- US stocks rebounded Tuesday after the biggest daily drop in the
Dow in 2021. - Rising COVID-19 cases and concerns about the economic recovery triggered a global sell-off on Monday.
- Bitcoin tumbled below $30,000.
US stocks rallied higher Tuesday after a harsh sell-off the previous day, as investor concerns about the impact of rising COVID-19 cases on the global economy eased.
On Monday the
Investor attention is now turning to corporate earnings, with IBM jumping over 2% in early morning trading after reporting its biggest increase in quarterly revenue in three years.
Here's where US indexes stood at the 9:30 a.m. ET open on Tuesday:
- S&P 500: 4,270.04, up 0.27%
- Dow Jones industrial average: 34,057.71, up 0.28% (95.67 points)
- Nasdaq composite: 14,320.87, up 0.32%
"Valuations across the market as a whole had become stretched and we were due for a pullback, but many of the cyclical companies are selling off on fears that Covid will stop the recovery in its tracks," said Chris Zaccarelli, Independent Advisor Alliance CIO. "We don't believe that that's the case and are willing to let the selloff run its course and buy the dip on the belief that the economy will fully recover and return to its prior growth trajectory, bringing most of the cyclical companies in the airline, travel and leisure industries along with it."
The yield on the US 10-yr Treasury slipped 2.2 basis points to 1.159%, after hitting its lowest level since February on Monday.
Bitcoin slipped to $29,662 Tuesday, over 50% lower than record highs achieved in April.
West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.54%, to $66.06 per barrel. Brent crude, oil's international benchmark, slid 0.34%, to $68.40 per barrel.
Gold climbed 0.83% to $1,824.30.