The Washington Post - 13.03.2020

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A10 eZ M2 the washington post.friday, march 13 , 2020


500’s 7 percent slide that trig-
gered the circuit breaker — a
15-minute break to stop the free-
fall and give traders time to
recalibrate. The cool-down was
temporary, t hough, with the blue-
chip index sinking more than
2,200 points before rebounding
slightly. By midday, it was down
more than 1,800 points, or 7.
percent, while the S&P 500 was
off 7.2 percent and the tech-heavy
Nasdaq down nearly 7 percent.
The New York Stock Exchange
activated the rarely used lever as
the coronavirus’s accelerating
spread and worsening economic
outlook have rattled global mar-
kets for weeks. futures markets
tumbled overnight after Trump
announced the travel restrictions
— a move that blindsided Europe-
an officials.
on monday, the S&P 500 trig-
gered the first circuit breaker
after falling 7 percent early into
the session. By the end of day, it
had shed 7.6 percent and the Dow
had lost a stunning 2,014 points,
or 7.8 percent. The markets recov-
ered somewhat Tuesday, posting
across-the-board gains, only to
recoil Wednesday after the World
Health organization declared the
coronavirus a pandemic. The
Dow cratered nearly 1,500 points
to fall into a bear market, which
marks a 20 percent drop in its
all-time high.
Thursday’s decline recalled
198 7’s “Black monday,” still the
largest one-day Dow drop in per-
centage terms. Stocks fell
22.6 percent that day, w ith the sell
orders coming so quickly that
they overwhelmed the computer
and phone systems at the New
York Stock Exchange. It took the
market two years to recover the
lost ground.
The pneumonia-like illness has
spread to every continent save
Antarctica since it first emerged
in China late last year, sickening
more than 120,000 people and
claiming thousands of lives. The
United States has more than
1,000 confirmed cases and 41
deaths.
The White House and Con-
gress are at odds over what type
of economic rescue package to
assemble. The Trump administra-
tion has pushed the idea of new
tax cuts and delayed tax filings as
a way to boost the economy, as
well as expanding sick leave bene-
fits and helping the airline, hotel,
and cruise industries. Democrats
are moving ahead in the House of
representatives with a plan to
expand unemployment insur-
ance, provide more sick leave,
and assure food benefits are avail-
able for people who lose their jobs
and need emergency assistance.
“The bad news for the travel,
entertainment, leisure, and ener-
gy industries resulting from the
virus fears, initial unemployment
claims are likely to move higher
soon,” Ed Yardeni, president of
Yardeni research, wrote in com-
mentary Thursday. “measures of
consumer and business confi-
dence are likely to drop sharply
soon as well. A recession isn’t
inevitable, but it certainly is be-
coming more likely. ”
Before Thursday, the Dow has
closed a single-day session down
at least 7 percent on 20 occasions
since 1896, according to Howard
Silverblatt, of S&P Dow Jones
Indices.
[email protected]
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ing in U.S. government bonds.
These irregularities echoed the
types of freezes seen during the
2008 financial crisis and the fed
appeared to want to act quickly to
stop them.
“It’s safe to say, the fed almost
never does what it did the past
two weeks,” said Peter Conti-
Brown, a fed historian and asso-
ciate professor at the Wharton
School of the University of Penn-
sylvania. “The fed has unlocked
its emergency tool kit.”
But others said the market
dysfunction showcased a fragility
in the system resulting from some
of the regulatory changes that
were introduced in the wake of
the 2008 financial crisis.
Lawmakers required banks to
hold more capital in reserve,
which buffered them against
most shocks. As trading volumes
have exploded over the past de-
cade, however, the changes also
have made banks risk-averse. In
some corners of the financial
markets — such as the overnight
“repo” market for bank-to-bank
loans — the result in recent days
has been a shortage of willing
buyers, experts said.
And to cope, some said, the fed
needs to reinstate its crisis-fight-
ing playbook from 2008.
“We just need a really bold
response,” said Hal Scott, a Har-
vard Law School professor who
heads the nonpartisan Commit-
tee on Capital markets regula-
tion. “The spread of the virus is
shutting down the economies of
these countries. Ta ke Italy — the
economic system is not function-
ing. We could be there.”
Trump has bashed Powell for
acting slowly in the face of plung-
ing markets and recession fears
from the coronavirus outbreak.
But along with the fed, inves-
tors are looking to Congress —
with increasing desperation — for
an aggressive response to the
economic threat. “There has to be
a fiscal response,” s aid Posen.
The Dow plummeted nearly
1,700 points, but it was the S&P

buy $60 billion worth of Treasury
bonds for the next month, from
march 13 through April 13, to help
keep that market functioning ap-
propriately. Earlier this week, in-
vestors reported problems trad-

