Dow Drops Thursday To Lowest Level In Nearly Two Years

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MADLEN READ | June 26, 2008 06:23 PM EST | AP

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NEW YORK — A barrage of bad news including yet another record high for oil drove stocks sharply lower Thursday, hurtling the Dow Jones industrials down nearly 360 points to their lowest level in almost two years.

The market also worried about fresh signs of trouble in the financial, high-tech and automotive industries. Negative analyst comments sent shares of General Motors Corp. stock to their lowest point in more than three decades.

Oil futures shot past $140 after the head of OPEC predicted the price of a barrel of crude could rise well over $150 this year and Libya said it may cut oil production.

That increases the odds that gasoline prices, which crossed a nationwide average of $4 a gallon weeks ago, will extend their advance, and that goods and services across the economy will get ever more expensive.

The Dow dropped 358.41 points, more than 3 percent, to close at 11,453.42 _ its lowest finish since Sept. 11, 2006. Investors rushed for the safety of Treasury bonds, regarded as a haven when the stock market is in turmoil.

The blue-chip index is now 19 percent below its record close last October of 14,164.53.

Oil was far from the only worrisome factor driving stocks lower.

Citigroup Inc. stock fell sharply after an analyst give it a "sell" rating and warned investors to expect less from the brokerage sector in an uneasy economy.

Disappointing forecasts from technology bellwethers Oracle Corp. and BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd. further soured investors' moods and made the tech sector one of the steepest decliners.

Broader stock indicators also fell sharply, although not to their mid-March lows. The Standard & Poor's 500 dropped 38.82, about 3 percent, to 1,283.15, and the Nasdaq composite slid 79.89, or 3.3 percent, to 2,321.37.

The Dow and the S&P, which is off 18 percent from its highs of last fall, are close to the prolonged 20 percent decline that traditionally indicates a bear market. Many analysts would argue Wall Street has had a bear market mentality for months.

On Thursday, the unnerving forecast about oil prices raised the specter of higher inflation and more damage to the economy.

OPEC President Chakib Khelil was quoted as telling a French television station that oil could rise to between $150 and $170 per barrel this summer before pulling back later in the year.

That and a falling dollar helped send light, sweet crude as high as $140.39 and to a record settlement of $139.64 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Rising oil has saddled nearly all parts of the economy with higher costs.

All the bad news overshadowed a report by the National Assocation of Realtors that sales of existing homes edged up in May for only the second time in the past 10 months.

It also wiped out any positive impact from the Federal Reserve's widely expected decision Wednesday to leave interest rates unchanged.

And it drove home anew how much U.S. companies stand to be hurt by the prolonged housing slump, the credit crisis and the soaring price of oil.

The great fear on Wall Street has been that rising prices and worries about their finances will force Americans to curb spending and reinforce the economic decline.

That fear was backed up by the latest reading on the gross domestic product. The Commerce Department said the economy grew at a 1 percent annual rate in the first quarter _ a slight improvement from earlier estimates but still anemic.

And that number does not reflect the impact of higher gas and oil prices that shot up further during the second quarter, which ends Monday.

"This is unfortunately kind of a slack period. We're waiting for second-quarter earnings," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago, pointing to the uptick in housing sales. "Until then, we have this very negative attitude among investors and everyone seems to be latching onto negative news and shrugging off the positive news."

Bond prices rose sharply. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 4.03 percent from 4.10 percent late Wednesday.

The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while the price of gold, a hedge against inflation, jumped.

One analyst said the selling was aggravated by end-of-quarter window dressing, when institutions make trades designed to put their portfolios in the best light.

"Second quarter estimates are still declining," added Alexander Paris, economist and market analyst for Barrington Research. "There might be some nervousness about the earnings season coming up."

It was just a few weeks ago, when the Dow made a one-day dive of nearly 400 points, that the market tried to find its bottom after months of turbulence driven by the credit crisis and oil.

But when it became clear financial companies were still dealing with the aftermath of investing in billions in soured mortgages, and when the price of oil kept charging higher, it also became clear stocks weren't on sure ground.

In other economic news Thursday, the Labor Department reported initial jobless claims remained flat last week at 384,000. Wall Street had been looking for a slight decline.

The Realtors, meanwhile, said existing home sales rose 2 percent in May, compared to analysts' forecast of 2.2 percent increase. Few observers believed this was the start of an upward trend in home sales.

GM, one of the 30 stocks that comprise the Dow industrials, sank $1.38, or 11 percent, to $11.43. They sank as low as $11.21 earlier in the session _ tying the low reached on Dec. 30, 1974, according to the University of Chicago's Center for Research in Security Prices. The center adjusts prices for stock splits.

A Goldman Sachs analyst cut his rating on the stock to "sell" and lowered ratings on several auto suppliers.

