The Wall Street Journal - 21.03.2020 - 22.03.2020

(Joyce) #1

A8| Saturday/Sunday, March 21 - 22, 2020 THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Saturday/Sunday, March 21 - 22, 2020 |A


THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC


Jan. 10:Chinareportsfirst
deathfromcoronavirus.

Feb. 19:S&P500hits13th
recordof2020andNasdaq
Compositehitsits16th.

Feb. 21:Goldandbondssurge
withinvestorsseeking
havens,pushing10-yearyield
below1.5%.Thenumberof
casesinSouthKorearises
sharply.

Feb. 24:Numberofcases
outsideChinasurges.Traders
rampupbetsonlowerinterest
rates.

Feb. 25:CDCwarnsitexpects
widerspreadofvirusinU.S.
NewcasesrisesharplyinItaly,
IranandSouthKorea.IMF
chiefsaysbodyis
downgradingglobal-growth
projections.

Feb. 26:Microsoftwarns
supplychaindisruptions
wouldhurtsales.VPMike
Penceputinchargeofvirus
response.

March 2:AppleandMicrosoft
recoupabout$193billionin
marketvalueasstockssurge.
Chinesemanufacturingdata
fromFebruaryplungedueto
coronavirus.

March 5:Schoolsshutinthe
Seattlearea.Senatepasses
emergency$8.3billion
spendingbill.

March 6:OilfallsafterOPEC
andRussiacan’treachadeal
todeepenoutputcuts.Cases
ofcoronavirustop100,
globally.Austin’sSouthby
Southwestfestivaliscanceled.

March 10:TrumpsaysWhite
Houseofficialsareconsidering
potentialmeasuresincludinga
payroll-taxcutandhelpfor
hourlywageearners.

March 11:Dow’s11-yearbull
marketends.WHOdeclares
coronavirusapandemic.
PresidentTrumpannouncesa
30-daybanonsometravel
fromEuropeintotheU.S.NBA
suspendsseasonafterplayer
testspositiveforcoronavirus.

March 13:Fedoverthe
weekendslashesits
benchmarkinterestrateto
nearzeroandsaysitwillbuy
$700billioninTreasuryand
mortgage-backedsecurities.

March 17:FederalReserve
saysitwillstartmakingloans
toU.S.companiestoease
fundingstrains.Trump
administrationbacksplanto
sendchecksdirectlyto
Americansaspartofa
$1trillionstimuluspackageto
helphouseholdsand
businesses.10-yearyieldposts
biggestjumpsinceSeptember
2008.

Feb. 27:Stocksfallinto
correctionterritorymore
than10%belowrecent
records.GoldmanSachs
projectsU.S.companies
willgeneratenoearnings
growthin2020.

March 9:Italyplaceswhole
countryunderquarantine.
U.S.crudeoilfalls25%to
$31.13,itsbiggestdropsince
1991.S&P500falls7%at
opentotriggercircuit
breakerforfirsttimein
years.10-yearTreasury
yieldhitsrecordlowof
0.501%.Goldhits
seven-yearhigh.

March 12:S&P500and
Nasdaqenterbearmarket,
downmorethan20%from
recentrecords.Fedsaysit
willmakevastsumsof
short-termloansavailable
onWallStreetandpurchase
Treasurysecurities.Leaders
inNewYork,NewJerseyand
Connecticutannounce
restrictionsonpublic
gatherings.

March 16:Stockshaveworst
daysinceBlackMondayin
1987.U.S.airlinesseekover
$50billioninfinancial
assistancefromthe
government.Datashow
businessactivityinChina
turnedbroadlynegativefor
thefirsttimeonrecordin
firsttwomonthsoftheyear.

March 18:U.S.crudeoilhits
18-yearlowof$20.37abarrel.
PresidentTrumpinvokes
DefenseProtectionActto
requirecertainordersfrom
businessestofightvirusand
announcesplanstoclosethe
borderwithCanadato
nonessentialtraffic.Senate
passesreliefbilltoprovidefree
testingandrequiresmaller
employerstogivetwoweeksof
paidsickleave.Fedsaysitwill
launchanewlendingfacilityto
backstopthemoney-market
mutual-fundsector.

March 19:Joblessclaimsrise
sharplyforweekended
March14.Londoncity
officialscloseportionsofthe
capital’ssubwaysystem.
DeathtollinIranrisesnear
1,300.

S&P 500 daily closes


Dec.31,






Friday





Feb. 193386.


10









0

5

%

January February March

S&P 500, daily moves


Sources: FactSet (stock indexes, commodities, ETFs);
Dow Jones Market Data (dollar index)

Biggestdailypercentagedecline
–12%sinceOct.19,1987(BlackMonday)

demand repayment, triggering
sales of unrelated assets.
Gold has also been caught
in a painful selloff of almost
all raw materials. Commodi-
ties prices started falling as
the virus dented economic ac-
tivity in China in January, but
the declines have accelerated
since Saudi Arabia and Russia
launched an oil-price war ear-
lier this month. The prospect
of rising supply and crumbling
demand has sent U.S. crude oil
down 50% for the month to
about $22.50 a barrel.
Many analysts are worried
the oil-price crash will result
in bankruptcies of energy
companies, some of which
have borrowed heavily in re-
cent years. The fallout could
also ding lenders who are al-
ready struggling with the eco-
nomic slowdown and the Fed-
eral Reserve’s decision to cut
interest rates near zero.
Because of strains in short-
term money markets and criti-
cal markets like Treasurys, the
Fed has announced several
other steps, including buying
Treasurys and mortgage-
backed securities to keep mar-
kets functioning properly.
Those measures have ex-
tended to the currency mar-
kets, with concerns about a dol-
lar shortage outside the U.S.
driving the WSJ Dollar Index,
which tracks the dollar against
a basket of 16 other currencies,
to a nearly 18-year high..

