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US STOCKS-Recession fears put Dow on course to erase 'Trump-bump'

Published 18/03/2020, 19:03
© Reuters.
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* S&P 500 extends losses after trading halt
* Boeing slumps after call for $60 bln lifeline
* General Mills lifts forecast on bulk-buying
* Indexes down: Dow 9.06%, S&P 8.35%, Nasdaq 7.66%

(Updates to early afternoon)
By Medha Singh and Sanjana Shivdas
March 18 (Reuters) - Wall Street's four-week slump deepened
and the Dow Jones Industrials was set to surrender all its
"Trump-bump" gains on Wednesday, as the coronavirus pandemic
threatened to bring the U.S. economic activity to a grinding
halt.
The benchmark S&P 500 index fell 7%, triggering a 15-minute
trading cutout, a familiar trend in the last two weeks of wild
swings in markets that ended Wall Street's longest ever bull
run.
With airports and hotels emptying and airlines asking staff
to take unpaid leave to stem losses, the S&P 1500 airlines index
.SPCOMAIR sank 27.6%, in what could be its worst day on
record. Shares in Hilton HLT.N , Marriott MAR.O and Hyatt
H.N hotels fell by 20% to 30%.
President Donald Trump's request for Congress to approve
$500 billion in cash payments to taxpayers along with $50
billion in loans for airlines did little to stem the rout.
Shares in Boeing Co BA.N , for long a symbol of U.S. tech
and industrial power, sank another 24.4% and were now down more
than 60% since the start of the year.
"We're going to have massive disruption and dislocation in
our economy," said Keith Bliss​, managing partner at iQ Capital
in New York.
"People are conflating what's going on with the coronavirus
with what happened in the global financial crisis."
With Trump activating disaster management agency FEMA across
the country, Senate leader Mitch McConnell said lawmakers would
vote on coronavirus legislation at 2 p.m. ET.
Wall Street's main indexes had bounced on Tuesday from a
massive selloff a day earlier, as the Trump administration
pressed for a $1 trillion stimulus package and the Federal
Reserve relaunched a plan to buy short-term corporate debt.
But dramatic stimulus measures have only provided
short-lived bounces in equities with investors factoring in a
global recession and worrying about the duration of the damage
extending into the summer.
"There are two things the market is awaiting - a stimulus
and it needs to be bigger than a trillion dollars for sure to
help all the workers who are going to be out of work for a month
or two," said Thomas Hayes, managing member at Great Hill
Capital LLC in New York.
"And a little hope in color on some drug approvals for
treatment."
Meanwhile, worries about mass debt defaults or writedowns
pressured U.S. lenders, sending the S&P 500 banking subsector
.SPXBK down 9.5%.
The S&P 500 has fallen by around a third, or around $7
trillion in value, since scaling record highs in mid-February.
Its collapse into a bear market, among the fastest in history,
has spurred some calls for a pause in trading.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin late on Tuesday suggested
shortening of trading hours at some point, but that drew
opposition from several leading investors and exchange managers,
who said it would harm the market's credibility. At 13:38 p.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI
was down 1,923.25 points, or 9.06%, at 19,314.13, the S&P 500
.SPX was down 211.18 points, or 8.35%, at 2,318.01. The Nasdaq
Composite .IXIC was down 561.77 points, or 7.66%, at 6,773.01.
Walmart Inc WMT.N rose 3.2% after Credit Suisse said the
retailer would benefit from a structural change in consumer
behaviour toward online shopping.
Kroger Co KR.N jumped 6.1%, while Costco Wholesale Corp
COST.O rose 2.3%.
Energy stocks .SPNY tumbled nearly 13.6% and the led the
losses among all 11 S&P sectors as oil prices crashed.
Declining issues outnumbered advancers for a 19.00-to-1
ratio on the NYSE and for a 11.55-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
The S&P index recorded five new 52-week highs and 271 new
lows, while the Nasdaq recorded eight new highs and 934 new
lows.

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