Stock Market Today: Dow, S&P Live Updates for November 20, 2020



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Asia stocks outperform the world as virus resurgence hurts the US and Europe

Photographer: Kiyoshi Ota / Bloomberg

US futures fell in Asian trading on Friday after a clash between Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and the Federal Reserve over their emergency loan facilities. Asian stocks looked poised for a quiet opening.

The S&P 500 contracts were withdrawn after the Trump administration and the Fed publicly disagreed on whether to extend the pandemic programs. Tech stocks had driven US benchmarks higher as investors weighed the impact of tighter restrictions against viruses against the prospect of a vaccine launch in the coming months. Stocks of companies that were on the verge of performing well during the lockdowns performed better. Futures changed little in Japan, Australia and Hong Kong.

Treasury yields fell and the dollar fell after weekly U.S. jobless claims rose more than expected. Gold extended a slide amid a slump in bullion-backed exchange-traded funds. Tesla Inc. hit a record as investors bet the global auto market will be dominated by electric cars for decades to come.

Benchmark Treasury yields return to 0.80%

Mnuchin on Thursday sought the return of unspent funds from the Fed’s emergency loan facilities, but the central bank declined, saying the programs played a vital role. Mnuchin sought a 90-day extension for four programs, but requested that others expire as scheduled on Dec. 31 and that the Fed return $ 455 billion to the Treasury so that Congress can spend the money elsewhere.

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