The New York Times - USA (2020-12-01)

(Antfer) #1

B2 N THE NEW YORK TIMES BUSINESSTUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2020


Months

36 2510 30
Years

220

240

260

’16 ’18 ’20

400

600

800

1000 thousand

’16 ’18 ’20

80

100

120

’16 ’18 ’20

0

5

10%

’16 ’18 ’20

0

2

4

6

8

$10 a bushel

’12 ’14 ’16 ’18 ’20

0

50

$100 a barrel

’12 ’14 ’16 ’18 ’20

0

1

2

3

4

5

6%

’10 ’15 ’20

90

100

110

120

’15 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19 ’20

1.0

1.1

$1.2

’15 ’16 ’17 ’18 ’19 ’20

0

1

2

3%

0

1

2

3%

’19 ’20

+1.5

+1.0

+0.5

0.0

–0.5

–1.0

–1.5

–2.0

Information technology %
Health care
Consumer staples
Consumer discretionary
Communication services
Real estate
Materials
Industrials
Utilities
Financials
Energy

+0.7
+0.3
–0.1
–0.7
–0.8
–0.8
–0.9
–1.0
–1.5
–1.9
–5.4


  1. Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Adm(VBTLX) +7.4% +4.3% $119.3

  2. Dodge & Cox Income(DODIX) +9.1 +5.4 66.5

  3. Fidelity US Bond Index(FXNAX) +7.4 +4.3 55.5

  4. PIMCO Total Return Instl(PTTRX) +8.3 +4.8 53.0

  5. DoubleLine Total Return Bond I(DBLTX) +3.6 +3.4 43.4

  6. Fidelity Series Investment Grade Bond(FSIGX) +9.3 +5.3 34.7

  7. B a i r d A g g r e g a t e B o n d I n s t ( B A G I X ) + 8. 3 + 4. 9 3 0 .1

  8. American Funds Bond Fund of Amer A(ABNDX) +10.4 +4.6 28.5

  9. Baird Core Plus Bond Inst(BCOIX) +8.6 +5.3 25.7

  10. Vanguard Interm-Term Bond Index Adm(VBILX) +9.2 +5.0 19.7

  11. Apple Inc (A APL) $119.05 +2.1% 168.7

  12. General Electr (GE) 10.18 –2.1 124.9

  13. American Airl (AAL) 14.13 –5.7 97.1

  14. Carnival Corp (CCL) 19.98 –7.4 86.4

  15. Advanced Micr (AMD) 92.66 +6.3 84.2

  16. Ford Motor Co (F) 9.08 –0.1 77.8

  17. Pfizer Inc (PFE) 38.31 +2.9 65.0

  18. Bank of Ameri (BAC) 28.16 –2.9 63.5

  19. Wells Fargo & (WFC) 27.35 –3.9 48.1

  20. Intel Corp (INTC) 48.35 +1.9 46.3

  21. EOG Resources (EOG) $46.88 –8.8%

  22. Pioneer Natur (PXD) 100.58 –8.6

  23. Diamondback (FANG) 39.96 –8.2

  24. ConocoPhillip (COP) 39.56 –7.5

  25. Carnival Corp (CCL) 19.98 –7.4

  26. Apache Corp (APA) 12.89 –7.4

  27. Te c h n i p F M C P L ( F T I ) 8. 31 –7. 4

  28. Concho Resour (CXO) 57.48 –7.3

  29. Phillips 66 (PSX) 60.58 –7.1

  30. Hess Corp (HES) 47.18 –7.1

  31. IHS Markit L (INFO) $99.46 +7.4%

  32. Advanced Micr (AMD) 92.66 +6.3

  33. Xilinx Inc (XLNX) 145.55 +5.9

  34. Qorvo Inc (QRVO) 156.68 +4.4

  35. Skyworks Sol (SWKS) 141.17 +3.7

  36. Danaher Corp (DHR) 224.63 +3.6

  37. Iron Mountain (IRM) 27.50 +3.3

  38. Teleflex Inc (TFX) 382.75 +3.2

  39. S&P Global I (SPGI) 351.78 +3.0

  40. Pfizer Inc (PFE) 38.31 +2.9


+ 5%

0%


  • 5%


–10%
3,100

3,200

3,300

3,400

3,500

3,600

3,700

Sept. Oct. Nov.

+ 5%

0%


  • 5%


–10%
10,500

11,000

11,500

12,000

12,500

Sept. Oct. Nov.

+ 5%

0%


  • 5%


–10%
25,000

26,000

27,000

28,000

29,000

30,000

Sept. Oct. Nov.

