big gains from earlier in the week, which were triggered by expectatio­ns for a strengthen­ing economy and bigger profits from making loans at higher interest rates. JPMorgan Chase slipped 0,9 percent, and Bank of America fell 1,3 percent for two of the biggest weights on the S&P 500.

On the other end of the market was Tesla, which rose 6,6 percent.

The auto maker surged more than 740 percent last year, and they’re climbing more amid hopes that a Democratic­ally run D.C. could encourage the use of more electric vehicles. The jump pushes Tesla’s total market value past Facebook’s, and it’s now the fifth largest stock in the S&P 500.

Optimism emanating from Washington has helped to lift markets around the world.

In Asian stock markets, Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 2,4 percent, its highest finish in more than 30 years.

That’s even though Japan announced a state of emergency for Tokyo and nearby areas, asking people to stay home and refrain from going out at night to dine and drink.

South Korea’s Kospi gained 4 percent, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng rose 1,2 percent and stocks in Shanghai slipped 0,2 percent..

In European markets, Germany’s DAX returned 0,5 percent, and France’s CAC 40 rose 0,3 percent. The FTSE 100 in London slipped 0.1percent. — (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe