Wall Street Draws Little Comfort From Bush Stimulus Plan

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TIM PARADIS | January 18, 2008 11:45 PM EST | AP

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Trader Edward G. O'Connell rests at a trading post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Friday, Jan. 18, 2008. Wall Street gave up early gains to trade mixed as skittish investors, unable to hold on to much optimism about the economy, drew little comfort from President Bush's stimulus plan. (AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams)

NEW YORK — Wall Street ended a painful week with another decline Friday as skittish investors unable to hold on to much optimism about the economy drew little comfort from President Bush's stimulus plan.

The day's trading reflected how fractious Wall Street has been in the new year. Investors pulled back from a big early advance, with the major indexes trading mixed as Bush began to speak. By the time the president finished announcing a plan for about $145 billion worth of tax relief, the indexes were well into negative territory.

"It's disappointed in the size of the economic growth package. Wall Street's showing its displeasure," said Kim Caughey, equity research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh. "Honestly, I think the institutional investors understand the limits to the government's ability to enact economic change."

Coming after Bush's announcement, Friday's pullback made it clear that the stock market is in for a protracted period of uncertainty and continued declines. Investors have shrugged off all the positive signs they've received in recent days, including assurances last week from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke that the Fed is ready to act aggressively _ which means a likely big interest rate cut later this month _ to help support an economy pummeled by devastation in the housing and credit markets.

Steven Goldman, chief market strategist at Weeden & Co., contends Wall Street remains concerned about whether other economic troubles are lurking.

"It's a culmination of factors that have been in existence for a while _ it's the unknown," he said.

That uncertainty made for a turbulent week on Wall Street. While it began optimistically, with the Dow Jones industrials surging 172 points on hopes that perhaps the worst of the housing and mortgage crisis might be over, deepening pessimism led to a 277-point plunge Tuesday and a 307-point slide on Thursday.

For the week, the Dow and the Nasdaq composite index lost 4 percent, while the Standard & Poor's 500 gave up 5.4 percent. In the 13 trading sessions of the 2008, the Dow has lost nearly 9 percent, while the S&P has fallen 9.75 percent and the Nasdaq nearly 12 percent.

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The market will likely need a long string of upbeat economic and corporate reports before it can regain its footing _ and with the economy clearly weak right now, it is likely to be a while before that kind of data becomes available.

On Friday, the Dow, which was up more than 180 points early in the session, fell 59.91, or 0.49 percent, to 12,099.30.

The broader S&P 500 index fell 8.06, or 0.60 percent, to 1,325.19, while the technology-focused Nasdaq dropped 6.88, or 0.29 percent, to 2,340.02.

The week's sell-off left the Dow and the S&P 500 well below their October highs _ which had the Dow at a record trading high of 14,198.09. The Dow has fallen more than 2,000 points, or 14.6 percent, while the S&P 500 is down nearly 240 points, or 15.3 percent.

Disappointment with Bush's plan came as investors were searching for those companies that might be weathering the economic slowdown well.

Some are indeed doing better than expected _ like International Business Machines Corp., which told Wall Street late Thursday to raise its 2008 profit estimates for the tech company, and General Electric Co., which posted a fourth-quarter profit rise Friday.

But many others are struggling. Washington Mutual Inc. reported a steep loss late Thursday for the fourth quarter, as Citigroup Inc. and Merrill Lynch did earlier in the week. With the banking industry trying to fix its shrinking portfolios and preparing for more distress in consumer debt, the economy may only have the government to fall back on _ and Wall Street didn't hear as much as it wanted from Bush.

In addition, many investors have been hoping that the Federal Reserve would put in place an intra-meeting rate cut before the central bank's next monetary policy meeting Jan. 29-30. "The market is saying to the Fed: we want a rate cut and we want it now. The fact that it is not getting a rate cut is causing a lot of selling that is feeding on itself," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Avalon Partners.

Government bond prices slipped. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, was unchanged at 3.63 percent.

On Thursday, a dismal reading on the Philadelphia Fed's manufacturing index and ratings agency downgrades of bond insurers sent the market tumbling. On Friday, a Bank of America Corp. analyst cut its ratings on three bond insurers _ MBIA Inc., Ambac Financial Group and Security Capital Assurance Ltd. _ to "neutral" from "buy."

