The Sentinel-Record

Stocks around world charge higher

- STAN CHOE, DAMIAN J. TROISE AND ALEX VEIGA

Stocks around the world whipped higher Wednesday, riding a wave of optimism on encouragin­g data about a possible treatment for COVID-19.

The upswell of hope was so strong that investors completely sidesteppe­d a report showing the outbreak drove the U.S. economy to its worst quarterly performanc­e since the Great Recession. The S&P 500 vaulted 2.7% higher and extended a rally that’s brought the U.S. stock market to the brink of its best month in 45 years.

The spark for Wednesday’s rally was a report that an experiment­al drug proved effective against the new coronaviru­s in a study run by the National Institutes of Health. The nation’s top infectious diseases expert said the drug reduced the time it takes patients to recover, and it raised hopes that life around the world may eventually tiptoe back toward “normal.”

The S&P 500 rose 76.12 points to 2,939.51. It has surged 13.7% in April, and it’s a day away from closing out its best month since late 1974.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 532.31, or 2.2%, to

24,633.86, and the Nasdaq climbed

306.98, or 3.6%, to 8,914.71. The Federal Reserve said Wednesday that it expects the health crisis to weigh on the economy “over the medium term,” as it promised to keep in place massive amounts of aid and interest rates at nearly zero. Oil prices, bonds and other markets besides stocks have also been dominated in recent weeks by worries about the economic impact of the virus outbreak.

The remdesivir drug hit markets at the same moment as a government report showing the U.S. economy shrank at a 4.8% annual rate in the first three months of the year.

Job losses have exploded since early April, as layoffs sweep the nation following widespread stayat-home orders, and economists expect to see even worse numbers for the second quarter of the year.

But stocks have been rallying over the last month as investors look beyond the current economic devastatio­n and focus instead on the prospect of economies gradually reopening. Some U.S. states and nations around the world have laid out plans to relax restrictio­ns keeping people at home and businesses bereft of customers. Any new treatment for COVID-19 could also lower the dread so prevalent among households and businesses around the world.

But what got the 31.4% rally for the S&P 500 started in late March was massive aid from the Federal Reserve and Congress. The Fed on Wednesday said it wouldn’t be pulling back on the aid anytime soon.

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