Stocks Soar, Leave Correction Territory for Now

Major U.S. indexes surged more than 4% after days of declines.

Traders at the New York Stock Exchange. (Photo: AP)

U.S. stocks surged to the second 4% rally in three days after Congress authorized nearly $8 billion for virus prevention a day after the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates and investors warmed to Joe Biden’s ascendant candidacy. Treasuries fell for just the second time in 10 days.

The S&P 500 surged into the close, nearly matching Monday’s rally that was the best in 14 months. Health-care firms led the spike, rising the most since November 2008 as the weak performance in Tuesday’s primaries by Bernie Sanders dented the threat of policies that would upend the industry.

“It looks like a combination of two things: Biden’s showing on Super Tuesday is really an unexpected surprise, a positive surprise to the markets because markets always prefer a more moderate centrist Democratic nominee,” Deepak Puri, Americas CIO at Deutsche Bank Wealth Management, said by phone. “The other is the G-7 coordinated fiscal and monetary policy easing, which is on top of the 50 basis-point rate cut by the Fed announced yesterday.”

Stocks opened higher on speculation other central banks and governments would provide stimulus as the outbreak claimed more lives and new cases piled up. New York reported five new cases Wednesdsay and California had its first related death. The S&P 500 has now surged more than 6% this week, a rebound that began Friday when the Fed pledged support. The S&P 500 is still more than than 7% below its February record.

Ten-year Treasury yields pushed back above 1%, while two-year dropped to 0.66%. The low rates also helped breath new life into corporate bond deals after a days-long hiatus.

Investors are anxious for promised action by the Group of Seven to confront the virus while they’re buying risk assets on dips and watching the world’s biggest bond market move closer to negative yields. The Democratic contest posed a fresh challenge to Trump as nine states went to Biden, who’s positioned as a moderate against a more progressive Sanders in the race for the party’s nomination to take on Trump in November.

These are the main moves in markets:

Stocks

Currencies

Bonds

Commodities

–With assistance from Elena Popina, Katherine Greifeld, Nancy Moran, Todd White and Vildana Hajric.

— Check out ‘Year of the Election’ Has Become ‘Year of the Virus’: J.P. Morgan’s Kelly on ThinkAdvisor.

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