Futures are rebounding Wednesday night after Dow closes in bear market. Traders await Trump

FAN Editor

Traders work before the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on February 28, 2020.

Johannes Eisele | AFP | Getty Images

Futures contracts tied to the major U.S. stock indexes were higher on Wednesday night after the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended its historic 11-year bull market run by closing in a bear market.

Dow futures were up more than 200 points. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures were also higher.

President Donald Trump will deliver an Oval Office speech at 9 p.m. ET in an effort to address questions and concerns about the spread of the novel coronavirus. The president is expected to unveil details of his economic stimulus plan to combat a coronavirus economic slowdown.

The move in the futures came after yet another wild session on Wall Street and the demise of the Dow’s record-setting bull market run that began in March 2009. The blue-chip index fell 5.85% on Wednesday to close at 23553.22, more than 20% below its record close of 29551.42 hit on Feb. 12 and into what is widely considered a bear market.

“The crux of the angst investors are feeling as the coronavirus spreads surrounds what might happen to consumer spending,” wrote Scott Wren, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

“Consumers sitting at home and not out spending money because they fear catching the coronavrius is the ultimate negative outcome,” he added. “It has been the U.S. consumer who has been driving the recovery bus during this long expansion.”

The Dow’s 1,464-point drop on Wednesday was in large part thanks to outsized losses in planemaker Boeing, which fell 18.15% and suffered its worst day on Wall Street since 1974, according to FactSet data. That stock is down more than 50% over the last six months.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fared slightly better on Wednesday, down 4.89% and 4.7% respectively. Those two indexes also remain just outside of bear market territory albeit down at least 19% from their respective record closes. 

Investors continued to blame the spread and economic impact of the coronavirus for the last month’s steep losses. The virus, which has now infected more than 124,000 people worldwide and killed at least 4,589, threatens to disrupt countries like Italy that have taken aggressive action to slow its spread. 

Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte announced late Wednesday that all the country’s stores except pharmacies and groceries will be closed in a move deemed both necessary to safeguard human health and a threat to the country’s output.

Wall Street worries that such measures could tip the global economy into recession, especially if Washington decides the disease is rampant enough in the U.S. to warrant similar measures. The World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic earlier on Wednesday.

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