Narayana Kocherlakota, former
president of the federal reserve
Bank of minneapolis. “once you
start to lose that, you lose an
anchor that isn’t easily replaced.”
The fed also announced it will

were overlooked during a record
11-year economic expansion.
“It’s primarily the response to
bad or absent leadership, particu-
larly on the public health front,
and unhelpful statements by the
Trump administration, ECB and
others that’s fundamentally
what’s driving this,” said Adam
Posen, a former member of the
Bank of England’s rate-setting
committee.
Lagarde sparked a sell-off in
Italian government bonds with
an offhand remark Thursday that
the ECB was not worried about
rising funding costs for some
euro zone governments. She later
modified her comments in a sub-
sequent interview with CNBC.
Likewise, the White House late
Wednesday needed to issue a
clarification after Trump misstat-
ed the details of his policy re-
sponse to the virus in an oval
office speech.
malfunctioning markets were
the target of an extraordinary
action Thursday by the federal
reserve Bank of New York. It said
Thursday that it was injecting
$1.5 trillion into the bond market
Thursday and friday to ensure
the short-term funding markets
that banks use to lend to one
another operate smoothly. The
New York fed said it acted “pur-
suant to instruction” from fed
Chair Jerome H. Powell.
The action was both financially
esoteric — the sort of operational
consideration that only bond
traders might appreciate — and
profoundly important for the
health of Americans’ invest-
ments. The roughly $17 trillion
Treasury market is the safe haven
for investors who want a near-ab-
solute guarantee that they will
get their money back. It also
operates as a benchmark against
which all other assets — stocks,
corporate bonds, municipal
bonds and commodities — are
priced.
“The belief that the Treasury is
a risk-free asset is the bedrock of
global financial markets,” said

The coronavirus outbreak


BY MIKE DEBONIS,
ERICA WERNER
AND JEFF STEIN

The Trump administration and
congressional Democrats neared
agreement Thursday night on an
economic relief package to help
people affected by the coronavi-
rus, with both sides under enor-
mous pressure to act to address
the spiraling crisis.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-Calif.) said she expected a vote
friday “one way or another” to
approve the package, which is ex-
pected to amount to several tens
of billions of dollars.
“We’ve resolved most of our
differences, and those we haven’t
we’ll continue to have a conversa-
tion — because there w ill obvious-
ly be other bills,” Pelosi told re-
porters outside of her office in the
Capitol at the end of a long day of
intense talks with Treasury Secre-
tary Steven mnuchin.
The legislation will include
measures to boost paid family
leave and unemployment insur-
ance, e nsure free coronavirus test-
ing and strengthen n utritional aid
like food stamps. The emerging
agreement builds upon a bill
House released by Democrats late
Wednesday that included a num-
ber of provisions republicans op-
posed, setting off hours of fren-
zied negotiations on Capitol Hill


to reach bipartisan consensus.
Lawmakers of both parties
were determined to deliver an
economic relief package before a
congressional recess that had
been scheduled for next week.
“Let’s try to accomplish some-
thing t hat we can agree o n and get
it done,” said Sen. rob Portman
(r-ohio), summing up the senti-
ments o f many.
A final hang-up was over a paid
family and medical leave provi-
sion, w ith republicans pushing to
structure it in a way that it could
be implemented quickly and
avoid undue burdens on employ-
ers.
“There were some differences
of opinion, but we felt that putting
together something that the
American people could see coop-
eration on between the two par-
ties in this difficult moment
would be a confidence-builder,”
said House Ways and means Com-
mittee Chairman richard E. Neal
(D-mass.). “A nd I think that we
approached it that way.”
While House approval of the
package was expected friday,
clearing lawmakers to begin a
scheduled r ecess, the Senate is not
expected to take it up until next
week. majority Leader mitch mc-
Connell (r-Ky.) canceled his
chamber’s planned recess next
week but allowed senators to
leave Washington for the week-

