Wall St rises on latest Fed rescue program

Vinson

Wall Street has closed out the trading week on a high note as the US Federal Reserve unleashed another program designed to buoy local governments and businesses crushed by massive closures to stem the coronavirus outbreak.

The benchmark S&P 500 index posted it best weekly gain since 1974, in a holiday-shortened week, bolstered by early signs the outbreak was hitting a peak as well as aggressive global stimulus.

Under the Fed’s $US2.3 trillion package, the US central bank said it would work with banks to offer four-year loans to companies of up to 10,000 employees and directly buy bonds of states and more populous counties and cities.

Tim Ghriskey, chief investment strategist at Inverness Counsel in New York, said such a package had not been anticipated.

“Buying junk bonds, oh my god, pretty much unexpected, so a very strong open, and all the beaten-up names, including energy, they took off,” he said.

The financial index was up 5.19 per cent on Thursday, providing the biggest boost to the S&P 500, as banks rose sharply on the Fed’s backstop.

JP Morgan rose 8.97 per cent, leading gains on the Dow.

Shares of the iBoxx High Yield Corporate Bond Fund climbed 6.55 per cent.

That helped take the sting out of another tough report on the labour market, with weekly initial jobless claims topping the six million mark for a second straight week.

“Everyone is expecting really lousy earnings and really lousy economic data. It is all going to be focused on when does the rebound happen and what parts of the economy comes back the quickest,” Ghriskey said.

The defensive real estate and utilities sectors rose more than four per cent.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 285.8 points, or 1.22 per cent, to 23,719.37, the S&P 500 gained 39.84 points, or 1.45 per cent, to 2789.82 and the Nasdaq Composite added 62.67 points, or 0.77 per cent, to 8153.58.

For the week, the Dow rose 12.7 per cent, the S&P climbed 12.1 per cent and the Nasdaq gained 10.6 per cent.

While public health experts stressed the need to keep people apart to contain the contagion, the restrictions have strangled the economy and sparked widespread production cuts, layoffs and projections of a severe recession.

In a sign that the disease’s curve was flattening in New York, the epicentre of the US outbreak, Governor Andrew Cuomo said new hospitalisations fell to a fresh low of 200 for the crisis, although deaths spiked to another new high.

The three major indexes, however, finished well off their earlier highs as oil prices reversed course and turned lower as production cuts by OPEC and its allies were seen as not enough to offset the lack of demand. The energy sector fell 1.08 per cent.

Walt Disney jumped 3.39 per cent, as the company said its Disney+ streaming service had attracted more than 50 million paid users globally.

Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 6.05-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.54-to-1 ratio favoured advancers.

The S&P 500 posted six new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 14 new highs and 11 new lows.

Volume on US exchanges was 11.52 billion shares, compared to the 15.1 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.

Source Article

Next Post

Reasons for optimism for Australian market

Signs of a flattening coronavirus curve in Australia and higher oil prices could bolster the local share market as it resumes trading although US futures were pointing to an overnight drop on Wall Street. The session after the Easter holiday is always difficult to predict, with the Australian market playing […]

You May Like