Stock markets lose ground again Monday despite U.S. central bank pledge to do 'whatever it takes'
Federal Reserve removes limits on how much debt it will take on from banks as collateral
The stock market slide deepened on Monday as the rapidly spreading coronavirus forced more U.S. states into lockdown, overshadowing unprecedented moves by the U.S. Federal Reserve to shore up credit across the economy.
After recently cutting interest rates to near zero, the Fed will now lend against student loans and credit card loans, as well as back the purchase of corporate bonds and make direct loans to companies.
Announcement of the extraordinary measures briefly lifted U.S. stock index futures before Monday's trading session began, but the mounting death toll from COVID-19 and a tide of lockdowns more U.S. states quickly sent the main indexes into the red, putting the S&P 500 on pace for its worst month since World War Two.
The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 582 points or three per cent while in Toronto, the TSX's main index lost 623 points, or more than five per cent.
"What the Fed did is important because it does help in the credit markets. But it's not enough from an equity market perspective," said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at Robert W. Baird in Milwaukee. "What we now need is leadership out of Congress to pass some sort of stimulus bill, because what the Fed's doing is relieving some problems, but it doesn't do enough to solve to solve what's out there."
Investors had hoped the U.S. Senate would clear a $1 trillion-plus coronavirus stimulus package over the weekend, but Democrats and Republicans were still scrambling to come to an agreement.
Maryland, Ohio, Louisiana and Delaware joined New York and California in asking people to stay home, foreshadowing a near halt in economic activity and more pain for U.S. equities, and prompting several analysts to slash their growth forecasts.
Goldman Sachs expects an outright contraction in global real gross domestic product in 2020 on the back of a 24 per cent plunge in U.S. real GDP in the second quarter: two-and-a-half times as large as the previous post-war record.
The S&P 500 has experienced a $9 trillion US wipeout to its value since the benchmark index hit a record high last month. A rush for safe-haven assets like government bonds caused U.S. Treasury yields to fall on Monday.
The S&P 500 is down about 34 per cent from its February record high, its lowest level since fears of the coronavirus swept across the investment world. The TSX is down by even more.
"What we really need to turn things around is a sense of closure - not on the virus, but on the response to the virus," said Stephen Massocca, senior vice president at Wedbush Securities in San Francisco. "Once the market sees that, I think the market will rebound considerably."
With files from CBC News