The benchmark indices fell nearly 3% on Thursday, erasing all the gains made a day earlier on optimism over the Rs 20-trillion rescue package announced by the government
Sectorally, IT stocks took the biggest knock as the Nifty IT index declined 3.5 per cent to 13,293.70 levels. Nifty Bank lost 566 points or nearly 3 per cent to 19,068.50 levels
A total of 18 companies including Biocon, Escorts, and Manappuram Finance are scheduled to announce their results today
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 496.84 points, or 2.09 per cent, at 23,267.94, the S&P 500 was down 52.72 points, or 1.84 per cent, at 2,817.40 (at 9:37 pm IST).
It will take some time for the US economy to get back to where it was, Powell said in a webcast, and called for more fiscal stimulus
He said the US economy may depend on more fiscal stimulus to fight the economic impacts of the coronavirus
For the sake of context, the financial crisis of 2008 had seen the S&P 500 fall by more than 50 per cent from its peak
Though the calendar gives no details on what was discussed, it suggests an explosion of activity at the US central bank unseen since the darkest days of the 2007-2008 financial crisis
The Dow finished up 21% from its Monday low, establishing it in a bull market, according to a widely used definition. It was the index's strongest three-day percentage increase since 1931
The Bank of Japan just said it will hold an emergency meeting Monday, instead of the March 18-19 scheduled one
US stocks initially advanced after the announcement before sliding into losses, while the 10-year treasury yield neared 1 per cent
The broader index also witnessed one of its most volatile sessions ever, swinging nearly 400 points, or 3.6%
Central bank keeps key overnight lending rate remains at 1.50%-1.75%; chief says policy appropriate and not on preset course.
The global equity markets overall may prove directionless in 2020, but individual stocks still look capable of powering ahead. Investors will need to focus on stock-picking
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell reasserted the independence of the US central bank during White House talks with President Donald Trump on Monday, the Fed said. Powell attended the meeting, which comes amid an unprecedented campaign of public attacks on the central bank, at the invitation of the president, and was joined by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, the Fed said in a statement. In a tweet, Trump, who has lambasted Powell in harsh, personal terms over monetary policy, said the meeting was "good & cordial," adding that "everything was discussed" including interest rates, inflation, foreign exchange and the Fed's balance sheet policies. The Fed, however, said Powell's comments were consistent with last week's congressional testimony and did not concern "expectations for monetary policy," except to say it will depend entirely on new economic information. "Finally, Chair Powell said that he and his colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee will set monetary ...
Job growth has slowed this year, averaging 167,000 per month compared with an average monthly gain of 223,000 in 2018
Fed officials reduced interest rates by a quarter-percentage point Wednesday and signaled a pause in further cuts unless the economic outlook changes materially
The Fed said it will 'monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook as it assesses the appropriate path' of its target interest rate
The outburst followed the release of the Institute for Supply Management's factory index, which slipped to its lowest level since June 2009
There are limits to what central banks can achieve