Citigroup fell more than 6 percent, down $1.18 to $17.67, after Goldman downgraded it. It also downgraded Merrill Lynch & Co., which fell $2.41, or about 7 percent, to $33.05.

The forecasts from Oracle and Research in Motion dented the notion tech companies might be better able to weather the economic downturn.

Oracle, a maker of business software, warned that the traditionally slow summer months could prove particularly difficult this year. Research In Motion also issued a forecast that disappointed investors.

Oracle fell $1.13, or 5 percent, to $21.42, while Research in Motion fell $18.88, more than 13 percent, to $123.46.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by about 6 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume amounted to 5.11 billion shares, up from 4.72 billion shares on Wednesday.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 17.88, or 2.50 percent, to 698.42.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average slipped 0.05 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 fell 2.6 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 2.4 percent, and France's CAC-40 lost 2.4 percent.

 
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If McCain gets in, then the next time he says "Bomb bomb bomb Iran", then oil will jump another $50 per barrell and the stock market will drop another couple thousand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 AM on 06/29/2008

IT IS TIME TO BUY!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 AM on 06/28/2008
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So this is what you get when you have a borrow-trillions--and-spend, crony-capitalist monkey man handling the nation's treasure for seven years. But cheer up. Just think how much worse the economy would be if Bush weren't so "pro-business." LOL.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 AM on 06/27/2008

For all you money grubbers out there, a big hardy Nelson laugh.........Ha HA!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 PM on 06/26/2008

The situation is really bad. Major layoffs. Families having trouble feeding their kids. The stock market is many average Americans retirement... or their kids education. Pension funds and state governments invest in the markets... When the markets go down, state property and sales taxes will have to go up.

Some ones car gets 40 miles to the gallon who is an office worker and some one else has to tow a trailer to a job site.. Or the person that has 30 MPG car drives 30K miles per year while another with a 10 MPG car drives only 10,000 miles per year...same carbon foot print.

But your 30 mpg gallon car does not mean that like the rest of us your food cost and electric bills are not going up... or that you might not be able to afford heating oil this winter.

The boating/RV industry is going POOF. They're things actually made in the U.S.. More jobs going poof. People unable to drive to tourist locations. no vacation and jobs lost at tourist areas.. Many of them summer jobs for kids.

See you may not own stocks directly, but the losses in the market will rock your world whether you know it or not... just like a persons house dropping 50% in value will affect you also as the dollar drops in value/interest rate rise... Insurance companies invest in the stock market your Premiums... When the market goes down you get insurance cost increases.

Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 AM on 06/27/2008
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Too bad the people who have money in the stock market voted for Republican kleptocrats then, isn't it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 06/27/2008
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We have witnessed the roaring twenties and now the binging is over. It's time to pay the
piper for not just a mismanaged economy but a mismanaged philosophy. This will
require a major correction, a NEW DEAL. Anything less is window dressing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 AM on 06/28/2008

Our country is so short sighted. We are up in arms over gas prices. I can't believe that we have over a trillion dollar war going on, with no end in sight and people we are still buying SUV's Dodge Rams Hummers and Escalades as long as we can get gas locked in at 2.99 or whatever. In 2002 I bought a Toyota Corolla that gets about 28-30 MPG. What a car.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 PM on 06/26/2008

1962 VW Bug gets 32 mpg. Blows a little smoke, but still not bad mileage!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 PM on 06/26/2008
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul permalink

Hang on to that thing. It gets good milage and you can fix it yourself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 AM on 06/27/2008

We live in the most free and the richest nation on earth with the best economy ever and anybody can see a doctor whenever they need to and nobody lives on the streets and even though your portfolio lost value today, you can still go on vacation. Right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 06/26/2008

Satire done right...YOWZAH!!! Love it, babee, love it! EB

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:27 PM on 06/26/2008

How are we the most free? We have the world's largest prison population 2 million people. The president can listen to my phone conversations without any oversight. The president can call me an enemy combatant and ship me to Gitmo without any due process. Corporations can violate my civil liberties and bribe congress into retroactively forgiving them. As far as I can tell the only difference between me and the Iraqi's that lived under Sadaam is that I have a more benevolent dictator.

God bless the 2nd ammendment, I'm going to need it!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 PM on 06/26/2008

I think that was satire!

Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 AM on 06/27/2008
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don't worry, boosh and friends are still funneling your tax doollars to themselves and their friends.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 06/26/2008

Holy ****.

This is bad news and yet good news. It will make Americans think twice about Me-too McCain and the Republican management of the economy.

I was shopping today and spent 55 bucks for one person for groceries that will last me maybe four or five days. This is more bad news for the Republicans. Even the most basic of staples, spaghetti and spagetti sauce, was exhoribtantly high. This was "poor food" when I was growing up.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 06/26/2008

Only if you can lay this at BUSH policies and McCains feet also. And that is not being done well.

