US markets shrug off record unemployment numbers as tech shares rise

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Despite reports of historic unemployment, with roughly 6.6 million Americans filing for unemployment, domestic stocks rose during regular
trading today. One day after grim estimates on the potential death toll from the COVID-19 epidemic in the U.S
sent stocks tumbling, and amid a continuing economic fallout from the government response to slow the spread of the disease, all three major
U.S
indices gained. Meanwhile, the federal government in the U.S
continues to work on the specifics of how to funnel nearly $2 trillion into the American economy as part of the CARES Act stimulus package
And pharmaceutical and medical device companies are working day and night to develop better diagnostics tools and novel therapies to treat
the virus while potential vaccines slowly make their way through the regulatory approval process. Here the tale of the tape: Dow Jones
Industrial Average: +469.93, +2.24% S-P 500: +56.40, +2.28% Nasdaq Composite: +126.73, +1.72 The tech-heavy Nasdaq rose the least of the
major indices, indicating that the up-day wasn&t as bright for the technology industry
This fact was underscored by aselloff among shares of SaaS and cloud stocks, as measured by the Bessemer cloud index that fell 1.4% on the
day
The Nasdaq remains in bear market territory. After-hours today, shares of Tesla shot higher after the electric car company announced
delivery numbers that delighted investors
The volatile company announced 88,400 deliveries for the three-month period, ahead of expectations of 79,900 (per FactSet). Looking ahead,
it doesn&t feel like the market has digested the scale of economic impact that the new unemployment claims implies; with employment falling
sharply, demand contracting and economies around the world prioritizing safety over commerce, the world could be in for more than an
economic pause, or lull
We may be staring down the first weeks of a depression.