US stocks open higher ahead of Biden’s inauguration

The major United States stock indexes all opened on the plus side ahead of Joe Biden’s inauguration as 46th president of the US, driven by hopes that more generous government spending will be unleashed under the new administration.

The major United States stock indexes all opened higher on Wednesday ahead of Joe Biden’s inauguration as the 46th president of the United States, as investors wager that more generous virus relief aid will be unleashed under the new administration.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened up more than 87 points of 0.28 percent at 31,018.40.

The S&P 500 – a proxy for the health of US retirement and college savings accounts – jumped more than 22 points or 0.58 percent at the opening bell on Wall Street.

And the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index opened up more than 139 points or 1,06 percent at 13,336.55 to hit a new record high.

President Donald Trump left the White House on Wednesday morning for the last time during his term and will become the first president in over a century and a half to not attend his successor’s inauguration.

Speaking at a press conference prior to his departure from Washington, DC, Trump touted the strength of the US stock market during his time in office and its comeback from last year’s pandemic lows.

“The stock market is actually substantially higher than it was at its higher point prior to the pandemic,” Trump told reporters, adding “we built it twice.”

While the stock market has bounced back from its pandemic lows to achieve new highs, the nation’s economic recovery is widening long-festering racial and income inequalities and leaving millions of Americans behind.

The recovery also started to stall in the final three months of 2020 as surging COVID-19 infections ushered in business-sapping restrictions.

Biden is inheriting an unemployment rate that stood at 6.7 percent in December, nearly double the pre-pandemic rate of 3.5 percent.

The economy shed 140,000 jobs in December – slamming the breaks on seven straight months of jobs creation – and the weakness has continued into this year with nearly a million workers filing for unemployment benefits with states in the week ending January 9th.

But economists and US stock investors see better days ahead, as investors lay bets that more federal spending on virus relief aid and green infrastructure is in the cards.

Last week, Biden unveiled a proposal for a new, massive $1.9 trillion stimulus package to accelerate the nationwide vaccination drive, and give more financial help to struggling households, small businesses and communities that have born the brunt of the pandemic’s economic fallout.

The measures include an additional $1,400 direct cash transfer to qualifying Americans – in addition to $600 stimulus cheques included in December’s $900bn round of virus relief aid- and boosting the federal weekly top-up to state unemployment benefits from $300 to $400.

Democrats now control both houses of Congress – which ultimately controls the nation’s tax and spending policies – but many Wall Street analysts expect horse-trading with Republicans to chip away at the size and scope of Biden’s proposed stimulus.

A preview of the spending battles that lay ahead emerged on Tuesday during the Senate confirmation hearing for Biden’s nominee for US Treasury Secretary, Janet Yellen.

During the hearing, Republican senators expressed concerns about mounting government deficits to fund virus relief measures.

Yellen, for her part, urged Congress to not dwell on the bill for more stimulus and instead “act big”, warning  that “without further action, we risk a longer, more painful recession now, and long-term scarring of the economy later.”

Source: Thanks AlJazeera.com