Markets

Stock market live Tuesday: Dow soars 2,100 points, biggest jump in 80 years, stimulus close

Second-quarter GDP hit will be biggest we have ever experienced, says Credit Suisse chief strategist
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Second-quarter GDP hit will be biggest we have ever experienced, says Credit Suisse chief strategist

All eyes are on Congress closing in on a much-needed stimulus bill to rescue the economy from the coronavirus damage. The stock market staged a huge turnaround with the Dow posting its best day since 1933. Here's what happened:

4:54 pm: Energy and financials sectors lead stocks higher in market's epic rally

The energy and financials sectors led stocks higher on Tuesday, rallying 16.3% and 12.75%, respectively, as investors await a stimulus package from Washington, aimed at combating the coronavirus-induced market sell-off. It was the energy sector's best day since Oct. 2008, and stocks got a boost as oil prices moved higher. Exxon and Chevron, the U.S.' two largest oil companies gained 12.69% and 22.7%, respectively. In the financials sector, Morgan Stanley rallied 19.45%, while Bank of America jumped 16.3%. Wells Fargo gained 14.5%, and JPMorgan was up 11.8%.Energy and financials leading the way is a departure from how the market has been trading as of late. Over the last month the two sectors are the laggards, with energy falling 45.5%, while financials has shed 32.8%. - Stevens

4:48 pm: Dow's historic rebound

Tuesday's surge marks a historic rally for the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average. It was the benchmark's fifth best percentage gain in history and the largest point gain ever. — Li, Rattner

4:40 pm: Investors says one key piece is missing for a bottom

Many on Wall Street believe absent a clear sign that the coronavirus is contained, rallies like the 10% violent upswing in the Dow Tuesday will come and go. "We're going to need to have to see the infections pass an inflection point," said Vincent Reinhart, chief economist at BNY Asset Management. The market has received help from monetary policy and looks on its way to aid from the fiscal side, but market experts see no clear path forward without signs the coronavirus is passing. – Li, Cox

4:39 pm: Stocks hit the hardest by coronavirus sell-off soar

Stocks that have been hit the hardest by the coronavirus outbreak, including cruise lines, airlines, and hotels, all jumped during Tuesday's trading session as investors hope for a stimulus bill, and as President Trump said he would like to have the economy open again come Easter. Norwegian Cruise Line saw the largest jump, gaining 42%. Royal Caribbean and Carnival Corporation rose 22% and 14%, respectively. When it comes to the airlines American was the outperformer, rising 35.8%. United Airlines gained 25%, while Delta Air Lines jumped 21%. Airline maker Boeing gained 20%.Meanwhile, hotel stocks were also on the move, with Marriott jumping 12.8%, while Hilton gained 9.5%. - Stevens

4:30 pm: Market rally by the numbers

  • Advancing stocks outpaced Declining stocks 2,788 to 242 or more than 12 to 1 on the NYSE 
  • Dow closed up 11.37% for its best day since March 15, 1933
  • Dow had biggest point gain ever of 2,112.98
  • Dow is 30.9% below its intraday all-time high of 29,568.57 from Feb. 12
  • S&P closed up 9.38% for its best day since Oct 28, 2008
  • S&P had the second biggest point gain ever gaining 209.93 points
  • S&P is 27.88% below its intraday all-time high of 3,393.52 from Feb.19
  • NASDAQ closed up 8.12% for its best day since March 13
  • NASDAQ is 24.6% from its intraday all-time high of 9,838.37 from Feb. 19
  • Gold (APR) settled up 5.95% at 1,660.8 for its best day since March 19, 2009 when gold gained 7.84%, hitting a high today of 1,698 its highest level since Mar 9th when gold traded as high as 1,704.3
  • Month to date: Gold is up 6.01%
  • Year to date:  Gold is up 9.04% — Francolla

4:01 pm: Down ends the session up 11%, posts best day since 1933

Stocks closed on their session highs on Tuesday as investors grew optimistic about a sweeping fiscal stimulus deal to prop up the economy hurt by the coronavirus pandemic. The Dow soared 2,100 points, or 11.2%, to post its best day since March 1933. It's also the largest point gain for the 30-stock benchmark ever. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq jumped 9.3% and 8.1%, respectively. — Li

