- US
stocks fluctuated on Thursday as investors reacted to a resurgence of coronavirus cases. - Texas, North Carolina, and Arizona this week reported record numbers of COVID-19-related hospitalizations, while China is grappling with its worst outbreak since the initial one in Wuhan.
- US weekly jobless claims hit 1.5 million last week, a slight decline from the previous report and more than economists had expected.
- Read more on Business Insider.
US stocks fluctuated Thursday as investors reacted to a global resurgence of coronavirus cases.
The
Several US states have seen a spike in coronavirus cases, and Texas, Arizona, and North Carolina this week have reported record numbers of COVID-19-related hospitalizations.
Meanwhile, China is grappling with its worst outbreak since the initial one in Wuhan. In Beijing, a new round of cases has reportedly prompted school closures and canceled flights into and out of the city, though authorities have said the outbreak is under control.
"The belief that the global economy will swiftly recover during the third quarter is now uncertain," Hussein Sayed, the chief market strategist at FXTM, told Business Insider in an email. "The faster economies reopen, the more likely we will see a second wave of infections translate into new lockdowns."
Here's where US indexes stood at 2:00 p.m. ET on Thursday:
- S&P 500: 3,115.74, up 0.08%
- Dow Jones industrial average: 26,084.99, down 0.14% (35 points)
- Nasdaq composite: 9,939.06, up 0.3%
US weekly jobless claims hit 1.5 million for the week that ended on Saturday, the Labor Department said on Thursday. That exceeded the consensus economist estimate of 1.3 million and marked a slight decline from the prior period. In 13 weeks, 46 million Americans have applied for unemployment insurance amid coronavirus-related layoffs.
Stocks related to the economic reopening — including airlines, cruise lines, and retailers — slumped on Thursday. The group has been subject to volatile trading sessions as investors weigh the US's economic reopening against spikes in COVID-19 cases.
In testimony on Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell urged Congress not to pull back the fiscal support it had given the US economy "too quickly."
"The economy is just now beginning to recover," Powell said. "It's a critical phase, and I think that support would be well placed at this time."
Oil prices slid. West Texas Intermediate crude fell as much as 2.2%, to $37.11 per barrel. Brent crude, the international benchmark, sank 1.6%, to $40.06 per barrel, at intraday lows.