MBIA fell 67 cents, or 7 percent, to $8.55 after a sharp drop Thursday.

Ambac rebounded from Thursday's drop, though, rising 34 cents, or 5.5 percent, to $6.58. The company said Friday it will ditch its previous plan to raise $1 billion in capital, a decision many investors considered an ill-advised move to maintain its ratings.

Security Capital Assurance fell 17 cents, or 9.3 percent, to $1.65.

A better-than-expected reading on consumer sentiment came as a pleasant surprise to investors Friday, but ultimately did not help Wall Street save its early advance. The University of Michigan's index, which most economists expected show a decline for mid-January, rose instead. Though not a perfect predictor of consumer spending, the report gave Wall Street some hope that Americans' buying might not drop off too precipitously amid worries about a recession.

The dollar rose against most major currencies, while gold slipped.

Crude oil futures rose 44 cents to settle at $90.57 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 7.39, or 1.09 percent, to 673.18.

Meanwhile, chip maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. late Thursday said its fourth-quarter net loss widened, but the loss was smaller than Wall Street predicted. AMD surged 73 cents, or 11.5 percent, to $7.07.

IBM rose $2.30, or 2.3 percent, to $103.40 on its strong forecast.

Washington Mutual rose $1.09, or 8.8 percent, to $13.55. Many investors, in anticipation of an even bigger fourth-quarter loss, had driven the savings and loan's stock sharply lower Thursday.

In overseas trade, Japan's Nikkei stock index rose 0.56 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index advanced 0.35 percent. In Europe, London's FTSE 100 finished down 0.01 percent, Frankfurt's DAX fell 1.34 percent and Paris' CAC fell 1.25 percent.

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On the Net:

New York Stock Exchange: http://www.nyse.com

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NEW YORK — Wall Street ended a painful week with another decline Friday as skittish investors unable to hold on to much optimism about the economy drew little comfort from President Bush's stimu...
NEW YORK — Wall Street ended a painful week with another decline Friday as skittish investors unable to hold on to much optimism about the economy drew little comfort from President Bush's stimu...
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- ArchAngel I'm a Fan of ArchAngel 11 fans permalink

What's the best way to boost employee and employer economics?

What's the best way to make America more competive?

What's the best way to end anxiety, suffering, and literally thousands of American deaths every single year?

Open up medicare and allow every single American to be able to participate.

Health care safety net for every single American with no exceptions!

Let's use a fraction of the money being talked about to permanently fix a fundamental problem with America's economy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 AM on 01/19/2008
- tchristin I'm a Fan of tchristin 13 fans permalink

9-11 happened on George Bush's watch and over 6 years have passed without finding the man responsible Osama Bin Laden (who continues to put out video propaganda and train new terrorists), over 3900 American soldiers have died in Iraq who went there because of failed intelligence and blatant lies about WMD's, then there's Katrina, Scooter Libby, Alberto Gonzales, election fraud, no bid contracts, spying on American citizens without court orders... the economy, crime, lack of health care...

How many days are left in this administration?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 01/19/2008
- marinade I'm a Fan of marinade 40 fans permalink

Bush's legacy:

Instead of avoiding a mess, step right in it. Instead of cleaning it up right away, allow it to become a catastrophe.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 01/19/2008
- hmmmmmer I'm a Fan of hmmmmmer 29 fans permalink

What a dweeb. It is only because of his policies, the policies of the Republicans over 6 years, and his deploring need to see oil at $100 a barrel that has put us in the mess we are in. Now lets take another 150 billion and try to pander to every. I am guessing he is trying for that 45% approval rating. What a joke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:48 AM on 01/19/2008
- gcallaghan I'm a Fan of gcallaghan 52 fans permalink
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Here it is. Katrina on a national scale and the retarded codpieceboy's response to the crisis is late, weak and totally ineffectual. Why do Republicunts hate Americans so much?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 AM on 01/19/2008

Let's put an end to the lending market.

Because if we put a free on interest rates for those who didn't realize they couldn't afford their homes, the interest rates of new home owners would sky rocket.

If we don't do anything, people will either become homeless or they will have to figure out what they are going to do without the help of wise government.

