Stocks Tumble as Investor Jitters Return: Live Updates – The New York Times

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Business|Stocks Tumble as Investor Jitters Return: Live Updates

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The House of Representatives plans to vote on fiscal stimulus measures on Thursday.

Stocks on Wall Street tumbled on Wednesday, as topsy-turvy trading throughout global markets signaled continued investor concern about how governments would deal with the coronavirus fallout.

The S&P 500 fell more than 3 percent in early trading Wednesday, undoing some of the previous day’s surge. On Tuesday, the benchmark index posted its best single-day performance in over a year, rising almost 5 percent.

Energy stocks led the S&P 500 lower, taking a cue from another slump in oil prices. Benchmark American crude dropped 2 percent, to less than $34 a barrel, after the Saudi Arabian state oil company said for the second time this week that it would expand production capacity. The announcement signaled no relief in Saudi Arabia’s clash with Russia over oil supplies, which sent crude prices crashing earlier this week.

Yields on Treasury bonds fell again, with those on the 10 year note nosing below 0.7 percent in early trading. The decline reflects a combination of dour expectations for global economic growth, as well as high levels of nervousness from investors, who have bought U.S. government bonds as a safe haven during the market tumult in March. When bond prices rise, yields fall.

Investors are vacillating between the threat that the coronavirus poses to the global economy and the hopes that governments will unveil a series of measures to help businesses.

President Trump has signaled he would consider ways to stimulate the economy. Options include cutting payroll taxes and extending the American tax filing deadline past April 15. But so far, the White House has yet to announce any specific measures, and most experts say a payroll tax cut is not an effective way to combat the problems facing the economy.

In Europe, major indexes in London, Frankfurt and Paris fell, giving up early gains that had come after the Bank of England said it would cut interest rates to help British businesses. Shares in Asia also fell.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told lawmakers on Wednesday that he would be recommending to the president that the Internal Revenue Service allow a delay of tax payments without penalty or interest that would apply to “virtually all Americans other than the superrich.”

The Treasury secretary noted that all individuals are allowed to request tax payment extensions online but that this would be a special provision meant to help small and medium sized businesses and “hardworking individuals.”

He said that this will not apply to large corporations or the wealthiest Americans, but did not elaborate on what the threshold will be. “That will have the impact of putting over $200 billion back into the economy and that will create a very big stimulus,” Mr. Mnuchin said, adding that Treasury is already working on funding the initiative.

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Treasury and White House officials have been discussing the idea of extending the April 15 tax deadline over the past week as the administration considers measures to relieve financial pressure on individuals and businesses struggling with fallout from a virus that has closed schools, kept workers at home and disrupted supply chains.

The I.R.S. could extend the tax payment deadline or waive penalties and interest for late payments.

Democrats, eager to put their stamp on a coronavirus relief package as the White House debates which economic plan to propose, scrambled on Wednesday to draft and introduce legislation to provide financial help to patients, workers and families affected by the fast-moving epidemic.

Senate Democrats were set to release their plan Wednesday morning, and top aides said Speaker Nancy Pelosi was aiming to have a separate package ready by afternoon ahead of a possible House vote on Thursday before lawmakers are scheduled to leave Washington for a weeklong recess.

Ms. Pelosi began talks on Tuesday with Mr. Mnuchin with the goal of reaching swift agreement, but the White House and congressional Democrats are divided about what the package should look like.

The Federal Reserve’s surprise rate cut last week didn’t reassure financial markets. Nor, it appears, did the Bank of England’s similar move this morning. So what could policymakers do to prevent a recession?

If the financial crisis is any guide, the answer is to act aggressively, and to act now.

So far, at least, the Trump administration doesn’t seem to be heeding that advice. Mr. Trump is weighing a temporary elimination of the payroll tax, a measure that would have a big dollar figure (it could cost nearly $700 billion) but would provide only a trickle of extra cash into workers’ bank accounts. For people who lose their jobs as a result of the outbreak, a payroll tax cut wouldn’t help at all.

A more effective move, according to many economists, would be to provide lump-sum payments to every American. That would help people directly affected by the outbreak by giving them cash to pay rent or buy food. And it would provide a jolt to the economy, if not right away, then at least once the crisis has passed.

President Trump plans to meet with top officials from the nation’s banks at the White House Wednesday afternoon to discuss the coronavirus outbreak that has roiled markets and threatened economic growth.

Top executives from Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup, as well as the leaders of some of their smaller counterparts, will attend, according to bank officials briefed on the plans.

The full agenda is not clear, but the bank executives are preparing to address questions on their views of the recent market volatility, the funding of small businesses and their own economic outlooks, according to the officials.

Bank stocks have been hit hard during the recent market turmoil. But all the volatility has an upside for banks, too: The high volume of trading in recent weeks has created revenue opportunities as traders and salespeople work with clients to continually rebalance their portfolios.