3:42 pm: Stocks jump to session highs

With just 20 minutes of trading left, stocks accelerated gains with the Dow jumping 1,940 points, or 10.44%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are up 8.8% and 7.6%, respectively. - Stevens

3:20 pm: Homebuilders ETF (ITB) on pace for best day since 2008

The iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (ITB) jumped more than 14%, putting it on track for its best day since 2008. New home sales came in at 765,000 for February, which topped analysts expectations of 743,000, according to estimates from FactSet. The January number was also revised to 800,000 from 764,000. Stocks leading the ETF higher included KB Home and Toll Brothers, each of which gained 32%. - Stevens

2:58 pm: Final hour of trading: Stocks rally on hopes of fiscal stimulus

With roughly one hour left in the trading session, the Dow was up 1,700 points, or 9.1%, as investors cheered the apparent progress made in Washington over potential fiscal stimulus amid the coronavirus outbreak. Those gains lifted the Dow off of its lowest levels since late 2016. —Imbert

2:52 pm: Retail investors sell equities at record pace

Amid the coronavirus-induced market sell-off, retail investors have sold stocks at a record pace, according to Saut Strategy founder Jeffrey Saut. He said that Monday was the single largest day of selling in his data's history, and that it was the eighth straight day of retail investors offloading equities. Over that stretch, investors sold a total of $5.5 billion worth of stocks, which is roughly $700 million per day. "For context, in the Q418 sell-off they [retail investors] sold for 24 straight days, for a total of $8.5bn," he said. Many experts say retail investors should try to resist the urge to time the market, which is difficult even for professional investors. Selling at the wrong time can not only lock in losses, but also puts investors at risk of missing the market's best days, which typically follow the worst, according to analysis from Bank of America. Additionally, Goldman Sachs found that "households," which they define as retail investors as well as some professionals such as hedge funds, are the only subset of shareholders that have "sold equities during each bear market since 1950." – Stevens, Imbert

2:34 pm: Trump, Pence held call on economy with investors including Paul Tudor Jones

President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence held a call with top money managers to discuss the coronavirus impact on the economy, according to sources. Investors on the call included Third Point's Dan Loeb, Blackstone's Stephen Schwarzman, Vista Equity's Robert Smith, Intercontinental Exchange's Jeffrey Sprecher and Paul Tudor Jones, hedge fund manager and co-founder of JUST Capital. The call with some of Wall Street's top investors and hedge fund leaders was focused on how they are viewing markets and the U.S. economy, less about potential actions the administration could take to mitigate the impact of the outbreak. the people familiar with the matter said. — Franck

2:06 pm: Coca-Cola CEO says supply chain is 'creaking around the world' due to coronavirus

Coca-Cola is feeling the strain of the coronavirus pandemic on its supply chain. "The supply chain is creaking around the world. There are flash points when it's getting a little harder to get ingredients through, whether it's delays at the borders, the big changes in channel mix," CEO James Quincey said Tuesday on CNBC's "Squawk on the Street." In the United States, the beverage giant is seeing heightened demand from grocery stores and e-commerce channels for its drinks as consumers stockpile food and beverages in preparation for spending more time at home. As a result, the company is focusing on producing the products most important to its business, such as water, soda and sports drinks. —Amelia Lucas

1:56 pm: Trump says he wants to 'reopen' the economy by Easter

President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he'd like to "reopen" the U.S. economy by Easter despite the rapid coronavirus contagion that's forced many states to shutter their businesses. Trump's remarks came in a Fox News "virtual town hall" event at the White House. Easter is April 12, less than three weeks away. "We're opening up this incredible country. Because we have to do that. I would love to have it open by Easter," Trump said.
"I would love to have that. It's such an important day for other reasons, but I'd love to make it an important day for this. I would love to have the country opened up, and rarin' to go by Easter." — Franck

1:49 pm: Italy coronavirus deaths rise by 743 in a day, lifting death toll to 6,820

The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy has grown by 743 to 6,820 in the last 24 hours, the head of the Civil Protection Agency said on Tuesday, reversing a decline in fatalities seen over the last two days. On Monday 602 people died. That followed 650 deaths on Sunday and 793 on Saturday — the highest daily figure since the contagion came to light on Feb. 21. The total number of confirmed cases in Italy rose to 69,176 from a previous 63,927, an increase of 8.2%, in line with Monday's growth rate, the Civil Protection Agency said. Traders are watching Italy coronavirus numbers to get an idea of a timeline when U.S. cases may peak. —Reuters

