Stock market news today: Dow and S&P 500 updates | CNN Business

Dow bounces back: May 20, 2020

Economist professor Jeffrey Sachs
Why Jeffrey Sachs is 'pessimistic' about economic recovery
3:32 • Source: CNN Business
Economist professor Jeffrey Sachs
3:32 • CNN Business

What we covered here

  • US stocks finished higher.
  • Lowe’s and Target reported strong earnings.
  • CNN Business created a Coronavirus Markets Dashboard to help you track the stocks, sectors and indicators that are most affected by the pandemic.
23 Posts

Expedia posts $1.3 billion loss

Expedia Group posted a $1.3 billion loss, its largest since the financial crisis of 11 years ago, as it also it suspended its dividend.

The company, which handles online travel bookings, said it will not pay a dividend again until the current financial crisis battering the travel industry has passed.

Most of the loss is due to the company writing down its estimated value going forward, a reduction in what is known as “goodwill” in accounting measures. Its adjusted net loss excluding special items came to $258 million.

Revenue at the company fell $400 million, or 15% to $2.2 billion.

Among the brands that Expedia operates are Expedia, Hotels.com, VRBO, Trivago, HomeAway, Orbitz, Travelocity, Hotwire, CheapTickets, CarRentals.com and CruiseShipCenters.

Stocks hit a 2-1/2 month high

US stocks rebounded from the prior session’s losses on Wednesday, finishing the day in the green.

Investors continue to be hopeful about the reopening of the economy.

  • The Dow finished up 1.5%, or 369 points.
  • The S&P 500 closed 1.7% higher. The index climbed to 2,971.6 points, its highest level since March 6.
  • The Nasdaq Composite ended up 2.1%.

Green Growth Brands declares bankruptcy

Green Growth Brands, the Ohio-based cannabis company that operates dispensaries, such as The+Source in Nevada, and manufactures products, such as Seven7h Sense CBD, announced Wednesday it is filing for insolvency protection.

The company filed for insolvency under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act in Canada, where its shares are traded. In a statement, the company said the bankruptcy filing was due to a “severe liquidity crisis” that had been accelerated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Another 2.4 million jobless claims are expected tomorrow

We’re bracing for millions more jobless claims when the Department of Labor reports the latest numbers tomorrow.

Economists polled by Refinitiv expect 2.4 million Americans filed for first-time unemployment benefits last week. It would be the ninth week that jobless claims are in the millions, but also the seventh straight week that they declined from the week prior.

Continued jobless claims – which count people filing for unemployment benefits for at least two weeks in a row – are expected at 24.8 million. That would be about 2 million more than the week prior.

As the number of first-time claims begins to come down, economists are increasingly paying attention to how many people keep filing claims week after week. That provides a more complete picture of how the labor market is doing.

Trump will lose in a landslide because of the economy, new election model predicts

The economy has gone from President Donald Trump’s greatest political asset to perhaps his biggest weakness.

Unemployment is spiking at an unprecedented rate. Consumer spending is vanishing. And GDP is collapsing. History shows that dreadful economic trends like these spell doom for sitting presidents seeking reelection.

The coronavirus recession will cause Trump to suffer a “historic defeat” in November, a national election model released Wednesday by Oxford Economics predicted.

The model, which uses unemployment, disposable income and inflation to forecast election results, predicts that Trump will lose in a landslide, capturing just 35% of the popular vote. That’s a sharp reversal from the model’s pre-crisis prediction that Trump would win about 55% of the vote. And it would be the worst performance for an incumbent in a century.

The model has correctly predicted the popular vote in every election since 1948 other than 1968 and 1976 (although two candidates lost the popular vote but won the presidency in that span, including George W. Bush in 2000 and Donald Trump in 2016).

Read more here.

How Nike stores are changing after Covid-19

Nike (NKE) was one of the first retailers to close all its stores when the coronavirus pandemic hit. Now it has reopened 5% of its US stores, while all its locations in China and South Korea fully reopened again.

But the way those stores operate is changing.

“What we’re focusing on is using our digital platforms and capabilities,” Heidi O’Neill, Nike’s president of consumer and marketplace, told Alison Kosik on the CNN Business’ digital live show Markets Now.

Customers who visit the reopened stores can use a feature called “Click to Try or Click to Buy” on Nike’s app, which allows them to scan a QR code and buy instantly or have their product taken to a dressing room. The company also offers a contactless way for customers to scan their feet to find footwear in their size.

And of course consumers can still order online and receive their products at home.

The company is also seeing increased use of its Nike workout app, O’Neill said.

CIO outlook: 'Cautious but not bearish'

The US stock market has rebounded from its coronavirus lows. But where does this leave investors?

“We had a relatively V-shaped recovery in the market,” said said Katie Nixon, chief investment officer at Northern Trust Wealth Management.

She said that the economic recovery won’t trace the same shape but will be more drawn out, as economic data such as weekly jobless claims are suggesting we could be past the worst.

