Dow Plummets Nearly 400 Points On Unemployment News, High Oil Prices

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TIM PARADIS | June 6, 2008 06:44 PM EST | AP

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Ned Zeller rubs his eyes while working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Friday, June 6, 2008 in New York. Stocks plunged Friday, sending the Dow Jones industrials down nearly 400 points, after oil prices shot up by more than $11 a barrel and neared $140 a barrel _ and wiped out investors' recent optimism about the economy in the process. (AP Photo/Jin Lee)

NEW YORK — Wall Street tumbled Friday, taking the Dow Jones industrials down nearly 400 points, on a pair of alarming economic developments: oil prices that shot up by more than $11 a barrel and approached $140 for the first time, and the biggest gain in the government's unemployment reading in more than 20 years.

The jump in oil to a price that might have seemed unfathomable only a few months ago appeared to wipe out investors' recent optimism over the prospects for a strengthening of the economy. Oil jumped following a Morgan Stanley analyst's forecast of $150 oil by July 4, and in response to a drop in the dollar and fresh tensions in the Middle East.

The surge in oil seemed the guarantee that gasoline prices that are on the verge of a national average of $4 a gallon will only continue to climb, putting additional pressure on consumers who have been forced to forgo discretionary purchases in order to pay for gas and other basics. Moreover, consumers who can't find work or who are worried about losing a job will be even more hesitant to spend on extras.

Wall Street has been worried of late that a pullback in consumer spending will deal a blow to the economy, as Americans' expenditures account for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity. So Friday's surge in oil convinced many investors to pull money out of stocks that suddenly seemed too risky.

Crude oil saw a huge rebound during the week after falling amid a drop in demand for gasoline. The biggest gains came Friday, with light, sweet crude setting a high of $139.12 in after-hours trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil settled at $138.54, a gain of $10.75 for the regular session; that was the biggest one-day advance for oil in the history of the Nymex.

The spike in energy prices came as the Labor Department said the nation's unemployment rate jumped to 5.5 percent in May from 5.0 percent in April. It was the biggest monthly increase since February 1986 and the rise leaves unemployment at it highest level since October 2004. Wall Street had predicted an uptick to 5.1 percent.

The number of U.S. jobs shrank by a smaller-than-expected 49,000, but that development offered Wall Street little solace as May marked the fifth straight month of jobs losses.

But the sudden spurt in oil appeared to weigh most heavily on Wall Street. The increase, fueled in part by a weak dollar, also came after an Israeli Cabinet minister hoping to replace Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was quoted as saying Israel would attack Iran if it doesn't abandon its nuclear program.

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"I think the biggest concern right now is oil and it's potential for a stagflationary environment," said Bill Knapp, investment strategist for MainStay Investments, a division of New York Life Investment Management. Stagflation occurs when stalling growth accompanies rising prices.

The headwinds facing the economy sent the Dow Jones industrial average down 394.64, or 3.13 percent, to 12,209.81; it was down by as much as 412 points at its low of the session. The decline was the worst percentage and point drop since Feb. 27, 2007, when the blue chips dropped 416.02 points, or 3.29 percent, amid concerns about souring debt and an economic slowdown.

Broader stock indicators also fell sharply Friday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index lost 43.37, or 3.09 percent, to 1,360.68, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 75.38, or 2.96 percent, to 2,474.56. The day's declines were the steepest percentage losses for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq since Feb. 5 this year.

The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index, an index that measures a wide swath of the U.S market, fell 2.9 percent Friday, a paper loss for the day of about $500 billion.

Investors' nervousness was clear. The Chicago Board Options Exchange's volatility index, known as the VIX, and often referred to as the "fear index," jumped 26.5 percent Friday.

Friday's pullback came a day after the Dow jumped nearly 214 points, its largest daily point gain since April 18 and a reaction to better-than-expected sales from retailers and a dip in weekly jobless claims. The welcome economic news helped investors shrug off a more than $5-a-barrel jump in oil prices. But the advance in oil Friday made it clear to Wall Street that ascendent energy prices posed a serious threat to consumer spending and the economy.

Friday's session capped an erratic week for the markets. Stocks fell Monday and Tuesday before moving sideways Wednesday and surging Thursday. The back-and-forth moves left the Dow down 3.39 percent for the week, the S&P 500 off 2.83 percent and the Nasdaq with a loss of 1.91 percent.

Bond prices jumped Friday after the weak jobs data sent investors scurrying for safety. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.91 percent in late trading from 4.04 percent late Wednesday.

