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How the stock market has performed during past viral outbreaks, as epidemic locks down 16 Chinese cities -
By Mark DeCambre Published: Jan 25, 2020 3:17 p.m. ET
EX... China has shut public transport in at least 16 cities to contain the spread of the coronavirus, according to reports
The stock market is trying to shake a deadly coronavirus. History says it tends to do a pretty good job U.S. equity markets have experienced downbeat trade this past week as investors kept one eye trained on a deadly flu outbreak in China.
However, gauged by the market’s performance during the onset of other infectious diseases, including SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome, Ebola and avian flu, Wall Street investors may have little to fear that this disease will sicken a U.S. stock market that finished 2019 with the best annual return in years and has kicked off 2020 at or near all-time highs.
That said, many investors are recommending caution amid the current bout of coronavirus that was first identified late last year in Wuhan City, China, and has claimed 42 lives, with some 1,300 people sickened as of Saturday. The ability of the virus to halt travel and harm consumption, particularly in Beijing, are some of the ways an outbreak could have economic implications that could wash up on U.S. shores.
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