“The reason we’re cautious is really just [about stock] valuation,” said Nixon. Not all stocks are valued at a level that makes them attractive to buy.

At the same time, “we’re still really looking at the US equity market as probably the best one in the world,” Nixon added. “We think US equities are still an attractive place to be.”

For example, America’s big tech companies are leading the way out of this downturn, she said.

For average investors, now the time to look at how their investments have been working out, Nixon said. Questions like whether they have enough liquidity and enough high-quality fixed income assets in their portfolios are important to consider, she said.

This won't be a smooth recovery: Jeffrey Sachs

Even as coronavirus lockdown restrictions are easing across the United States, many people remain in their homes.

As long as the epidemic continues in different pockets of the United States and the rest of the world, it will be hard to have a real economic recovery, said Columbia University economist Jeffrey Sachs.

The new normal of the economy will be based more on digital and e-commerce, as well as working from home.

On top of that, the country hasn’t yet reached the peak of virus-related unemployment. The unemployment rate spiked to 14.7% last month, the highest level on record. But the May number is expected to be even worse. With a rate as that could be as high as 20%, the big question is how long a recovery will really take.

'We don't pay enough attention to ripple effects,' says Schwab's Liz Ann Sonders

Stocks are rallying today as continued optimism boosts investor sentiments about the reopening of the economy.

As every investor knows by now, the current, second quarter of the year will have some of the worst economic data the United States has ever seen. A lot of that bad news is already priced in. Case in point: the stock market barely reacts to the dire labor market reports, either the weekly jobless claims or monthly jobs reports.

But therein lies a conundrum, said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at the Schwab Center for Financial Research on a media call today.

Take the labor market, for example, where most of the millions of coronavirus-related job losses are considered to be temporary. The increasing number bankruptcies could mean those layoffs might become permanent, Sonders said. In this month alone, retailers JCPenney, Neiman Marcus and JCrew have filed for bankruptcy.

Another fallout would be if colleges continue to teach online rather than in person come fall, Sonders said, which could create difficulties for the local economies of college towns.

The coronavirus GDP drop will shatter all records: BofA

The current, second quarter of this year will be an ugly one for the economy – and for the history books.

US gross domestic product is expected to collapse by up to 40% on an annualized basis between April and June.

While economists forecast a recovery in the second half of this year, that steep decline is will drag down the full-year GDP.

Economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch expect a decline of 8% for the GDP this year, which would put the drop from peak growth to the trough at 13%.

Bank of America is thinking about the coronavirus recession in three phases.

  1. The lockdown that halted economic activity.
  2. The reopening that leads to a sharp rebound in GDP growth, consumer spending and employment numbers.
  3. Then a longer and slowed recovery, driven by a second wave of Covid-19 infections.

Dow climbs 400 points

Less than an hour into the trading day, stocks are continuing their rebound rally. The Dow shot up 400 points, or 1.7%.

The S&P 500 was up 1.8%, and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.9%.

The stock rally doesn’t have a particular driver today, but the reopening of the economy continues to fuel investor optimism in spite of worries about a second wave of infections.

Royal Caribbean says demand for 2021 is strong

The late author David Foster Wallace once referred to taking a cruise as a supposedly fun thing he never wanted to do again, but it looks like many consumers disagree. Royal Caribbean said Wednesday that booking trends for next year are solid.

Royal Caribbean, which voluntarily suspended cruises in March due to the Covid-19 pandemic, reported a bigger loss for the first quarter than expected but sales that topped Wall Street’s forecasts.

Shares of Royal Caribbean (RCL), which have plunged 70% this year, were down about 2% Wednesday. But Royal Caribbean said bookings for 2021 are within the usual historical range and prices for next year’s cruises are up in the mid-single digits.

Of course, the rest of 2020 is likely a wash due to Covid-19. Royal Caribbean has already said that volumes for the rest of this year are “meaningfully lower” and that prices are down as well. But the company hopes to resume some cruises in mid-June and is planning more stringent safety and cleaning procedures in conjunction with the CDC.

Cruise companies have been hit particularly hard by the coronavirus because several of them had passengers test positive for Covid-19. Shares of Carnival (CCL) and Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH) have also plummeted more than 70% this year.

Norwegian said in its latest earnings report that it also was expecting healthy demand in 2021. But investors are still extremely nervous, especially since the three major cruise lines were not eligible for federal government stimulus money.

JetBlue and United roll out new safety initiatives

Two airlines are making adjustments to their service as demand for air travel slightly improves and they try to instill confidence with customers that flying is safe.

  • JetBlue (JBLU) said it will continue to block middle seats on flights until at least July 6. The airline will also administer temperature checks and begin electrostatic fogging its planes in June.
  • United (UAL) launched a partnership with the Clorox Company to advise its cleaning procedures. The airline will also provide Clorox products, like sanitizing wipes, to customers at United’s hubs beginning Wednesday.

Stocks rebound

US stocks opened higher on Wednesdays, rebounding from the prior day’s session when all three major indexes broke their three-day winning streaks.

