The stock market in the United States seems to head for another rough week, as futures contracts tanked ahead of Monday's opening bell.
What Happened
President Donald Trump's planned $2 trillion economic stimulus package is likely to see a delay as Senate Democrats opposed it because it prioritizes the corporate industry and does little for American workers, CNN reported Sunday.
The Senate was split 47-47 in a procedural vote to advance the package, divided across a partisan line, CNN noted.
The delay in the economic stimulus comes as the number of confirmed novel coronavirus (COVID-19) cases in the U.S. reached 33,276 by late Sunday, including 417 deaths, according to the data from Johns Hopkins University. New York alone has confirmed almost half of the COVID-19 cases at 15,793.
Globally, nearly 336,000 cases have been confirmed, and 14,641 people have reportedly died from the virus.
The Federal Reserve St. Louis chair James Bullard gave a grim outlook of the pandemic in an interview with Bloomberg on Sunday.
Bullard said the unemployment rate in the country could hit 30% in the second quarter, and the gross domestic product could drop by 50%.
Price Action
Dow Jones futures traded 4.84% lower at 18,119 at press time on Sunday. S&P 500 futures were down 4.71% at 2,180.75. Nasdaq futures traded 4.28% lower, at 6,671.
Both Dow Jones and S&P 500 futures earlier in the evening hit the daily lower limit of 5% established by the CME Group Inc. CME.
The Dow is down 24.54% in March, its worst monthly drop since the Great Depression in 1931, as noted earlier by MarketWatch.
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