Stock market news live updates: Stocks rise ahead of Georgia runoff election results

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Stocks rose Tuesday afternoon as investors awaited results from the Georgia Senate runoff elections and nervously eyed worsening COVID-19 trends in the U.S. and abroad.

[Click here to read what’s moving markets heading into Wednesday, Jan. 6]

The Dow pushed higher by more than 150 points, or 0.5%, after dropping 1.25% on Monday for its worst start to a year since 2016. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq were also roughly flat. Other risk assets performed more strongly, and U.S. crude oil prices (CL=F) jumped as much as 5.1% to top $50 per barrel for the first time since February 2020. Bitcoin (BTC-USD) hovered at more than $33,000.

Traders are closely watching developments around Georgia’s Senate runoffs, with these elections set to determine control over the chamber and the balance of power in Congress. So far, investors have largely assumed that Republicans will maintain control of the Senate, albeit with a very narrow majority, given the party’s recent tendency to win Senate seats especially in off-cycle elections. Still, polls so far have shown a razor thin lead for both Democratic candidates. Voting for the elections ends on Tuesday.

Georgia aside, Republicans so far have 50 seats in the Senate to Democrats’ 48, meaning that a Democratic sweep of both seats in the state would give them a majority, since Vice President-elect Kamala Harris would be able to cast tie-breaking votes.

Under a Republican-controlled Congress, President-elect Joe Biden would have limited latitude to advance many of his campaign promises, including raising corporate taxes and minimum wages, and unveiling reforms around education, housing and climate change, which could all impact various pockets of the markets. But under a unified Democratic government, a larger additional stimulus package that could further boost the economy in the near-term might transpire.

“[A Senate with a Democratic majority] would lead to greater fiscal stimulus — we would expect around $600bn more on top of the recently enacted $900bn — but would also likely mean tax increases to finance additional spending,” Goldman Sachs economists led by Jan Hatzius said in a note Tuesday. “Regarding the latter, we would expect that an evenly divided Senate would approve only a fraction of the tax increases the Biden campaign proposed.”

For markets, Oppenheimer strategist John Stoltzfus said in a note Monday he believed a Democratic sweep in Georgia could spark an as much as 10% decline in the S&P 500 from year-end closing prices.

Meanwhile, concerns around COVID-19 picked back up as cases resurged after a holiday lull. The average daily new cases reported across the country over the past seven days totaled more than 210,000, according to data from the New York Times, bringing the total number of infections in the U.S. to nearly 21 million.