1:28 pm: Lawmakers edge toward deal on $25 billion in cash coronavirus aid for airlines

Lawmakers on Capitol Hill were close to a deal that would include $25 billion in grants for airlines struggling from the impact of the coronavirus, a person briefed on the discussions said Tuesday. The aid would be a resounding victory for airlines, their lobbyists and the labor unions that argued loans alone would not be enough to preserve jobs. Airline shares surged on news that lawmakers were nearing a deal. In early-afternoon trading, American was up 33%, United rose 23% and Delta was nearly 20% higher. — Josephs 

1:22 pm: Jobless claims will be north of 3 million for last week, Morgan Stanley says

Morgan Stanley predicts 3.4 million people filed for unemployment last week, the firm's chief U.S. economist, Ellen Zentner, said on "The Exchange." "That's a one-week number … That's incredible," she said. "What we're now focused on is what the shape of growth will look like on the other side of that as the social distancing measures start to recede." - Stankiewicz

12:42 pm: Stocks extend gains, Dow now on track for best day since 2008

The market comeback accelerated in early afternoon trading with the Dow jumping more than 1,800 points, or 9.7%, on pace for its best day since 2008. Chevron rallied more than 19%, the biggest winner in the 30-stock benchmark. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite soared 8.5% and 7.3%, respectively. — Li

12:00 pm: VIX falls

The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) — Wall Street's preferred fear gauge — dropped more than 3 points, or 6.4%, to 57.63. The VIX eclipsed its financial crisis high last week, closing at 82.69. To be sure, the index is still high relative to other periods in history and still suggests sharp moves may be in store for stocks. —Imbert

11:55 am: Markets at midday: Stimulus deal hopes send Dow up 8%

Around midday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up more than 8%, or roughly 1,500 as investors cheered increasing prospects of U.S. lawmakers moving forward with a coronavirus economic stimulus bill. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told CNBC's Jim Cramer there is "real optimism" in Congress over a stimulus deal being reached. —Imbert

11:15 am: Cruise stocks soar

Shares of Royal Caribbean, Carnival, and Norwegian Cruise Line each jumped 27%, 21% and 32% respectively. Investors in cruise stocks were hopeful that a U.S. stimulus package, which Congress hopes to agree to on Tuesday, will include bailouts for the industry that has been hit hard by the coronavirus crisis. - Sheetz

11:07 am: Analyst calls of the day

Analysts upgraded a bunch of stocks as markets look for a rebound, including Nvidia, Tesla, Zillow & more

  • Needham upgraded Nvidia to buy from hold.
  • Morgan Stanley upgraded Virgin Galactic to overweight from equal weight.
  • DA Davidson upgraded Zillow to buy from neutral.
  • Wedbush upgraded Deckers to outperform from neutral.
  • UBS upgraded Tesla to neutral from sell.
  • UBS downgraded Ford to neutral from buy.
  • Raymond James upgraded Cigna to strong buy from outperform.
  • Goldman Sachs upgraded Intel to neutral from sell.
  • Telsey upgraded Dollar Tree to outperform from market perform.
  • Argus downgraded Tesla to hold from buy.
  • Bernstein upgraded Spotify to market perform from underperform.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here. — Bloom

10:52 am: Goldman says buy gold now: 'Time to buy the currency of last resort'

Gold prices jumped more than 6% on Tuesday, putting the precious metal on track for its best day in 11 years, and Goldman Sachs believes the Federal Reserve's latest stimulus package will prompt investors to seek out the safe-haven asset and drive prices even higher. "Time to buy the currency of last resort," Jeffrey Currie, Goldman Sachs' global head of commodities research, succinctly summed up in a note to clients Monday night.The firm is "increasingly confident" about its 12-month target of $1,800 per ounce, which is roughly 8% higher than where gold futures currently trade. —Stevens

10:28 am: Stock market 'will be crushed' if relief deal stalls, Cramer says

CNBC's Jim Cramer said after his interview with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on "Squawk on the Street" that it was urgent that the Democrats and Republicans reach a deal on economic relief on Tuesday. "Obviously, if they don't come together in the next 24 hours it's a different world for all of us," Cramer said. Cramer took issue with some of the items Pelosi says she wants included in the bill but said he expected an agreement to be reached. "Anything that advances the ball is something with neutral language. That said, the Speaker is a complete pro at getting things done and knows that the country will feel very let down, and obviously the markets will be crushed. If I were a betting person, and felt like it was okay to go in when the S&P was up 5.85%, you better believe there's going to be a deal today." — Pound