The dollar declined against other major currencies _ a move that makes each barrel of oil more expensive. Gold prices jumped.

Knapp remains skeptical of the reasons behind the run-up in oil.

"The supply demand dynamics just don't warrant where we are today. It's becoming incredibly hackneyed to say it's all coming from demand in China," he said. "I think the consensus is that something is going to come along to deflate this commodity bubble and put the stock market back on track."

And the worries about employment and oil may be intertwined.

Ethan Harris, Lehman Brothers' chief U.S. economist, contends that the jobs report helped drive oil prices higher. He said traders are worried that the increase in unemployment would leave the Federal Reserve unwilling to raise interest rates. A notion of a Fed with few options combined with comments from the European Central Bank this week on the possibility of rate hikes have hurt the dollar.

"The weaker dollar is pushing up oil prices because oil is denominated in dollars and oil sellers want to be compensated for the weaker dollar," Harris said, adding that he thinks the market's moves have been overdone.

"While I'm skeptical of the whole thing in terms of whether it makes sense logically, this is the way the market behaves. It's like a Pavlovian response. If the Fed looks soft, oil prices go up," he said.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by more than 4 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came 4.69 billion shares, compared with 4.18 billion traded Thursday.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 22.90, or 3.00 percent, to 740.37.

Wall Street's pullback weighed on Europe. Britain's FTSE 100 ended down 1.48 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 1.99 percent, and France's CAC-40 lost 2.28 percent on the day. Japan's Nikkei stock average closed up 1.03 percent; trading there ended before the release of the U.S. jobs report.

___

The Dow Jones industrial average ended the week down 428.51, or 3.39 percent, at 12,209.81. The Standard & Poor's 500 index finished down 39.70, or 2.83 percent, at 1,360.68. The Nasdaq composite index ended the week down 48.10, or 1.91 percent, at 2,474.56.

The Russell 2000 index finished the week down 7.91, or 1.06 percent, at 740.37.

The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index _ a free-float weighted index that measures 5,000 U.S. based companies _ ended Friday at 13,924.63, down 336.13 points, or 2.36 percent, for the week. A year ago, the index was at 15,343.15.

___

On the Net:

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

Nasdaq Stock Market: http://www.nasdaq.com

NEW YORK — Wall Street tumbled Friday, taking the Dow Jones industrials down nearly 400 points, on a pair of alarming economic developments: oil prices that shot up by more than $11 a barrel and...
NEW YORK — Wall Street tumbled Friday, taking the Dow Jones industrials down nearly 400 points, on a pair of alarming economic developments: oil prices that shot up by more than $11 a barrel and...
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Cheer up everybody, the worst is yet to come.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 AM on 06/07/2008
- hey0there I'm a Fan of hey0there 4 fans permalink

seriously.­. you think its bad now, just wait till they start phase 2

gas & food "shortages"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 06/07/2008
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Who believes the governments statistics any more?

These numbers & their parameters, are so tortured

you can pretty much double the unemployment rate

to get where it makes the sense it did 40 years ago.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 AM on 06/07/2008

We're rolling downhill like a snowball heading for hell.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 06/07/2008
- DofG I'm a Fan of DofG 48 fans permalink
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Material Inequity

Somehow, sooner than later, our plutocrats must notice the 'gorilla in the room' when it comes to the distribution of wealth. The wealthy, and their enabler –the government, must understand, with 'idiotic clarity', that our systemic economic imbalance, cannot, and will not be sustained. This is Natural Law! This is not necessarily about giving up the advantages of wealth, but coming to terms with the fact that, like the human body, all systems are unitary. The wealthy are, in deed, dependent on the masses. And if they are smart, they will collectively realize that there must be economic balance within the system, or all will suffer a horrific fate. The question is whether this can be done by the initiative of reason, rather than an inevitable traumatic alternative.

Our system of government has given our nation, and the world, a profound opportunity to make a leap within the social ecology of Man. However, we must quickly put into motion some modifications to our socio-economic philosophy. This means understanding the toxic confluence of a 'free market' system with untempered competition, and the rule of law.

Ultimately, sustaining our way of life is really not about a lack of resources to be vied for. But it is a lack of human development, and true creative purpose that naturally minimizes, or eliminates, 'economic obesity' as an aspiration. If we can't make this transmutation, we will remain fundamentally animalistic, under the pretension of intellect, reducing our constitution to mere sophistry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 AM on 06/07/2008

"The surge in oil seemed the guarantee that gasoline prices that are on the verge of a national average of $4 a gallon will only continue to climb, putting additional pressure on consumers who have been forced to forgo discretionary purchases in order to pay for gas and other basics."

