Each of the three major indices logged a third straight day of losses Thursday. The S&P 500 slid marginally to 3,476 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped over 0.5% to 11,713. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped almost 20 points on Thursday in a fall below 28,500. Chief investment officer of global wealth management at UBS, Mark Haefele, commented; According to CNBC’s “Squawk Box” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin stated that he, along with the President, were committed to getting a stimulus deal done, but acknowledged that this would be hard to achieve before the election. The employment figures were also disappointing with hundreds of thousands more filing new unemployment insurance claims last week. Initial jobless claims unexpectedly rose to almost 900,000 for the week ended Oct. 10, which represents the highest level since mid-August. Sentiment across Europe was also dampened as some governments reinstated pandemic restrictions to curb the second wave of Covid-19. The UK is on the verge of another lockdown as virus cases spike in the north of the country.  

Sector performance outlook

The week’s top-performing sectors included industrials with General Electric and 3M Company positing gains this week, while the energy sector was also boosted by strong performances from Exxon Mobile and Chevron Corp. The banking sector got a lift from JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America gaining 1.5% and 2.24% respectively. The Charles Schwab Corporation gained an impressive 5.14%. Credit services also took a hit with Visa and Mastercard stocks losing around 1.25% apiece, while the healthcare sector was also in the red as Johnson and Johnson led losses.