10:26 am: Rally accelerates on stimulus deal hopes, Dow now up 1,400 points

The market comeback gained steam in morning trading with the Dow jumping more than 1,400 points. The S&P 500 popped 6.6% and the Nasdaq rose 6.2%. Optimism is rising that Congress can reach an agreement on a coronavirus stimulus plan in the next few hours. — Li

10:21 am: Airline stocks surge on hope of a stimulus bill

Shares of United, Delta, American and Southwest each rose at least 10% in early trading as investors heard optimism from Congress on a coronavirus stimulus deal being reached on Tuesday. The stocks of the four big U.S. airlines have been decimated in recent weeks by the slowdown in travel. — Sheetz

10:09 am: The S&P 500 could be back to 2,800 soon and all-time highs by year-end, Fundstrat's Tom Lee says

While the stock market feels "broken" in recent weeks amid the coronavirus sell-off, equity strategist Tom Lee of Fundstrat sees a V-shape recovery ahead, with the S&P 500 recovering half of its losses as soon as next month and potentially all of its losses later this year. If a market bottom occurs this week, the S&P 500 could trek back to the 2,800 level as soon as April, said Lee. This would mean the index rallies about 25% in the next few weeks. This is still well off the S&P 500′s all time high of 3,393.52 on Feb. 19.

Fundstrat looked at 10 stock market drawdowns of about 30% since 1920 and found that the time needed to recover half of the losses during those pullbacks, was half the duration of the decline, the firm said. The median ratio for recovery is 0.5x, the most recent example being in 2002 and during the 2008-2009 financial crisis. "In 2020, this means, a six week decline would require 3 weeks to recover 50% back," said Lee, landing the S&P 500 at 2,800 as soon as April. A 100% recovery take on average three to four months, meaning a 3,400 around summertime. – Fitzgerald

9:47 am: Speaker Nancy Pelosi tells CNBC there is 'real optimism' on virus deal

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told CNBC's Jim Cramer that there's "real optimism" that Congress can reach a stimulus deal to combat the impact of COVID-19 within the next few hours. The California Democrat has critiqued versions of the GOP's developing legislation for what she says is too little support for workers and too much support for corporations. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin are leading the effort on Capitol Hill to finalize the stimulus bill. — Franck

9:45 am: South Korea stocks surge 

The iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY) popped 11.8% on Tuesday, on pace for its best day since Nov 21, 2008 when the EWY gained 18.79%.  The ETF consists of 110 large and mid-sized companies in South Korea. — Francolla, Li

9:42 am: G7 finance ministers, central bankers pledge to do 'whatever is necessary'

The key financial leaders from G7 nations said in a statement Tuesday that they will do "whatever is necessary to restore confidence and economic growth and to protect jobs, businesses, and the resilience of the financial system."In addition to major efforts by the Federal Reserve, other central banks around the world have also announced major programs to help support economies during the pandemic, including the European Central Bank and the Bank of England.The central banks "pledge to maintain expansionary policies for as long as needed and stand ready to take further action, using the full range of instruments consistent with our mandates," the statement said. — Pound

9:31 am: Dow jumps 1,100 points at the open

Major stock averages opened Tuesday's session in the green on hopes for a massive fiscal stimulus deal. The Dow climbed 1,100 points after hitting its lowest closing level since November 2016 on Monday. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite rose 5.1% and 4.8%, respectively. — Li

9:09 am: Gold futures pop 6% amid extraordinary central bank actions

Futures contracts tied to gold popped more than 6.5%. Gold prices are now up 12% this week alone after the Fed pledged unlimited asset purchases to support the markets, the latest in extraordinary central bank actions across the globe to fight off a coronavirus-induced recession. Investors are betting the central bank actions will lead to broad currency debasement and possible inflation, leaving gold as the best alternative.— Melloy

8:12 am: Chevron CEO says the dividend is the company's No. 1 priority and is 'very secure'

Energy companies are coming under pressure as oil prices sink, but Chevron CEO Michael Wirth said the company has no plans to slash its dividend. "Our dividend is our number one priority and it's very secure," he said Tuesday on CNBC's "Squawk Box." "We're taking actions to preserve cash. It will have some impact on production in the near term, but we've stayed with our financial priorities, which include protecting the dividend."

