By Nicholas
Jasinski | Tuesday, May 19
Expert Analysis. Just as
a promising
announcement about a vaccine candidate helped ignite a sensational
rally on Monday, less-good news on the same front knocked the market today.
"Live by
the vaccine, die by the vaccine," my colleague Ben Levisohn said ominously
this evening.
U.S. stocks
spent most of the day around the break-even line today, holding on to Monday's
strong gains. In the final hour of trading, however, indexes fell from
near their session highs into negative territory. The trigger was
a report from health-care news site Stat that highlighted some skepticism in the scientific
community about the vaccine announcement from Moderna that fueled much of Monday’s rally.
Investors have
fashioned themselves as epidemiologists and infectious disease pros during
2020's coronavirus market, trading news about treatments and vaccines with
itchy trigger fingers. But real expertise obviously matters, and Stat
cited a pair of vaccine researchers from Yale and Johns Hopkins poking
holes in Moderna's thin-on-details announcement from Monday.
The bottom
line was that the result was promising, but much work remains to be done and a
widely available vaccine isn't imminent. Not something investors couldn't have
understood themselves, but seeing it laid out for them nonetheless inspired
some late selling today.
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average closed down 1.6%, the S&P
500 lost
1%, and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.5%. Moderna stock dropped more than 10%
today after a 20% surge on Monday. The company had also announced a public
offering of $1.3 billion in shares last night, taking advantage of a more than 300% rise in its stock this year to
raise money to fund "needs related to the manufacturing” of its vaccine,
among other things.
Markets will
remain highly sensitive to news about coronavirus treatments and vaccines.
Needless to say, a cure or prevention would be a game changer. But investors
have shown a tendency to get ahead of themselves.
The S&P 500 climbed 2.7% one day in April
after Gilead Sciences announced that
a trial run by the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases had found that its antiviral remdesivir
benefited Covid-19 patients, even though the benefit was very small.
On Monday, it happened again, this time over
an NIAID trial of Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine. The data seemed positive, but
came from a Phase 1 trial with 45 participants.
The key news highlighted by the company was
that in the first eight people whose samples they had tested, the level of
neutralizing antibodies were similar to the levels seen in people who had been
sickened by Covid-19 and then recovered.
It was good news by any
measure for investors eager for an end to Covid-19. But it was also interim
data on a Phase 1 trial, which is rather early in the game in terms of the
normal course of drug development.
Evidently it took a report
from a health-care site that may not have been high on Wall Street's reading
list before the pandemic to inform some investors of that fact today. Maybe
they're not such distinguished infectious disease experts after all.
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