High hopes for the reopening of the economy continue to help the market.

The UK just sold its first bond with a negative interest rate

Britain is now being paid to borrow money.

It’s the latest country to sell government debt at a negative yield – meaning that investors who hang onto the bonds until their maturity point will receive a little less than they paid for them.

The UK’s Debt Management Office said Wednesday that it sold £3.75 billion ($4.59 billion) worth of three-year bonds, called gilts.

The gilts, which mature in July 2023, sold at an average yield of -0.003%.

With that sale the UK joins Germany and Japan, as well as some European nations, in offering government debt with negative interest rates.

Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda, said in a note to clients that “expectations for the Bank of England to cut rates continue to grow.” The UK’s central bank slashed interest rates to 0.1% in March.

Oil giant Halliburton slashes dividend by 75%

Halliburton, one of the world’s largest oilfield service providers, cut its dividend by 75% as it grapples with a sharp decline in production.

The Houston company said Wednesday that the difficult decision “reflects the current market conditions and uncertainties regarding the depth and duration of this downturn.”

Halliburton (HAL) and other providers of drilling equipment and manpower have been crushed by the oil crash, which has forced a wide range of oil companies to drastically scale back production.

CEO Jeff Miller said the move will help the company “navigate these uncertain times” and position it to “take advantage of the market’s eventual recovery.”

Wall Street wasn’t shocked by the news: Halliburton stock rose 3% in premarket trading Wednesday morning.

In addition to the dividend cut, Halliburton announced that its board of directors is taking a voluntary 20% pay cut.

Although the largest US oil companies have insisted their dividends are safe, the leading oilfield service providers are taking a different approach. Last month, rival Schlumberger (SLB) cut its dividend by 75%.

And another oil services company, Diamond Offshore (DO), filed for bankruptcy in late April.

Luckin shares resume trading and promptly plunge

You might need to sit down with a cup of coffee for this. The Nasdaq exchange wants to delist scandal-ridden Chinese company Luckin after suspending trading in the stock on April 7. But before that can happen, Luckin shares are set to RESUME trading on Nasdaq Wednesday morning.

Shares of Luckin (LK) plunged more than 40% in premarket action to about $2.60 a share. The stock, which surged after a buzzy IPO in May 2019 on hopes that the company would steal sales from Starbucks (SBUX), plunged more than 75% in April after disclosing that its chief operating officer led a scheme to fabricate sales.

The COO – as well as Luckin’s CEO – have since been fired. It’s unclear what’s next for the company. Luckin said in a regulatory filing that it was appealing the Nasdaq’s delisting decision. Nasdaq did not explain in its release why it had decided to let the stock begin trading again.

But there has been speculation that Luckin will have to close stores or even file for bankruptcy. It seems the race to $0 for Luckin’s stock has begun.

Herbalife is selling $600 million worth of junk bonds to buy back its own shares

Herbalife didn’t get the memo about Wall Street’s allergy to stock buybacks, apparently.

The company announced yesterday it was offering $600 million of “B-rated” debt to investors, and the company intends to use the proceeds to repurchase its own shares, among other “general corporate purposes” and capital investment projects.

The pandemic has led most public companies to rethink their stock repurchase plans. Instead, companies are trying to hoard cash to keep their businesses liquid during the massive economic downturn.

Herbalife did pretty well in the first quarter, considering the last month of the quarter was consumed by job losses as stay-at-home orders began to be enforced. Sales were up nearly 8% last quarter.

The company’s stock didn’t bounce much on the news – it’s essentially flat this morning after rising a little over 3% yesterday.

Lowe's surges on strong sales

Former JCPenney (JCP) CEO Marvin Ellison must be really really happy that he’s now the head of Lowe’s and no longer at the helm of the bankrupt retailer. Lowe’s reported earnings and revenue that topped forecasts Wednesday, thanks to a stunning 12.3% increase in same-store sales in the United States. Shares of Lowe’s (LOW) rose 6% in premarket trading on the news.

Lowe’s, like rival Home Depot (HD), benefited from healthy demand for home improvement products as consumers stuck in their houses during the Covid-19 pandemic have been undertaking more DIY projects.

Ellison said in the press release that the company’s quick actions to enforce social distancing efforts in stores, add more hand sanitizers, increase the frequency of cleaning and adding curbside pickup options helped boost results. Lowe’s also stepped up its digital efforts, resulting an 80% increase in online sales during the quarter.

Lowe’s said it was investing $340 million in added benefits, wage increases and bonuses for its workers during the quarter. Home Depot took an $850 million charge in its first quarter results for similar actions.

US stock futures bounce back

Stock futures are up again. That didn’t work out so well yesterday, when stocks lost steam at the end of the day, giving up all their gains and ending up sharply lower. That snapped a three-day winning streak for stocks.

But today’s a new day.

Here’s where things stand this morning:

  • Dow futures were up nearly 300 points
  • S&P 500 futures rose 1.2%
  • Nasdaq futures were 1.1% higher.

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