Business World

S&P 500 rallies for 2nd day on stimulus package

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THE S&P 500 rallied for a second straight session on Wednesday as the US Senate appeared near a vote on a $2-trillion package to support businesses and households devastated by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Wall Street trimmed hefty gains late in the session after reports raised doubts about how quickly the bill might pass, but the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average still ended up more than 1% and 2%, respective­ly.

Boeing surged 24%, bringing its gain over the past three sessions to almost 70%, as investors bet on government support for the aerospace industry as well as airlines. American Airlines Group, United Airlines Holding and Delta Air Lines each jumped more than 10%.

Boeing, long a symbol of US manufactur­ing strength, remains down by more than 50% since mid-February.

Wednesday marked the first time since Feb. 12 that S&P 500 climbed two days in a row. Even after its late-day retreat from its highs, the Dow’s 14% gain over two sessions was its strongest two-day percent performanc­e since 1987.

“What the fiscal and monetary stimulus has done is to allow the market to recover,” said Justin Hoogendoor­n, head of fixedincom­e strategy at Piper Jaffray in Chicago. “It’s not because the main street community is coming back. It’s the institutio­nal crowd being able to say, ‘the world isn’t falling apart.’”

Top aides to Republican President Donald Trump and senior Senate Republican­s and Democrats said they had agreed on the unpreceden­ted stimulus bill, which includes a $500-billion fund to help hardhit industries and a comparable amount for direct payments of up to $3,000 apiece to millions of US families.

However, Senator Bernie Sanders, an independen­t who is running for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, said he was prepared to put a hold on the bill unless a group of Republican senators drop their objections to language on jobless benefits in the legislatio­n.

Top House Republican Kevin McCarthy said he wanted House members to have at least 24 hours after the Senate vote to review the bill.

With fears of a global recession and corporate defaults running high, and expectatio­ns of a continued surge in cases of the illness caused by the new coronaviru­s in the United States, many investors remained reluctant to call an end to Wall Street’s recent, staggering sell-off.

“We are still in a phase where we need to be cautious,” warned Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist for US Bank Wealth Management. “We don’t yet know when these social distancing measures will end, and the evidence for now is that they will continue to expand.”

Data due on Thursday is likely to show US weekly jobless claims surging to 1 million as companies announce layoffs and as statewide lockdowns force businesses to shutter stores.

Apple, Inc. fell late in the session, closing down 0.55% after Nikkei reported the company could delay the launch of an iPhone with 5G wireless technology. —

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