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Stock market live updates: Futures slide, Trump China news conference looms, April spending plunges

View of New York Stock Exchange, Wall Street on March 23, 2020 in New York City.

Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

This is a live blog. Please check back for updates.

9:25 am: Kudlow says in an interview that the U.S. government is ‘furious’ with China

President Donald Trump’s top economic advisor Larry Kudlow said in an interview Friday morning that the U.S. government is “furious” with the way China has behaved in recent weeks in its handling of the coronavirus outbreak and its interference with the autonomy of Hong Kong. “Regarding Hong Kong, China is now violating a 50-year-old treaty,” Kudlow told the Fox News Channel from the White House. “Frankly, the U.S. government is … I’ll use the word furious at what China has done in recent days, weeks and months. They have not behaved well and they have lost the trust, I think, of the whole Western world.”

Trump is expected to host a press conference later Friday to condemn Beijing’s recent behavior. — Franck

9:23 am: U.S. savings rate hits record high amid coronavirus crisis

Americans are saving more than ever before in history as the coronavirus has the U.S. fearing about the future of the economy. The personal savings rate hit a historic 33% in April, the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis said Friday. The rate represents how much people save as a percentage of their disposable income. April’s print is by far the highest since the department started tracking in the 1960’s, and surpasses consumer savings when the U.S. was embroiled in the financial crisis. The increase in savings came as spending declined by a record 13.6% for the month. The deadly virus, which has caused more than 40 million Americans to file for unemployment, has paralyzed consumer spending habits. – Fitzgerald

8:48 am: Corporation raise $1 trillion in debt issuance

Corporate debt issuance has surpassed $1 trillion as companies borrow money at double the pace of last year as the Federal Reserve moves to backstop the corporate credit market amid the coronavirus pandemic. Of the $1.038 trillion in new issuance, over $700 billion of new debt rolled out since the Fed announced it would support the corporate bond market. —Imbert, Domm

8:43 am: U.S. personal spending plummets 13.6% in April

8:30 am: Citi: Stock market rally has been driven by short covering

The S&P 500 has surged more than 30% since hitting an intraday low on March 23. However, strategists at Citi think those gains are a byproduct of investors covering short positions. The strategists point out that equity prices have been soaring despite $120 billion in redemptions from stock funds. “From here, a move higher will need new longs and inflows,” they said in a note. —Imbert, Bloom

8:09 am: Powell slated for a talk with former Fed vice chair Alan Blinder

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak Friday to The Griswold Center for Economic Policy Studies at Princeton University. The event, taking place virtually at 11 a.m. ET, will be moderated by Alan Blinder, former Fed vice chairman under Bill Clinton. The focus of the talk will likely be on the economy and the central bank’s stimulus measures during the coronavirus crisis. Powell will also take part in a moderated audience question and answer session. Earlier this month, Powell said policymakers may have to use additional tools to pull the country out of an economic downturn that has caused “a level of pain that is hard to capture in words.” —Li

8:02 am: Raymond James becomes the biggest bull on Lululemon

Shares of the athletic retailer ticked up in premarket trading on Friday after Raymond James hiked its price target to the highest on Wall Street. Raymond James, which has a buy rating on Lululemon, raised its 12-month target to $335 per share from $250 per share. The new target implies a near 18% rally from Thursday’s closing price of $284.42 per share. The firm said the yoga-pants maker remains of its top ideas for long-term, secular winners in a retail landscape that is characterized by a widening gap between winners and losers. “We believe LULU’s dominance in the growing athletic apparel market will continue to increase as its innovation machine continues to deliver exciting and unique product to its loyal customer base,” Raymond James retail analyst Matthew McClintock said in a note to clients. Raymond James increased its fiscal first quarter earnings estimates for 2020, but the numbers still represent large declines from 2019. “The central takeaway here is that near-term earnings declines are transitory and that, more importantly, the current crisis only accelerates LULU’s favorable positioning as a leader in the athletic apparel market,” McClintock added. Shares of Lululemon rose 0.6% in early trading. – Fitzgerald

8 am: Oil on track for best month on record after gaining more than 70%

Oil moved lower on Friday, but for the month West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, is on track to register a more than 70% gain for its best month on record. After falling to record lows in April, an uptick in demand as well as historic supply cuts have driven prices higher. But prices are still far from recent highs. On Friday, WTI traded around $33 per barrel, or about 50% below its January high of $65.65 per barrel. “It certainly doesn’t feel like it was oil’s best month ever,” said Regina Mayor, KPMG’s global head of energy. “Low $30s for WTI is clearly better than where we were at the end of April, but it’s not sufficient enough to bring the bulk of production back online,” she added. —Stevens

7:23 am: Stock futures fall as Trump news conference looms

Stock futures fell slightly on Friday morning as traders awaited a news conference from President Donald Trump regarding China. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures dipped 70 points, or 0.3%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures both fell 0.1%. Trump announced he would hold the news conference late during Thursday’s session, sending equity prices lower for the day. The news conference comes after China approved a controversial national security bill earlier this week.Despite the decline in futures, Wall Street was headed for solid weekly gains. The Dow and S&P 500 are both up 3.8% and 2.5%, respectively, for the week while the Nasdaq Composite has gained 0.5%. —Imbert

— With reporting from Yun Li, Thomas Franck, Michael Bloom and Patti Domm. 

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Source: Finance - cnbc.com

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