What have the DEMs done to end the speculation and Enron Loophole...?


Regards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 06/27/2008
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Acknowledge the ingenuity and dynamism of the market, but the market is no cure for all that ails us. When life is solely a financial question then it is a question without enough thought behind it. One should keep silent until they form a better question. Everybody has to eat, sleep, drink, and be merry. The money accumulation game is varying abstractions of the basics. A bigger house is still home or it is not. We can all agree that better living conditions are the median. No one wants to live sub par. How can that ever be in a world with so much wealth and the ability to spend that wealth on worthless and costly pursuits like war? Then there is the amount that is stolen through corruption. The system does not have to be the way it is, and the free market can continue to be a vibrant money making market. Fairness and the idea that all American citizens are valuable must return to the table of planning and ideas.

No American who wants a job should not be able to find the job for based on reports, there is a lot to be done, like infrastructure retrofitting. How many young families could a nation-wide infrastructure project feed and nourish? When maximization of profit for a few overrides maximization of humanity for all, we are lost. There is no more to say. Think on these things.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 PM on 06/26/2008

Bravo for a well-thought out and erudite comment without any vitriol! As Pogo said: "We have met the enemy and he is us!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 06/26/2008
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That Pogo, forever telling the truth...cheers to Walt kelly for his contribution.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 AM on 06/27/2008
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I'm thanking the gods that we didn't entrust Social Security with this loser. He ruins everything he touches.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 06/26/2008
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Great point. Now we know these free marketeers hoped to "privatize" social security to artificially prop up the stock market. At least in the Clinton era tax laws contributed to re-vitalizing the middle class. The rise of the internet and the explosion of the personal computer ignited a boom. Tens of
millions of Americans poured their cash into mutual funds and the market took off as it fueled
and eventually over-heated the dot-coms. In any case, most Americans were better off.
When the dot com crash came America discovered real estate and poured their money into
flip-this-house. Once that boom got over-heated it crashed too. Now its all about commodities
like oil, gold, corn and wonder of wonders -- water. Anybody remember the Tennessee Valley
Authority and the Public Works Programs of the 30s? Get ready folks because we're heading
back into the 30's and the next President should start by building an aquaduct system that
channels mid west flood water to the West where it's needed. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to see that the West and its mountain snow pack is in a long term drought and
the plains are getting doused because the weather pattern is shifting. A smart administration
will see this as a win-win for both regions. The engineering challenge is to overcome the
Continental Divide but the dividends will pay for well over a hundred years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 06/26/2008
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Dialog between Bernanke, Buffet & Wright discussing the Dow plummet today....

Bernanke: Warren as you were explaining before Bush called...Why did the chicken cross the road again?

Buffet: I think I will let my sidekick Wright answer this time....Wright go ahead, please.

Wright: To Come to Roost Mutha%*#)@!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 PM on 06/26/2008
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America's version of Pandora's Box was opened in January 2001 and all of the evils of mankind escaped into every sector of the business world thanks to Bush's destructive policies. Now it's time to release it's only value - Hope!

Obama 08!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 06/26/2008

Darn tootin'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 06/26/2008

Its too bad Obama is CFR and a part of the problem.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 AM on 06/28/2008

I saw a documentary a while ago that showed that the number one export from America was trash. They showed China shipping us goods in box cars and us filling those box cars up with trash and sending it back to China. Did anyone else see this?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 06/26/2008
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Do you remember the name of that documentary? I'd like to see it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 06/26/2008

God I wish that I did. I know it was on PBS. "Because I don't have cable". I think that it was on NOW. I didn't see the beginning. First it showed how some people were making living quarters out of those box cars. Then it showed other box cars being send back to China filled with American trash. And I remember hearing them say that this was our number one export. Oh yell, it also showed the catapiller was doing very well selling big earth moving equipment overseas.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 PM on 06/26/2008

They also showed how people in China would break down this trash and make things out of it to sell back to America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 PM on 06/26/2008

They just showed it on NOVA last night. Of course it's all liberal nonsense because it's on PBS :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 PM on 06/26/2008
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Thanks dubya.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 PM on 06/26/2008

With rumors abound crude oil prices vaulted today and greedy wall street speculators made up for some lost ground leaving record prices in their wake............................... Maybe one day this doomsday scenerio will end..............

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 PM on 06/26/2008
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The stock market under repubs, not so good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 06/26/2008

Make that, nothing under repubs is good. Remember, in trickle down economics the one who benefits most is the guy on top doing the pissing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 PM on 06/26/2008

Good one!!! Marked as favorite!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 PM on 06/26/2008
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