times in recent weeks dropped
7% to trigger a circuit breaker
that halts trading for 15 min-
utes. The circuit breakers are
designed to limit declines. Be-
fore March 9, they hadn’t been
triggered since 1997.
And lately, investors haven’t
even been able to count on as-
sets other than stocks to insu-
late their portfolios.
The yield on the benchmark
10-year U.S. Treasury note has
risen sharply since closing at a
record low of 0.501% on March


  1. Yields rise as bond prices
    fall, and the declines in Trea-
    surys—spurred by market dis-
    ruptions and the unwinding of
    Wall Street bets—have made
    volatility even more painful.
    At the same time, investors
    have shied away from corpo-
    rate bonds, municipal bonds,
    and emerging-market debt,
    driving record outflows in bond
    mutual and exchange-traded
    funds of nearly $109 billion
    during the week ended
    Wednesday, according to a
    Bank of America analysis of fig-
    ures from EPFR Global.
    Gold, another traditional
    haven, also peaked on March

  2. Since then, it has fallen 11%,
    with investors needing to sell
    liquid assets to cover losses
    suffered in stocks. Some of
    that came after margin calls
    for those who had used stocks
    as collateral to buy other secu-
    rities. With the value of those
    positions shrinking, banks can


Just weeks after cruising to
new records, U.S. stocks have
sunk more than 30%, ending
the longest bull market ever.
Oil prices crashed to 18-year
lows and a stampede out of
bond markets and toward cash
has added to the turmoil.


School closures, workplace
shutdowns and restrictions on
gatherings have stalled com-
merce in a way many investors
have never seen, fueling bets
on a painful recession and a big
hit to corporate profits.
Waves of information about
the virus and how it is remak-
ing life in the western world
are driving massive swings in
markets throughout the day.
The manic moves often begin
overnight as futures trading
opens and Asian markets begin
trading, driving big shifts be-
fore many U.S. investors have
even woken up.
S&P 500 futures have often
dropped 5%, the maximum de-
cline allowed under exchange
rules. Before March 8, the last
time S&P futures had fallen
that much was after President
Trump was elected in 2016.
The chaos hasn’t ended
there. After regular trading has
started at 9:30 a.m. in New
York the S&P 500 has four


Article by Amrith
Ramkumar,
Graphics by Peter
Santilli and Max Rust

HOW THE


BULL MARKET


UNRAVELED


The market’s plunge reflects the pace at which coronavirus has


upended life, shutting down nations, states and cities. A few


weeks ago, stocks hit record highs,extending an 11-year bull


run. The reversal has been punctuated by unruly trading in


bonds, currencies and commodities, leaving few stable options.


JANUARY

FEBRUARY

MARCH

TREASURY ETFS

–6 0 % 0 +2 0 %

Cumulative percentage change, year to date


S&P500 DJIA

NASDAQ
COMPOSITE

NYSE
FANG+
INDEX

RUSSELL
2000

KBW
NASDAQ
BANK
INDEX

STOXX
EUROPE
600

NIKKEI
STOCK
AVERAGE

HANG
SENG
INDEX

CRUDE
OIL GOLD

WSJ
DOLLAR
INDEX

1-
YEAR

7-
YEAR

20+
COPPER YEAR

Note: The NYSE FANG+ Index includes Facebook, Apple, Netflix, Google parent Alphabet, Amazon.com, Alibaba Group Holding, Baidu, Nvidia, Tesla and Twitter. Crude-oil futures prices based on front-month contract.
Prices for copper and gold based on most-active contract. Treasury exchange-traded funds are the iShares 1-3 Year Treasury ETF, iShares 7-10 Year Treasury ETF and iShares 20+ Year Treasury ETF.

TREASURYETFS

S&P500 DJIA NASDAQ
COMPOSITE

NYSE
FANG+
INDEX

RUSSELL
2000

KBW
NASDAQ
BANK
INDEX

STOXX
EUROPE
600

NIKKEI
STOCK
AVERAGE

HANG
SENG
INDEX

CRUDE
OIL

GOLD WSJ
DOLLAR
INDEX

1-
YEAR

7-
YEAR

20+
YEAR

COPPER

–28.7% –32.8 –23.3 –14.6 –39.2 –46.6 –29.5 –30.0 –19.1 –63.3 –22.4 –2.5 +8.1 +2.2 +8.1 +17.


Dow Jones Industrial
Average record close

China reports first
coronavirus death

WHO declares outbreak
an international public-
health emergency

CDC says it expects
virus to spread in U.S.

Federal Reserve cuts
interest rate by half
percentage point

S&P 500 and Nasdaq
Composite record closes

U.S. crude falls to
$20.37 a barrel, lowest
settle since 2002

Gold rises to $1,674.
and the 10-year Treasury
yield falls to 0.501%
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