- US stocks closed down on Tuesday as investors mulled Senate Republicans' coronavirus stimulus package and a slew of earnings reports.
- The GOP continued negotiations on its fiscal relief plan throughout the day. The $1 trillion package includes another round of $1,200 payments and additional funds for small-business loans.
- Experts expect a long negotiation period as Republicans and Democrats spar over their respective proposals.
- Earnings misses from 3M and McDonald's weighed on major indexes.
- Oil tumbled through the session, with West Texas Intermediate crude dropping as much as 1.8%, to $40.85 per barrel.
- Watch major indexes update live here.
US stocks slid on Tuesday as investors braced for prolonged negotiations between Democrats and Republicans on another round of economic stimulus.
The GOP continued deliberations on its fiscal relief plan through the session. The $1 trillion package includes another round of $1,200 direct payments, a $60 billion expansion of small-business loans, and more than $100 billion for schools. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said a stimulus measure wouldn't reach a vote unless it included liability restrictions.
Senate Republicans' spending plan came in far below the $3.5 trillion sought by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Experts expect a long negotiation process before a package is passed.
Here's where US indexes stood at the 4 p.m. ET market close on Tuesday:
- S&P 500: 3,218.54, down 0.64%
- Dow Jones industrial average: 26,379.56, down 0.77% (205.21 points)
- Nasdaq composite: 10,402.09, down 1.27%
Republicans unveiled the proposal after expanded unemployment benefits expired, pulling a key lifeline from millions of jobless Americans as the coronavirus pandemic continues to slam the economy. The new GOP bill would replace the $600-per-week expansion with benefits matching 70% of a worker's past wages, McConnell said on Tuesday.
Investors also digested earnings misses from McDonald's and 3M. The restaurant chain missed expectations for quarterly profit and posted a 30% drop in revenue. 3M missed estimates for revenue and earnings as sales of personal protective equipment failed to outweigh a broader slowdown in demand for its office products.
Tesla stock tumbled after the Bernstein analyst Toni Sacconaghi downgraded the company to "underperform" from "market perform." The firm maintained its $900 price target for Tesla, implying that shares will tank 42% over the next year. The automaker enjoyed a "mind-boggling" rally through 2020, but shares need to return to reasonable levels before investors buy in, Sacconaghi said.
"Despite our relatively bullish stance on electric vehicle evolution, and structural advantages we believe Tesla may hold, we find it difficult to justify Tesla's current valuation even under our most bullish/imaginative scenarios," the analyst wrote in a note to clients.
Tech giants including Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet also fell, further cutting into the sector's outperformance.
Pfizer climbed after beating earnings estimates and raising its 2020 guidance.
Oil slumped deeper through the session. West Texas Intermediate crude fell as much as 1.8%, to $40.85 per barrel. Brent crude, oil's international benchmark, erased a mild gain and fell 0.9% to $43.01, at intraday lows.
Spot gold neared a record $2,000 per ounce before erasing gains and turning lower. The precious metal has rallied through the summer amid a weakening US dollar and expectations that inflation will rise.
Bitcoin breached $11,000 late Monday and held the level through Tuesday morning before sliding below the threshold. Like gold, the digital currency has benefited from a turn to alternative assets and concerns that inflation will drag on traditional assets.
Now read more
Bitcoin rockets above $11,000 to year highs as the dollar weakens