• Home
  • Mail
  • News
  • Finance
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Search
  • Mobile
  • More...
YAHOO_FINANCE
  • Sign in
  • Mail
    Sign in to view your mail
Finance Home
    • Coronavirus
    • Watchlists
    • My Portfolio
    • Screeners
    • Premium
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Personal Finance
    • Videos
    • News
    • Tech
    U.S. markets closed
    • S&P 500
      2,386.13
      -324.89(-11.98%)

    • Dow 30
      20,188.52
      -2,997.10(-12.93%)

    • Nasdaq
      6,904.59
      -970.28(-12.32%)

    Wall Street prepares as coronavirus gets closer to home

    By Elizabeth Dilts Marshall and Sinéad Carew
    ReutersMarch 3, 2020
    Reblog
    Share
    Tweet
    Share
    Wall Street prepares as coronavirus gets closer to home
    FILE PHOTO: A street sign, Wall Street, is seen outside New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New York

    By Elizabeth Dilts Marshall and Sinéad Carew

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street stepped up preparations to deal with the impact of the coronavirus on Tuesday, testing backup plans and asking employees to work from home, as a New Yorker tested positive for the virus, bringing the prospect of the spread of the infection closer to home.

    A man in his 50s who lives in a New York City suburb and works at a small law firm in midtown Manhattan tested positive for the virus, bringing the number of confirmed cases in the state to two, New York officials said.

    Officials said they were trying to trace the movements of the man and his family, and that seven people at his law firm had been designated by the city's health department as requiring monitoring. One of the man's sons who attends a university in city was also showing symptoms of the virus, Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

    Several banks and other financial services firms in the city were testing secondary offices and systems to ensure they could continue to operate if the situation worsened.

    Sources familiar with JPMorgan Chase & Co’s <JPM.N> plans said the largest U.S. bank by assets was asking thousands of U.S. employees to spend a day working from home in the coming weeks to test its contingency plans.

    Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N> has secondary offices in nearby Greenwich, Connecticut, and Jersey City, New Jersey, and the bank has said it is continuously testing that systems work and could support employees, including traders, if there is a need.

    JPMorgan, Citigroup Inc <C.N>, Wells Fargo & Co <WFC.N> and Goldman Sachs have restricted all non-essential international travel for employees, starting with JPMorgan late last week.

    Goldman postponed its annual housing and consumer finance conference, scheduled for Wednesday, in the city.

    “We know that many of you cannot take time to be away from the office as you prioritize the continuity of your business,” it said in an email seen by Reuters. “With that in mind, and as travel restrictions that could affect our speakers and guests continue to evolve, we have decided to postpone our conference.”

    The response from Wall Street comes as the virus has spread across the globe, with some 80 nations hit with the flu-like illness that can lead to pneumonia. About 3.4% of confirmed cases of COVID-19 have died, far above seasonal flu's fatality rate of under 1%, according to the World Health Organization.

    Some experts warned that the virus could pose unprecedented challenges for the financial industry.

    One central bank official in Asia said in their experience the scale of impact from the coronavirus had been larger than they expected and the business continuity plans that banks and other financial services firms had fell short.

    "So I think this is something that financial institutions in every place should get ready for,” the official said.

    While traders can theoretically work from home, it is harder when considering factors such as network speeds, software and basic hardware such as the number of screens and computer memory.

    "So much electronic trading requires great computer power you can’t do it from your iPad from your bed at home,” said Michael Purves, chief executive Of Tallbacken Capital Advisors, New York.

    Still, others said systems are likely to hold up.

    Joe Saluzzi, co-manager of trading at Themis Trading in Chatham, New Jersey, which has about eight people, said much trading is now computerized. “It's all systematic and passive,” Saluzzi said. “A lot would still go on."


    (Reporting by Elizabeth Dilts Marshall and Sinead Carew; Additional reporting by Anna Irrera, Megan Davies, Lauren LaCapra, Imani Moise; Writing by Paritosh Bansal; Editing by Leslie Adler)

    Reblog
    Share
    Tweet
    Share
    Recently Viewed
    Your list is empty.

    What to Read Next

    • Idris Elba Revealed He Tested Positive for Coronavirus

      Town & Country
    • Curfews as US shuts down to fight coronavirus

      AFP
    • Q&A: Government coronavirus directives shield employers from bias, safety claims: MoFo partners

      Reuters
    • FBI Warns Scammers Are Using Fake Coronavirus Emails to Steal Personal Information

      Good Housekeeping
    • ‘This should be worldwide, not regional’: German drug firm chief rebukes Trump ‘attempt to monopolise vaccine’

      The Independent
    • Stock market news live: Coronavirus jitters send Dow swooning to worst-ever point loss, closes at near 3-year low

      Yahoo Finance
    • CVS Health to support COVID-19 testing

      Yahoo Finance Video
    • The case for shuttering the economy to battle coronavirus

      Yahoo Finance
    • Coronavirus, retail sales, FedEx earnings: What to know in markets Tuesday

      Yahoo Finance
    • Casinos shut down as coronavirus outbreak worsens

      Yahoo Finance Video
    • Coronavirus hits retailers worldwide: Store closures and reduced hours

      Yahoo Finance
    • The Dow just crashed 3,000 points — here is why it happened

      Yahoo Finance
    • San Francisco Bay Area counties issue shelter-in-place order

      Associated Press
    • Online recipe traffic spikes as people figure out how to cook

      Yahoo Finance
    • Wells Fargo still bullish on Apple amid coronavirus; Adidas not yet closing stores

      Yahoo Finance Video
    • Coronavirus will finish Trump’s presidency

      Yahoo Finance
    • The Fed dropped interest rates to 0% — what that means for your credit cards and bank accounts

      MarketWatch
    • 'Don't believe the numbers you see': Johns Hopkins professor says up to 500,000 Americans have coronavirus

      Yahoo Finance
    • School closures amid coronavirus outbreak will hurt 'lower-income families much harder:' NYU epidemiologist

      Yahoo Finance
    • Federal Reserve is ‘sowing the seeds to support the next expansion,’ says UBS Chief U.S. Economist

      Yahoo Finance Video
    • Coronavirus Will Change How We Shop, Travel and Work for Years

      Bloomberg
    • Stocks aren’t bargains yet, but a buying opportunity will come. Here’s how you’ll know it’s here

      MarketWatch
    • Abigail Disney reacts to images of big crowds at Disney World theme park: ‘Are you f—ing kidding me?’

      MarketWatch
    • U.S. Chamber pushes for payroll tax cut, emergency loans to keep businesses afloat

      Yahoo Finance
    • ‘We are getting closer to a bottom,’ says RiverFront Investment Group’s Chief Market Strategist

      Yahoo Finance Video
    • Factories shift operations in scramble to restock supermarket shelves

      Reuters
    • We just got our first look at how much coronavirus will damage the U.S. economy

      Yahoo Finance
    • Trump just waived interest on student loans

      Yahoo Finance
    • Workers condemn coronavirus relief bill's loophole for big companies

      Yahoo Finance
    • Market Recap: Monday, March 16

      Yahoo Finance Video
    • America may need a 14-day national quarantine because of coronavirus: top health expert

      Yahoo Finance
    • Coronavirus Takes Brutal Toll: 7 Retailers Shutting Down Stores

      Zacks