end.
As originally introduced, the
House bill included a $2 billion
boost to state unemployment in-
surance programs, more than
$1 billion i n nutritional aid, a new
paid-leave benefit for employees
affected by the outbreak and an
increase in federal medicaid
spending, as well as a guarantee of
free coronavirus testing. republi-
cans viewed the initial legislation
as overly broad, and President
Trump criticized it as full of “the
goodies that they haven’t been
able to get for the last 25 years.”
Through hours of phone calls
and staff-level negotiations, Pelosi
and mnuchin agreed to narrow
the legislation to focus more
squarely on effects of the corona-
virus outbreak and those hurt by
it. The legislative text was still
being finalized, but Pelosi s aid
mnuchin’s suggestions had been
“all very reasonable.”
The near-deal Thursday eve-
ning represented a dramatic turn-
around from the state of play in
the morning, when the White
House and congressional repub-
licans panned the House Demo-
crats’ bill and suggested chances
for a quick d eal were remote.
But as the hours progressed
and the scale of the crisis mount-
ed, it became clear there was no
appetite among lawmakers to
leave Washington for a week or

more without acting.
“This is such a serious issue,”
said Sen. Joni Ernst (r-Iowa), who
is up for reelection in November.
“We need to be continually moni-
toring this as a group, not having
us all out to the four winds.”
only last week, Congress
passed an $8.3 billion emergency
spending plan to address public
health needs arising from the cri-
sis. But with the stock market
plunging, layoffs beginning,
schools around the country shut-
ting down and entire sports
leagues halting their seasons, the
need for a robust economic re-
sponse became g laring.
There are now more than 1,
confirmed coronavirus cases in
the United States and more than
three dozen deaths, numbers that
are expected to rise exponentially.
And increasing numbers of law-
makers are announcing plans to
shut down their offices and self-
quarantine after brushes with in-
fected people.
Trump is advancing costly
ideas of his own — including a
payroll-tax holiday that could
drain tens of billions of dollars
from Social Security. T hat idea h as
gotten limited traction among ei-
ther party on Capitol Hill, and
congressional leaders decided to
pursue a narrower package that
could win GoP support, leaving
broader measures, such as the

payroll-tax cut, for another day.
The White House was also mov-
ing to assemble i ts own r elief plan,
one that included requests for
congressional action as well as
administrative actions that the
Trump administration could take
unilaterally.
White House officials held
meetings Thursday to hammer
out details of the administration’s
economic response package as
promised by Trump in his nation-
al address Wednesday night, in-
cluding some kind of paid-sick-
leave plan that could be enacted
administratively. Critical details
remained u nresolved, however.
As originally written, the
House paid-leave plan relied on a
two-pronged approach, combin-
ing a temporary program that
would be administered by the So-
cial Security Administration that
would provide up to $4,000 a
month to affected households
with a new permanent sick-leave
mandate for U.S. employers. only
firms employing fewer than 50
people would be eligible for feder-
al assistance in meeting t hat man-
date, which was strongly opposed
by the administration.
Those plans underwent signifi-
cant changes over the day of talks,
and in the final hours negotiators
were haggling over a less ambi-
tious family and medical leave
expansion proposal from rep.

robert C. “Bobby” Scott (D-Va.)
that would expand the number of
workers who can take up to 12
weeks of job-protected leave un-
der the family and medical Leave
Act while drawing down wage
replacement. Another idea was to
instead use a Small Business Ad-
ministration program to give em-
ployee retention tax c uts to small-
er businesses.
“It’s about paid sick leave. It’s
about family and medical leave.
It’s about unemployment insur-
ance. It’s about our children who
are out of school and need to be
fed. It’s about seniors and people
with disabilities,” Pelosi said.
“This goes to the actual heart of
what our purpose is.”
Another controversial provi-
sion i n the original bill would have
increased the percentage of med-
icaid spending borne by the feder-
al government by eight percent-
age points through Sept. 30, 2021.
That would be a welcome relief to
states, which could s ee an influx of
medicaid enrollees in a time of
economic crisis. But the price tag
for the federal government could
have been v ast — stretching easily
into the tens of billions of dollars.
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seung Min kim and Paul kane
contributed to this report.

