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Equities New York Outlook: Fears of viruses continue to slide

In the fight against the second wave of the pandemic, for example, the French government wants to tighten its measures. Analyst Milan Cutkovic from trading house Axi said the market has begun to incorporate further lockdowns – whether partially or completely – into the courses. There was still no question of panic on the trading floor, but the nervousness was increasing significantly. In Germany, too, there is talk of a tougher course in the fight against the virus.

According to experts at Societe Generale, investors’ risk aversion continues under these circumstances. The USA has also been gripped by the renewed wave of infections for some time. According to Jürgen Michels, chief economist at BayernLB, there is still uncertainty in the markets about the approaching US elections. Experts see a stuck game in the election result as a further significant risk.

The company received mixed news on Wednesday. Microsoft’s stock could not escape the market weakness before the market with a discount of 2.6 percent, even if the software company posted a profit jump in its first fiscal quarter. There were critical voices about the outlook, which according to the amber expert Mark Moerdler is only cautious. Investors would have hoped for a little more here, according to the expert.

The aircraft manufacturer Boeing, meanwhile, remains badly affected by the virus crisis and the problem plane 737 Max. However, in the third quarter it was not as deeply in the red as feared, which investors took into account to mitigate. With a comparatively moderate minus of 0.8 percent, the shares were able to escape the market-wide selling pressure to some extent.

One candidate with clearly positive investor feedback was General Electric with a pre-IPO increase of 5.4 percent. On a reported basis, there was another billion-dollar loss in the third quarter, but with its adjusted earnings per share, the conglomerate surprisingly just barely made it into the black. There was also positive market opinion on the inflow of funds.

Otherwise, an obvious winner of the corona crisis also reported with UPS. The logistics group continued to benefit from the package boom in the third quarter, but this did not help stocks rise. At times it looked like an increase, but most recently the shares slipped into the red with about two percent before the trading day ./tih/jha/

(AWP)

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