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Top 5 Things to Know in the Market on Thursday, June 25th

Published 06/25/2020, 06:21 AM
Updated 06/25/2020, 06:28 AM

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- A surge in new cases of coronavirus in the U.S. leads to New York imposing a quarantine on out-of-state arrivals, while a closely-watched academic model raises its forecast for the U.S. death toll to 180,000 by October. That's putting the skids under stocks, which are struggling to bounce from Wednesday's sell-off, the worst in two weeks. Markets face a challenge from the release of the weekly jobless claims reports and first-quarter GDP. It's also putting the skids under oil and even gold. Meanwhile in Europe, payments company Wirecard becomes the first-ever DAX member to file for bankruptcy, but Lufthansa averts the same fate after shareholders accept the terms of a government bailout. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, June 25th.

1. U.S. epidemic spirals out of control again

The U.S. recorded over 34,000 new cases of Covid-19, approaching levels last seen at the high point of the epidemic in April.

New York, Connecticut and New Jersey to impose a 14-day quarantine on visitors arriving from the worst-affected states, a new development given that the U.S. had only previously imposed such restrictions on arrivals from abroad.

Florida and Texas both reported record new case numbers, while officials in Houston said that the city’s intensive care facilities would be maxed out today.

The University of Washington in Seattle raised its forecast for the U.S. death toll to 180,000 by October from around 122,000 currently.

2. Jobless claims, GDP, Durable Goods data all due

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The U.S. will present its weekly figures for initial and continuing jobless claims at 8:30 AM ET (1230 GMT), with the number of new claims again expected to have fallen only marginally to 1.30 million, from 1.508 million a week earlier.

Continuing claims are expected to have fallen below 20 million for the first time since April – but that was also true ahead of the previous week’s report.   

The government will also announce revisions to its estimate of first-quarter gross domestic product. The number is of largely historical interest, given that the coronavirus barely touched the U.S. economy in March. Durable goods orders for May, to be released at the same time, will be more up-to-date information on the state of the economy, but will also be subject to high short-term volatility.

3. Stocks set to open mixed; Fed stress tests eyed

U.S. stock markets are set to open mixed after suffering their worst day since June 11 in response to the surge in Covid-19 cases across much of the country.

By 6:30 AM ET (1030 GMT), the Dow Jones 30 futures contract was down 106 points or 0.4%, while the S&P 500 futures contract was down 0.3% and the Nasdaq 100 futures contract was outperforming modestly, being up less than 0.1%.

Stocks in focus on Thursday will include the banks, who face the results of the Fed’s annual stress tests later in the day. The open question is whether the likelihood of a rise in bad loans due to the pandemic leads the Fed to impose restrictions on shareholder payouts and staff bonuses.

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There will also be quarterly updates from JC Penney (OTC:JCPNQ), currently negotiating its way through Chapter 11 proceedings, and – after the closing bell – Nike (NYSE:NKE).

4. Wirecard succumbs, while Lufthansa accepts bailout

German payments company Wirecard said it had filed for bankruptcy protection, three days after admitting to a $2.1 billion hole in its accounts.  

The move anticipated the likely cancellations of key partnerships with companies such as Visa (NYSE:V), Mastercard (NYSE:MA) and JCB after the exposure of what appears to have been massive fraud. Former CEO Markus Braun was arrested and released on bail earlier this week.

Wirecard, once a darling of both retail and institutional investors, had joined the benchmark DAX index in 2018, forcing out Commerzbank (DE:CBKG) in a what struck many as a sign of the times. It’s the first sitting member of the DAX to file for bankruptcy.   

Another German ‘champion’, however, avoided the same fate on Wednesday as Lufthansa (DE:LHAG) shareholders swung behind a 9 billion euro government-sponsored bailout.

5. Risk-aversion pushes dollar high, commodities lower

The rise in risk-aversion prompted by the fears of a new wave of lockdowns pushed the dollar higher and commodities lower.

By 6:30 AM, the dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of developed-market peers, was up 0.2% at 97.34, only 0.2% away from what would be its high for the month. However, its biggest gains came as bounces from oversold levels against the safe haven yen and Swiss franc.

U.S. crude oil prices, by contrast, fell 1.0% to $37.61 a barrel and are down some 7.5% from the highs they hit earlier in the week on hopes that the physical crude market is rebalancing. Brent futures fell 0.7% to hold just above the $40 a barrel mark.

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Gold futures, meanwhile, fell 0.4% to $1,768.50, again underlining a higher correlation to risk assets as it assumes a greater part in leveraged retail portfolios that are susceptible to short-term pressure in equities.

Latest comments

USA 2020, president Donald Duck, virus and deaths increase like nowhere in the world, racial killings, homophobics and everyone is afraid that his 2 Apple stocks will go down due to communist media... 3rd world country…
It looks like a disconnection between article contents and today's market. The latter looks stronger than one painted here.
Wonder how the "nah just another flu" crowd will try and spin these growing new cases numbers?
******...have a mortality rate and outcome far less
if your family members were included in this "low mortality rate" you would have a different opinion.. Now back to your cave, and stay there, it's a matter of public health
should we ban driving too? You know, due the amount of accident fatalities
As buy and hold long term investors these days are great for buying. Traders are facing very difficult times. keep focused and remember time in the markets beats timing the markets.
Could not agree more.
I made money selling the market short yesterday with a put option on SPY. A lot it's easier making money when the news is this bad and as a matter of fact easier and quicker than when the markers are rising??? Especially near all time highs.??? Randall Wagner, you obviously have an investor over trader bias but short sellers and traders do make money and more than investors and quicker. Please !!!! Active traders with experience know the markets better than most and can and will ******the socks off of most investors on performance!!!!
New York, Connecticut and New Jersey to impose a 14-day quarantine on visitors arriving from the worst-affected states - will the most noble tens of thousands of nationally mobile and active Antifa and BLM acitvists continue being exempt from these new rules for all the working and tax paying citizens?
spot on
Your job is to pay taxes to support poor people reproducing and thus increase poverty...need to know anything else?
markets historically go up so if you invest to hold you can't lose money. only short sellers and day traders are losing
I don't disagree about market historically goes up, but it can't be up forever. Invest to hold can't lose money? I have personally experience it multiple times. see what happen at one of the components of DAX? How about Lufthansa? In investing, there is no guarantees... Don't get caught in self-fulfilling prophecy
Only day traders and short sellers losing money? Speak for yourself buddy :) Better yet, stop trading stocks before you lose your life savings
If you bought the market anytime in the past 2 weeks, I can guarantee you will lose money. But good luck to everyone. Just keep grounded in reality.
Going to hospital is risky now cause the C19. Panic sales are coming if no good news soon. Can go either way.
At the end of Q1, this week is the sell off week in which companies are selling their own stocks.
Funny how we were told the Fed and Mnuchin would restrict companies from buying there own stocks which they did anyway. This bubble will burst. No doubt about it.
Tax payers money flows into corporations, not into employees’ mouths, Rather into shareholders’ and executives’s bank accounts
Its not about tax payers anymore...Its about central bank and govt planned control economy through debt issuance which when it bursts will reveal the US has destroyed future generations out of pure unmitigated greed.   The next ten years as the baby boomers get sicker in retirement will be the death knell..... We got ten years max and then boom!!!
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