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The Bank of England in London on Wednesday.Credit…Henry Nicholls/Reuters

The Bank of England made an emergency cut to its key borrowing rate on Wednesday by half a percentage point before the opening of stock trading in London.

The move, which brings the rate down to one-quarter of a percent, was approved unanimously in an emergency meeting of the central bank’s policymaking board, the Bank of England said.

It is intended “to support business and consumer confidence at a difficult time, to bolster the cash flows of businesses and households, and to reduce the cost, and to improve the availability, of finance,” the bank said.

Wednesday’s move is the Bank of England’s first rate cut since the virus outbreak. The Federal Reserve did the same last week in the midst of a market sell-off.

Christine Lagarde, the European Central Bank’s new president, is under intense pressure to take action as the virus outbreak threatens the Continent’s economy.

But there’s one big problem. The E.C.B. has been in nearly nonstop crisis mode since 2008, and it has few cards left to play. The bank’s main interest rate, the one it charges commercial banks for short-term loans, is already zero. It can only tinker with a secondary rate that is already negative.

Ms. Lagarde has signaled that she understands the urgency of the situation. She told European Union leaders on a conference call late Tuesday that the situation could become as bad as 2008 if governments do not act decisively enough, according to a person familiar with her remarks. The call was first reported by Bloomberg News.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, acknowledged during a news conference Wednesday that Ms. Lagarde had warned of the virus’s consequences. Ms. Merkel said she took Ms. Lagarde’s view of the situation “very seriously.”

In what appears to be more jousting with Russia, Saudi Aramco, the national oil company of Saudi Arabia, said Wednesday that it had been directed by the country’s ministry of energy to increase its oil output capacity to 13 million barrels a day from the current 12 million barrels a day.

After Saudi Arabia and Russia failed to agree on new production cuts at a meeting in Vienna on Friday, the Saudis have been making highly visible preparations for a price war with Russia and other producers.

Over the weekend, Aramco offered its customers deep discounts on crude, and on Tuesday the company said that it would sell 12.3 million barrels a day in April, well over the 9.7 million barrels a day it has been producing.

The opening shots of what could be a prolonged battle have hit the oil market hard. Brent crude, the international benchmark, has plunged about 20 percent this week.

“Jeopardy” and “Wheel of Fortune” will now tape without a studio audience for the foreseeable future, according to two people familiar with the plans. The average audience for those shows skews older and tends to travel to Los Angeles from locations all over the country, prompting the temporary ban, those people said.

Alex Trebek, the “Jeopardy” host, has pancreatic cancer, putting him potentially at even greater risk to the virus, one of the people said.

ABC’s “Live With Kelly and Ryan” was the latest talk show to temporarily ban its studio audience. “It feels like we’re auditioning,” said the co-host Ryan Seacrest on Wednesday morning to a mostly empty studio, which is in Manhattan.

Warner Bros., which produces shows like “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” and “Conan,” is not yet canceling studio audiences for its programs. But the studio said on Tuesday that it would begin screening prospective audience members.

  • The coronavirus stands to wipe out more than $820 billion in spending on global business travel, about half of it concentrated in China, according to the Global Business Travel Association.

  • Fiat Chrysler warned Wednesday that it might have to close some of its factories in Italy because of the coronavirus epidemic, which has hit the country especially hard. Any closures would be for health reasons, not because of problems getting parts or raw materials needed to keep assembly lines running, a Fiat spokesman said.

Reporting was contributed by Alan Rappeport, Ben Casselman, Alexandra Stevenson, Ben Dooley, Niraj Chokshi, Kevin Granville, Carlos Tejada, Matthew Goldstein, Jack Ewing and John Koblin.

    • What is a coronavirus?
      It is a novel virus named for the crownlike spikes that protrude from its surface. The coronavirus can infect both animals and people and can cause a range of respiratory illnesses from the common cold to lung lesions and pneumonia.
    • How contagious is the virus?
      It seems to spread very easily from person to person, especially in homes, hospitals and other confined spaces. The pathogen can travel through the air, enveloped in tiny respiratory droplets that are produced when a sick person breathes, talks, coughs or sneezes.
    • Where has the virus spread?
      The virus, which originated in Wuhan, China, has sickened more than 121,000 in at least 108 countries and more than 4,300 have died. The spread has slowed in China but is gaining speed in Europe and the United States.
    • What symptoms should I look out for?
      Symptoms, which can take between two to 14 days to appear, include fever, a dry cough, fatigue and difficulty breathing or shortness of breath. Milder cases may resemble the flu or a bad cold, but people may be able to pass on the virus even before they develop symptoms.
    • What if I’m traveling?
      The C.D.C. has advised against all non-essential travel to South Korea, China, Italy and Iran. And the agency has warned older and at-risk travelers to avoid Japan.The State Department has advised Americans against traveling on cruise ships.
    • How long will it take to develop a treatment or vaccine?
      Several drugs are being tested, and some initial findings are expected soon. A vaccine to stop the spread is still at least a year away.