3621.63 0.5% 12198.74 0.1% 29638.64 0.9%

Shanghai –0.5%

Tok yo – 0.8%

Frankfurt –0.3%

London –1.6%

Toronto –1.2%

New York –0.5%

$1 = 104.39

$1.1928 Unemployment Rate

New-home sales

Consumer confidence

Industrial production

Long- and intermediate-term
government bonds

S&P 500 Nasdaq Composite Index Dow Jones industrials

Best performers Worst performers Most active

Sector performance

Bonds

Yield curve

Key rates

Borrowing rate

Crude oil

Corn
Savings rate

yen

10-year Treas.

YESTERDAY

1-YE AR AGO

2-year Treas.

Fed Funds

Currencies Consumer rates Commodities Economy

How stock markets fared yesterday in Asia ... ... in Europe ... and in the Americas.

CLOSE

S&P 500 SECTORS

CLOSE CLOSE 1 YR 5 YRS

TOTAL RETURNASSETSTOTAL
CHANGE CHANGE CHANGE IN MIL. IN BIL.

VOLUME

POWERED BY
What Happened in Stock Markets Yesterday

What Is Happening in Other Markets and the Economy


Major stock market indexes

6 p.m. E.T. 8 10 12 a.m. 2 4 6 a.m. 8 10 12 p.m. 2 4 6 p.m.

Maturity

1-year CDs

30-year fixed mortgages

S&P 500 COMPANIES S&P 500 COMPANIES S&P 500 COMPANIES

Source: Morningstar

1 euro =

The Digest


Propelled by progress on corona-
virus vaccines and investor relief
over the end of a noisy presiden-
tial election in the United States,
markets posted one of their big-
gest rallies in years in November.
The S&P 500 notched a gain of

10.8 percent for the month, even
as stocks slipped 0.5 percent on
Monday — the first full day of
trading since the Thanksgiving
holiday. Despite that blip, Novem-
ber was the index’s best monthly
showing since April and its fourth-
best month in 30 years.
On Monday, parts of the stock
market sensitive to the shorter-
term outlook for growth were a
drag as the rapidly expanding
Covid-19 pandemic threatens eco-
nomic activity like consumer
spending and travel. Airlines and
energy companies were some of
the day’s worst performers. Re-
tailers like Gap and the apparel
branding company PVH Corpora-
tion, which owns Calvin Klein and
Tommy Hilfiger, also tumbled af-
ter a lackluster Black Friday, the
traditional start to the holiday
shopping season.
While analysts expect the up-
surge in the virus to slow the econ-
omy over the next few months, the
growing confidence in the arrival
of vaccines should help the keep
downturn modest.
“On the other side of this poten-
tial divot in economic activity,
however, awaits what we believe
will be a powerful cocktail of a vac-
cine, further fiscal stimulus, pent-
up demand for services, and in-
creased consumer confidence as-
sociated with a broad reopening of
the global economy,” Jason De-
Sena Trennert of Strategas Re-
search wrote in a client note on
Monday.
The market’s performance over
the last month has mirrored this
widespread willingness among in-
vestors to mostly look past the na-
tionwide surge of Covid-19 cases.
Pfizer, Astra-Zeneca and Mod-
erna all reported last month that
their vaccine candidates proved
effective at generating immunity
in clinical trials.
The drug makers recorded solid
market gains in November. Pfizer

was about 14 percent higher for
the month. Shares of Moderna — a
far smaller company — more than
doubled, rising 126 percent for No-
vember, including a 20 percent
jump on Monday after the com-
pany said it would ask regulators
in Europe and the United States
for emergency approval of its vac-
cine candidate.
Companies in industries such
as travel and hospitality that have
been battered by virus — and are
relying on a vaccine to restore
their fortunes — were some of
November’s best performers.
Cruise lines and casino compa-
nies also rose during the month:
Carnival climbed more than 40
percent and Wynn Resorts and

MGM Resorts each rose more
than 35 percent.
“There is considerable pent-up
demand for travel, leisure activi-
ties and holidays in the developed
world,” analysts with Capital Eco-
nomics wrote in a note on Monday.
The Russell 2000 index of small
capitalization stocks, which is
more heavily reliant on the out-
look for growth in American do-
mestic economy, rallied more than
18 percent in November.
Analysts say the rally also re-
flects investor relief that the 2020
election season is almost over. De-
spite the unprecedented wave of
litigation from President Trump
seeking to overturn the results of
the vote, President-elect Joseph
R. Biden Jr. is all but assured of be-
ing sworn in as president on Jan.
20.
Mr. Biden’s early personnel an-
nouncements for economic policy
posts have been largely well-re-
ceived on Wall Street. On Monday,
he announced his economic team,
including Janet L. Yellen, the for-
mer Fed chair, as the first woman
to lead the Treasury Department.
Meanwhile, prospects for im-
provement in the global economy
helped lift commodity prices last
month. Shares of energy compa-
nies in the S&P 500 rose more than
25 percent in November alone,
mirroring the more-than 25 per-
cent gain in benchmark American
crude oil prices.