Administration, congressional negotiators close to d eal on economic relief


cized oval office speech, and
accelerated once trading opened
Thursday in New York. Even the
federal reserve’s promise to
make available $1.5 trillion to
smooth the operations of the
giant U.S. Treasury market could
not calm anxious investors.
Across the United States,
meanwhile, the virus forced
schools, sports leagues and enter-
tainment venues — including
American icons — to alter their
plans.
The NCAA canceled “march
madness,” its premier annual
showcase, disappointing millions
of fans. major League Baseball
and the National Hockey League
likewise placed their seasons in
limbo, joining the National Bas-
ketball Association, which acted
one day earlier.
Public tours of the White
House have been canceled and
the U.S. Capitol and congressio-
nal office buildings will be off-
limits to tourists starting April 1.
Even mickey mouse was side-
lined when Disneyland said it will
close through the end of this
month.
In maryland, Gov. L arry Hogan
(r) ordered public schools to
close for two weeks starting mon-
day and banned gatherings of
more than 250 people. Schools in
ohio, New mexico and michigan
will close for three weeks, and
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear (D)
called for all schools in the state
to suspend in-person classes for
two weeks. And in Virginia, Gov.
ralph Northam (D) declared a
state of emergency, b ut left s chool
closings to local officials.
Still, at the White House, the
president continued to minimize
the danger from the virus. The
president said he was unfazed by
reports that a Brazilian official he
had met at mar-a-Lago last week-
end, fabio Wajngarten, later test-
ed positive for coronavirus.
“Let’s put it this way: I’m not
concerned,” the president said
when asked about having been
exposed to the Brazilian official,
who was photographed standing
alongside him and Vice President
Pence.
If Thursday’s cascade of can-
cellations was notable, it was the
financial markets that offered an
unmistakable verdict on the re-
sponse by major U.S. and global
institutions to the virus.
Wall Street’s stunning melt-
down over the past month has
erased almost all of the stock
market gains since Trump’s No-
vember 2016 election. on feb. 12,
the Dow was up more than 61 per-
cent since his surprise win. Now
the total Trump-era gain is
around 11 percent.
Thursday’s decline reflected
investor unease with the han-
dling of the crisis by global lead-
ers including European Central
Bank President Christine
Lagarde and Trump and the
emergence of structural prob-
lems in financial markets that


markets from a


Markets


dive despite


Fed move,


other steps


20172018 2019 2020

Jan. 4, 2017
19 ,594. 16

18,

24,

Nikkei (Japan)

March 12
18,559.

20172018 2019 2020

20172018 2019 2020

Feb. 12 DAX (Germany)
29,551.

Jan. 3, 2017
19 ,881. 76

Dow Jones
30 ,000 14,

10 ,
March 12
9,161.

20172018 2019 2020

2017201820192020

Feb. 19
9,817.

6,

5,

8,

FTSE (Great Britain)
10 ,

Nasdaq

Jan. 3, 2017
7,177.

Jan. 3, 2017
5,429.
March 12
7,201.

March 12
5,237.

Stock indexes see steep losses


Recent setbacks in the stock market have sent some indexes to values
near or below their level at the beginning of 2017.

March 12
21,200.

March 12
2,480.

Jan. 3, 2017
11,584.

Source: Yahoo Finance ALYSSA FOWERS/THE WASHINGTON POST

20172018 2019 2020

Jan. 3, 2017
2,2 57.

Feb. 19
3,386.

3,

S&P 500

Justin Lane/ePa-eFe/shutterstock
traders work on the floor of the New York stock exchange as stocks around the world continue to lose value. although the Fed has cut
interest rates and the White House and Congress are working on a stimulus, the actions fall short of the response needed to calm investors.

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