Senate passes $2 trillion coronavirus relief bill, which includes checks for Americans and small business loans

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Senate passes $2 trillion coronavirus relief bill, which includes checks for Americans and small business loans
McConnell Senate coronavirus relief bill

Joshua Roberts/Reuters

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Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) arrives during negotiations on a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) relief package on Capitol in Washington, U.S., March 23, 2020.

  • The Senate passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act or the ''CARES Act,' on Wednesday, March 25, sending it to the House of Representatives, and setting President Trump up to usher in roughly $2 trillion in economic stimulus as the coronavirus threatens near-term recession.
  • The stimulus measure passed 96 to none at around 11:50 p.m. ET and includes payments for millions of Americans, unemployment benefit expansions, and loans for struggling businesses.
  • The passage follows back-to-back blockages from Senate Democrats as the party demanded stronger worker protections and specifics around the allocation of corporate relief loans.
  • Visit the Business Insider homepage for more stories.

The Senate passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act or the ''CARES Act," on Wednesday, March 25, to bring financial relief to Americans and businesses hammered by the coronavirus and its economic toll.

The fiscal package passed 96 to none at around 11:50 p.m. ET. The stimulus measure includes direct payments worth $1,200 to millions of Americans, boosts unemployment benefits, and shores up hundreds of billions of dollars worth of loans for ailing businesses.

About $150 billion will be allocated to hospitals and healthcare workers for equipment. US airlines hammered by the virus and resulting travel shutdowns will receive $50 billion in loans. Democrats won a set of stricter guidelines for how corporations could receive and benefit from emergency loans issued by the Treasury Department.

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The bill's passage follows two stoppages by Senate Democrats looking to secure stronger worker protections and stricter guidelines for which corporations could receive government loans. Multiple meetings between Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin extended talks around the legislation's specifics.

President Trump and leading Republicans called for the measure to reach the White House by the end of Monday, a lofty goal still deemed too late by economists monitoring the coronavirus's rapidly escalating fallout. Failures to move the bill forward on Sunday and Monday pushed deliberations past the administration's deadline.

Senate leaders inched closer to compromise on Tuesday, while House Speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced her own $2.5 trillion fiscal plan in a bid to issue quicker economic relief.

Read more: The 'trade of the century': 2 hedge-fund managers break down a simple investing strategy built to profit from wreckage caused by the coronavirus

The White House and the Senate reached a deal early Wednesday morning on the recovery package, teeing the bill up for passage later in the day. Schumer deemed the legislation an "outstanding agreement," while Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said it represented a "wartime level of investment for our nation."

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The bill must now pass in the House of Representatives before it reaches President Trump's desk.

Sunday's failed cloture vote fueled short-lived concern in the already debilitated financial sector. US equities futures reached their limit down trading level Sunday afternoon shortly after the vote. The S&P 500 slipped roughly 3% by Monday's close as the bill's failed cloture vote further upset a stimulus-hungry Wall Street.

Stocks posted an 11% recovery in Tuesday's session on fresh hopes for the bill's passage, but few specifics on the legislation's timeline or new measures arose through the session. Tuesday's gain was the Dow's largest since 1933.

While investors have waited on the White House to bring forth fiscal relief, the Federal Reserve has unleashed a salvo of policy tools to ease money markets. The central bank cut its benchmark interest rate close to zero on March 15 after an emergency cut two weeks prior. The Fed's New York branch shored up liquidity through several trillion dollars worth of capital injections spread throughout the month.

In its latest effort to combat the virus's economic hit, the bank announced Monday plans for unlimited asset purchases to "support smooth market functioning and effective transmission of monetary policy," according to a statement. Three loan facilities to support businesses, consumers, and employers will be established, and an additional Main Street Business Lending Program will be announced in the near future, the Fed said.

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Read more: Morgan Stanley studied decades of recession history to compile a playbook for what to buy during and after a stock bear market - and when to do it

Get the latest coronavirus analysis and research from Business Insider Intelligence on how COVID-19 is impacting businesses.

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