Gold logged its biggest percentage gain since May 2009
Stocks began the week deep in the red, as political gridlock drags down Wall Street. Despite the Federal Reserve deploying aggressive new measures to aid markets against the COVID-19 outbreak, the Dow dropped over 800 points at its session lows as the Senate failed twice to negotiate the terms of a massive stimulus package. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq followed the blue-chip index lower, with all three indexes tagging over three-year lows earlier in the day.
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ZTO Express pulled back to a historic bullish trendline.Netflix stock was upgraded to "outperform."Plus, Boeing stock upgraded; the pessimists are out on this Verizon rival; and Apple rescinded their two-device limit.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI - 18,591.93) finished 582.1 points, or 3%, lower for the day. Boeing led the four gainers with a 11.6% win, while United Technologies (UTX) paced the 26 laggards with a 9.2% fall.
The S&P 500 Index (SPX - 2,237.40) lost 67.5 points, or 2.9%,while the Nasdaq Composite (IXIC - 6,860.67) shed 18.8 points, or .3%.
The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX - 61.59) lost 4.5 points, or 6.7%.
There are no earnings of note to report today.
Oil had a surprising gain today amid hopes that Congress is close to a deal on a massive stimulus bill that will help combat the slowdown caused by COVID-19. April-dated crude rose a modest 73 cents, or 3.2%, to settle at $23.36 per barrel.
Gold futures gained $83 or 5.6%, to settle at $1,567.60 per ounce.The surge for the precious metal comes after the Fed took aggressive steps to combat the impact felt by the coronavirus pandemic. It was gold's largest dollar gain ever, and biggest percentage rise since May 2009.