On Tuesday the oil giant said it will cut its capital spending plans for 2020 by 20% and suspend its buyback program in an effort to reduce costs. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude prices have been nearly cut in half over the last month as oil gets hit on both the demand and supply side. "This is the fourth time in my career I've seen prices drop by more than 50% in a very short period of time. We've been here before, we know what to do, we're taking action," Wirth said. — Stevens

8:03 am: Analyst Dick Bove sees 'major' rally, these banks to benefit

Stimulus from the Federal Reserve and Congress will lead to a "major market rally [that] is likely to occur immediately" and will benefit bank stocks, Odeon Capital banking analyst Dick Bove says. Specifically, Bove said he likes JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America among the big banks and M&T Bank and SVB Financial among the regionals. Also, he lists preferred shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Finally, he upgraded Wells Fargo and Comerica from sell to hold. Bove last week estimated that banks as a sector could see an earnings drop of 90% this year, and he said in his Tuesday note that he has not changed that outlook though the current situation presents a trading opportunity. – Cox

7:48 am: Rising hopes for a massive stimulus deal

Senate leaders and the Trump administration are moving closer to reaching an agreement on a $2 trillion stimulus deal to blunt the negative economic impact from the coronavirus pandemic. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer said he expects an agreement on Tuesday. "We expect to have an agreement tomorrow morning," Schumer told reporters Monday night. "There are still a few little differences. Neither of us think they are in any way going to get in the way of a final agreement." Negotiations on the bill were set to continue Tuesday morning. Democrats have twice blocked the Senate Republican rescue plan.— Li

7:45 am: Morgan Stanley says to buy Virgin Galactic's stock

The firm upgraded Virgin Galactic back to overweight from equal-weight, with the stock below $13 after topping $40 last month. Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said that "the world has changed ... however, the story and the balance sheet remains intact." He added that Virgin Galactic has "a healthy cash position" of about $500 million and an estimated $16 million per month cash burn, so the space tourism company has over 2 1/2 years of runway. —Sheetz

7:30 am: Travel, airline stocks surge

Some of the stocks worst hit in the coronavirus sell-off have gained steam in pre-market trading Tuesday. With potential relief for the aerospace industry getting closer, Delta Airlines rose 9.6% pre-market, while United climbed 8.9%. Boeing gained 9.8%. Gambling stocks Wynn Resorts and MGM Resorts jumped 7.5% and 9.3%, respectively. Royal Caribbean's stock surged 8.6%, while shares of hotel company Hilton rose 7.4%. Darden Restaurants, down about 60% for the year, gained nearly 8%. — Pound

7:22 am: Coronavirus global cases top 387,000

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases around the world has surpassed 387,000 with deaths breaking above 16,000, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. In the U.S. alone, cases have shot up to more than 46,000 while deaths total nearly 600. Washington State Gov. Jay Inslee issued a stay-at-home order on Monday to curb the virus outbreak. In the UK, residents are now in lockdown. — Imbert

7:20 am: Trump says US businesses will reopen 'fairly soon'

President Donald Trump is eager to get U.S. businesses operating again even as his administration battles the coronavirus and health officials are encouraging Americans to stay home. During a news briefing Monday, Trump vowed, "At some point we're going to open up our country, and it will be fairly soon." Asked whether that would be weeks or months, he said, "I'm not looking at months." The U.S. has seen 46,450 coronavirus cases so far and nearly 600 deaths. – Cox

7:15 am: Stock futures hit 'limit up' 

Stocks are set to rally as optimism rose that a fiscal stimulus deal could be reached as soon as Tuesday. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 930 points, or 5%, hitting the so-called "limit up" levels, the upper trading curb mandated by the exchange to tame volatility. Contracts on the S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 were also up 5% and "limit up." The S&P 500 SPDR ETF was up 5.3% in premarket trading.

The premarket moves followed another painful day for stocks with the Dow hitting its lowest closing level since November 2016 and wiping out its Trump-era gains briefly.  — Li

With reporting from CNBC's Thomas Franck, Jeff Cox, Maggie Fitzgerald, Michael Bloom, John Melloy, Gina Francolla, Pippa Stevens and Michael Sheetz.

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