The surge is working!

"The sudden spurt in oil appeared to weigh most heavily on Wall Street. The increase, fueled in part by a weak dollar, also came after an Israeli Cabinet minister hoping to replace Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was quoted as saying Israel would attack Iran if it doesn't abandon its nuclear program."

Hard times are befalling Wall Street! SOUND THE ALARM!!! Oh well... Putting our unemployed to work at helping Israel obliterate Iran... should perk things up a bit.

Sarcasm aside...

WE THE PEOPLE ... the WORLD ... can ILL AFFORD another four years of RAPING & PILLAGING under THE MCBUSH ADMINISTRATION!!!

OBAMA '08! (IF it's not too late!)
HOPE & CHANGE!

Stay safe, healthy and happy,
Love, Loretta

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 AM on 06/07/2008

It feels like the end of the Al Pacino character in Scarface, except our faces are covered in black instead of white.

Globalization rises all boats, but those boats burn the single sea of ancient sunlight they float upon.

Electricity and cars are as addcitive as meth, except the addicts look so damn good.The Energizer Bunny is a false god. It does not go on and on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 06/07/2008
- frappe I'm a Fan of frappe 207 fans permalink
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When stole the presidency in 2000, the price for a barrel of oil was at $35. Now, less than eight years later, it's approaching $150 per barrel. Much of this increase is attributable to the speculative markets. The fact remains, that, yes, demand has increased with China's and India's march to industrialization, but there is still sufficient oil in the ground to satisfy all of our needs well into the future.

Call me a cynic -- or a skeptic -- but I lean on that side of the argument that believes these prices are the result of pure speculative fiction, much like our experience with Enron, and the speculative markets are given far too much leverage to set our prices.

Of course, it doesn't help that we have a president who has the intellectual curiosity of a single-cell amoeba and a VP who exercises far too much authority, especially with respect to his friends in the energy industry.

To this day, we still don't know who sat in that energy policy meeting hosted by the VP shortly after the electoral coup in 2000. All we do know is that those energy executives were free to write the energy policy that the rest of us have to live with.

Is this democracy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:35 AM on 06/07/2008
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it's the VP's super-secret energy policy and the deregulation of the commodity trading pits by the Republican congress in 2001.

Thanks Republicans!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 AM on 06/07/2008
- joselopez I'm a Fan of joselopez 10 fans permalink
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American politicians better start reviewing their history. It was not Reagan that crippled the Soviet UNion, but their invasion and attempted occupation of Afghanistan.

We are now into the fifth year of this so-called War, when in reality we are now just peace-keepers. This attempt to keep the peace in Iraq has cost us 600,000,000,000 dollars and counting!!

It's affects have trickled into other aspects of our economy (gas prices, value of the dollar, etc.)

If we do not change course soon, America will no longer be considered a super power. We may be reading in the history books of when America lost its super power status.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 AM on 06/07/2008
- Boboday555 I'm a Fan of Boboday555 116 fans permalink
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Has anyone even thought about how this recession is going to effect the Bush's base of billionaires?
Maybe if President AWOL hands them even more WAR TIME TAX CUTS, they just might make it.

Let us pray this country comes to its senses and provides even more to Bush's hyper-rich republican owners.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 06/07/2008

"Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) introduced a constitutional amendment to abolish the Electoral College on Friday, less than a week after the Democrats settled on how to handle delegates from Florida at their national convention.

“It’s time for Congress to really give Americans the power of one-person, one-vote, instead of the political machinery selecting candidates and electing our president,” Nelson said in a release announcing the amendment.­"



Oh boy!

Having vanquished the winner of the popular vote in the Dem primary, she who must not be named, now the Dems are reverting back to their "count-every-vote" outrage of 2000.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 06/07/2008
- Boboday555 I'm a Fan of Boboday555 116 fans permalink
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Counting everyone's votes really get under you state-side Bushy's skin doesn't it?

But hey, you could always go enlist.
If enough of you war mongers on the right, who still support the Oil War in Iraq, finally enlisted, you just might be able to turn this whole thing around by election day.

