Stock market news live updates: Stocks sink as September gloom continues

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Stocks sank Monday but pared losses in the last stretch of trading during the regular session. Still, the three major indices extended the past few weeks’ worth of declines, as concerns over stagnating coronavirus case improvement stoked fears of more lockdowns, and as political uncertainty nudged investors away from risk assets.

[Click here to read what’s moving markets heading into Tuesday, September 22]

The Dow fell more than 500 points, or 1.8%, adding to a cumulative more than 350-point slide in the index from Thursday to Friday last week. The Dow was off by as many as 942 points, or 3.4%, at its worst point during the session.

The S&P 500 dropped 1.2% and at session lows was down about 9.8% from its recent closing high from Sept. 2 to come within striking distance of falling into a correction, or a drop of at least 10% from a recent high. The index logged a four-session losing streak, or its longest since February.

“So far, the market has over-shot our expectations for a 4% to 6% haircut from recent highs on near-term extended valuations, as well as economic and Covid-19 risks. That said, the declines through last Friday are not all that surprising,” John Stoltzfus, chief investment strategist for Oppenheimer Asset Management, said in a note Monday. “It is that September — traditionally but not always — can be tough month for stocks. The S&P 500 had delivered a massive rally rising 60% from the lows on March 23 through September 2. Markets tend to overshoot to the upside as well as to the downside.”

Other analysts pointed to developments – and in some cases, a lack of progress – in Washington, D.C. as contributors to the pullback.

“The root causes of the recent drawdown in US large caps are [first], recent weakness in real-time economic indicators, [second] the lack of movement on a fiscal stimulus package that could offset #1 and [third] the Fed’s lackluster forecasts in its Wednesday release of the Summary of Economic Projections,” Nicholas Colas, Co-founder of DataTrek Research, wrote in a note Monday morning.

Shares of major bank stocks including JPMorgan Chase (JPM), HSBC (HSBC) and Deutsche Bank (DB) slid following a report that they and other financial institutions for decades facilitated fund transactions used for allegedly criminal activities, and failed to report suspicious activity.

Meanwhile, heavily weighted big tech stocks Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT) reversed earlier losses to trade slightly higher. Oracle (ORCL) shares rose more than 1.5% after the company announced Friday that it was chosen to become TikTok’s “secure cloud technology provider,” and in doing so take a 12.5% stake in the social media service.