So lets not have a lending market. Let's build government housing that is available to everyone of free.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 01/19/2008

DAMN THEM! I have many friends and customers who can't understand why I detest this miscreant mongrol, called George. They are surprised that anyone earning what I do could possibly find any harm in what these pigs have done to my once womderful country. Just proves how adept Cheney and the others were in their coup. The average citizen has NO clue, and neither does Smirkey McFlightsuit. It has gone on since Jan. 01, because dumb-ass never knew much, and certainly didn't know what questions to ask...much less.. the answers. DAMN THEM...CFF

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 AM on 01/19/2008
- Sisyphuss I'm a Fan of Sisyphuss 13 fans permalink

Window dressing. And the Dems have nothing better. To dig ourselves out of this hole, we need to first stop the excavation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 AM on 01/19/2008

Bush and his circus clowns couldn't get drinking water to the Superdome during Katrina and they sure as hell aren't capable of helping us out a financial crisis.

The US Treasury can't print enough dollars to make up for their lastest failure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:31 AM on 01/19/2008
- rwe2late I'm a Fan of rwe2late 26 fans permalink

Unfortunately, stimulating our economic system to avert economic woes is akin to reviving Dracula to avoid more literal bloodsucking.
Wealth and power have concentrated upward to a ruthless clique of robber barons. Shall we strive to make this condition permanent? The primary US export is weapons. We spend more on the military than the rest of the world combined. We have over 700 overseas bases. We threaten other countries with nuclear weapons, missiles, and “pre-emptive” unilateral attacks. We are allied with and support dictatorships around the world. Shall we strive to make this militarism permanent? We are the world’s greatest polluter, and only offer to correct that by converting precious food to fuel for our own use, and by seizing control of the world’s energy resources. Shall we strive to continue those policies permanently? Our government runs a failed education system where nearly one-third do not graduate high school. It imprisons the greatest percentage of citizens in the industrialized world. It passes draconian laws, approving torture and abolishing habeas corpus. It has no universal health care. It does little to fix a crumbling infrastructure or develop mass transit. It auctions off our own public parks and natural resources. Shall all this never end?
I hope there is a “stimulus” package. I could use the cash. Nonetheless, a stake is needed, not more blood.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 01/19/2008
- njack I'm a Fan of njack 11 fans permalink
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My husband and I decided that if the federal government gave each americn citizen $1,000,000 and would not have spent all the billions in Iraq, we would be in great shape. It would have cost $300 million. Cheap, considering all the wasted dollars our government spends on stuff we don't even benefit from. I know I could really spark the economy with a million!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:29 AM on 01/19/2008
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It is about time that the world steps up and bails the good old United States of America out of it's mess. We've done the same for them.

To start China and Saudia Arabia can cancel all of our debts.

Next Iraq and the rest of Opec can start pumping and shipping crude directly to the U.S. at no charge for say, ten years, to allow us to get our house in order. Of course there will be benchmarks for progress. (Ha Ha)

Now for the foreign aid, that we so richly deserve. Israel, France and Germany can start sending dollars so that we can maintain our military and gas guzzlers.

If the whole pulls together they will be able to save us from ourselves.

Yes, one other thing, they have to take the whole Bush/Cheney Clan off our hands.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:25 AM on 01/19/2008

The markets take a dip at the end of every decade then creep up at a few years later into the new decade.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 AM on 01/19/2008
- bigfro I'm a Fan of bigfro 10 fans permalink

This does nopthing if your working, but if you've been fired or downsized then the extra unemployment benefits will allow you to feed your kids while you search for a job with a living wage. The stock market is the problem. CEO's don't make companies profitable. They fleece them for all their value and use a golden parachute to escape the wreckage

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:20 AM on 01/19/2008

What a fine group of superficial thinkers and topic know-nothings here on Huffington ... on this page alone.

There's the ridculous opinion...

"here's a few bucks - go pay for a few tanks of gas"

"These tax rebates are the equivalent of me giving my kids more allowance money that I took a cash advance from my credit card for"

And then there's the completely made up stuff...

"George Bush"s $3 trillion dollar tax giveaway to the rich over the past 7 years ..."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 AM on 01/19/2008
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