A November for the Record Books


The S& P 500 Index


Position of the S& P 500 index at 1-minute intervals on Monday.

Source: Reuters THE NEW YORK TIMES

3,590

3,640

3,620

3,610

3,600

3,630

10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.

Previous close
3,638.35

3-Month Treasury Bills

High rate at weekly auction.

Source: The Bond Buyer THE NEW YORK TIMES

0.08

0.12%

0.11

0.10

0.09

Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov.

0.085%

STOCKS & BONDS

By MATT PHILLIPS

Eshe Nelson contributed reporting.

10-YEAR TREASURY YIELD

0.84%
UNCH.

CRUDE OIL (U.S.)

$45.34
–$0.19

S&P 500 INDEX

–0.46%
3,621.63

DOW JONES INDUSTRIALS

–0.91%
29 ,638.64

NASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX

–0.06%
12,198.74

GOLD (N.Y.)

$1,775.70
–$6.20

COMPANIES


Salesforce May Buy Slack


As Soon as Tuesday


Salesforce is in talks to acquire
Slack in a deal that could be an-
nounced as soon as Tuesday, ac-
cording to people with knowledge
of the matter who weren’t autho-
rized to talk about the takeover
publicly.
The potential deal is a bet on re-
mote working, an area bankers
believe will be ripe for consolida-
tion in the months ahead, as
highly valued software companies
look to roll up the fragmented
market for collaboration tools.
The premise behind such
moves is that work practices may
never return to pre-pandemic
norms, so Salesforce and others
are hoping to cash in on the shift
by assembling a suite of services
to make remote working easier.
Software companies are riding
high on surging stock prices, sit-
ting on large cash piles and able to
tap more capital easily if they
need to. In addition to Salesforce,
potential buyers include Adobe
(which bought Workfront last
month), Twilio (purchaser of Seg-
ment and Sendgrid) and Serv-
iceNow. Potential targets include
Airtable, Asana, Box, DocuSign,
Dropbox and Smartsheet. These
deals won’t be cheap, but as the


shares of buyers rise in tandem
with targets, that may simply
mean more stock-for-stock deals.
Slack had a market capitaliza-
tion of about $17 billion before The
Wall Street Journal first reported
the talks with Salesforce last
week, and is now worth around
$23 billion.
Representatives for Slack and
Salesforce didn’t respond to re-
quests for comment on Monday.
Looming large in the work-
from-home market is Microsoft.
Its Office software is already in-
stalled on many workplace com-
puters, which makes it easy to in-
tegrate its Slack-like collaboration
tool, Teams. Microsoft has been
acquisitive throughout the pan-
demic, trying to scoop up TikTok
and announcing a deal to buy the
gaming company Zenimax Media.
LAUREN HIRSCH

MARKETS


DoorDash Seeks Valuation


Of $31.6 Billion in I.P.O.


DoorDash is setting its sights high
for its stock market debut.
The food-delivery company
said on Monday that it hoped to
raise up to $2.8 billion from its ini-
tial public offering, in a sale that
could value the company at as
much as $31.6 billion, including all
shares and options. It has set a
price range of $75 to $85 a share
for the I.P.O.
The fund-raising goal, disclosed
in the food-delivery company’s
latest I.P.O. prospectus, signals
the company’s ambitions as it be-
gins pitching prospective invest-
ors. It was valued at $16 billion in a
private fund-raising round in
June.
The company is hoping that in-
vestors will overlook losses and a


thicket of potentially costly labor
regulations and clamor for a piece
of a fast-growing gig-economy gi-
ant.
DoorDash expects to price its
offering in the next few weeks —
making it one of the last compa-
nies to go public in 2020 — and will
trade on the New York Stock un-
der the ticker symbol “DASH.”
Monday’s prospectus also shed
more light on how much control
DoorDash’s founders — and in
particular Tony Xu, its chief exec-
utive — will hold even after the
company goes public, thanks to
their holdings of a special class of
stock, a common feature in Silicon
Valley corporate governance.
Mr. Xu, Andy Fang and Stanley
Tang will control shares that give
them at least 69 percent of voting
power at the company. Moreover,
Mr. Xu has the right to vote the
shares held by his co-founders.
MICHAEL J. DE LA MERCED

BRENDAN McDERMID/REUTERS
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