Short of that, McCain and his silly supporters are in for a rude awakening in November.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:40 AM on 06/07/2008
- Sabreen60 I'm a Fan of Sabreen60 63 fans permalink
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Oh come on. You have got to let that go. It's her math verses his math. If you count MI and the caucus states, he got more votes. If you give all of MI to her and don't count the caucus than she's got the most votes. Either way it was certainly close. But you just pi$$ people off to keep harping on her math. Let it go. It's done. Move on!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 AM on 06/07/2008

Yes! Count every vote - Every one - even caucus results. And do away with diebold and give us a paper trail. One that is not destroyed or compromised by our courts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:08 PM on 06/07/2008
- booker52 I'm a Fan of booker52 25 fans permalink
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The powers that be keep try and pin this on suppy and demand, I cry bullshit. Someone is playing the stockmarket big time and driving up the price on oil. I keep waiting for the crash. Demand in the US has not change in 27 years, I wonder when someone here in the Government in going step in and stop this. Or is Bush and Co just going to let this country go under before he leaves office???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:22 AM on 06/07/2008

Courtesy of your friends in the Republican party. Don't forget to vote on Nov 4.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 AM on 06/07/2008
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Thanks Republicans!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 06/07/2008

Yeah, we're the ones who shut down domestic drilling.

We're the ones who value union support over job-creating trade.

We're the ones who would raise taxes.

We're the ones who supported the economy-wrecking Climate bill in the Senate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 06/07/2008

I look at both political parties as just worthless and both accountable for our state of affairs. The Dems do run Congress you know and they don't seem any better at it than the Reps.

It is hard to believe that the current politicians in both parties are the best we can come up with?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 AM on 06/07/2008
- frappe I'm a Fan of frappe 207 fans permalink
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Reason: Republican obstructionism. So don't use that disingenuous excuse that they're "both the same". Because, in simple fact, they are not. The Republicans profusely kiss the asterisks of their corporate masters and would like to reverse the social programs that came into being during FDR's New Deal era -- after the Republican inspired Great Depression of the 30s.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 06/07/2008
- john85msy I'm a Fan of john85msy 3 fans permalink

You who voted for these Bush people not once but twice should be embarassed and banned from voting in the next election. This is the worst administration in the history of this country by far. How are we going to learn from our mistakes if there is no investigation including impeachment?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 AM on 06/07/2008

Tom Delay called Obama a Socialist. I almost crapped myself laughing. Think about it, a phony bible salesman, under indictment by a Texas Grand Jury calling anyone anything. Delay is so yesterday, why dose Fox give this little prick a forum to pay his legal bills?

By the way, what’s worse a Socialist like Bernie Sanders or a corrupt Fascist corporate whore like Tom Delay, for me the answer is simple, but I don’t think crooks like this walk on water, only one man did that, as far as I know and he through pricks like Delay out of the Temple, go figure. I hope they give him a nice cell, than again maybe not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 AM on 06/07/2008
- wbwbruce I'm a Fan of wbwbruce 7 fans permalink

Shut this Country down for a couple of Days.
Everyone stay home and do not buy gas for two days and see what happens.
Hurt their pocket book.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:49 AM on 06/07/2008

Research that on Snopes.com before you spout nonsense.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 06/07/2008

What kind of foolishness is that. They have the supply and you will have the demand eventually. They may not sell the gas today, but you are going to need it soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 06/07/2008

Isn't it just the end of oil? India, China, S America ... all these fast-growing economies need massive amounts that, ten years ago, they didn't. And the developed nations need more and more, and no one's found a serious alternative that doesn't plunge the world into starvation. And anyway all systems (financial and physical) are geared to oil as the major source of energy. So: there's not enough to go round, so the price goes sky high. We are an industrialised planet running out of fuel. It's owning up time. I'm scared.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:49 AM on 06/07/2008
- Sabreen60 I'm a Fan of Sabreen60 63 fans permalink
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We're not running out of fuel - at least not in the foreseeable future. But the oil companies are earning unbelievably huge profits and the speculators keep on speculating. The oil producing countries in the middle east are saying it's our fault for the rising cost of oil. Are they right? It is a fact that if we demand less the cost will go down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 06/07/2008
- frappe I'm a Fan of frappe 207 fans permalink
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Well, when Booosh stole the presidency back in 2000, the price for a barrel of oil was about $35. Now it's more than four times as much less than eight years later. Using speculation as a means of determining market prices can sometimes produce disastrous results e.g. Enron and their illegal games...It can be easy to play with numbers. ..And let's not forget that it was the energy companies themselves that Bush and Cheney allowed to write our energy policy of the future. Look where that got us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 AM on 06/07/2008
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