Stock market news live: Dow posts best weekly gain since 1938, despite Friday drop

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Stocks fell Friday even after the U.S. House of Representatives passed a much-anticipated $2 trillion economic relief package. Earlier Friday morning, a new report showed consumer sentiment tumbled by the most since the financial crisis in March amid the coronavirus outbreak.

By the end of the session, the Dow was off more than 4%, or 900 points. Each of the S&P 500 and Nasdaq shed more than 3%.

But steep gains made earlier in the week still sent the Dow up a total of 12.8% for the week, for its best weekly gain since 1938. The S&P 500 rose 10.3% for its best weekly gain since 2009.

[Click here to read what’s moving markets heading into Monday, March 30]

A day earlier, stocks had ended higher for a third straight session as investors hoped a $2 trillion relief package passed by the U.S. Senate would help offset some of the domestic economic damage dealt by the coronavirus outbreak. Thursday marked the first time the S&P 500 posted three consecutive sessions of advances since mid-February.

The House of Representatives cleared the package Friday afternoon, sending it to President Donald Trump’s desk for signing.

Losses on the three major indices Friday tracked declines in European equities, after EU member countries failed to agree on a concrete plan to address the coronavirus outbreak in the region.

Countries including Italy, Spain and France – those hit hardest by the outbreak – had called for the joint issuance of so-called “coronabonds” to help raise funds through issuance of shared European debt, but other member countries struck down the relief move during last night’s discussions. An announcement that UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tested positive for COVID-19 also weighed on risk assets.

While policymakers around the world have stepped up their efforts to mitigate the economic blow from the virus, the pandemic itself has showed few signs of abating outside of China. Italy, one of the epicenters for the outbreak, reported its largest jump in new cases in the last five days, with new cases Thursday rising by 6,153.

Coronavirus around the world, as of the morning of Friday, March 27
Coronavirus around the world, as of the morning of Friday, March 27

Global cases of the coronavirus topped 585,000 as of Friday afternoon, including 97,000 in the U.S, according to Johns Hopkins data. At that level, the number of cases in the U.S. topped those in China and Italy for the first time, and the domestic death toll from the outbreak surpassed 1,100.

As states across the country remain in or go into lock-down, President Donald Trump sent a letter to governors Thursday suggesting the White House was seeking to create guidelines for individual counties classified as either high, medium or low risk for the outbreak to expand further. Trump has said he wants the country to widely reopen businesses by Easter in mid-April, although health officials have suggested lifting stay-in-place orders by that time could be premature as the coronavirus case count continues to climb.