Wall Street Tanks On Weak GDP, Jobless Data

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TIM PARADIS | July 31, 2008 05:55 PM EST | AP

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NEW YORK — Wall Street sank Thursday, after weak readings on economic growth and the job market touched off renewed concerns about the financial health of businesses and consumers. The Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 200 points.

The Commerce Department's report that gross domestic product grew at a 1.9 percent pace in the second quarter disappointed investors. Economists polled by Thomson Financial/IFR had expected growth of 2.4 percent in the broad measure of the economy's health.

Investors were also concerned about Labor Department data saying that the number of people seeking jobless benefits jumped to the highest level in five years. Economists warned the weekly figures can be volatile, however, and some dismissed them as an aberration.

A $4.5 billion cash offer from Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. for its cancer drug partner ImClone Systems Inc. kept the Nasdaq composite index from falling as sharply as other indexes. In other positive news, oil prices declined, and an index of Midwestern business activity indicated growth.

But Wall Street could not shake off its worries about the economy _ particularly after sobering remarks from Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan on CNBC late in the afternoon. Greenspan said he would be more surprised if the United States did not enter recession than if it did.

The comments came after Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said in a speech in Washington that the economy will continue to grow at a moderate pace for the rest of the year, and the government's $168 billion stimulus package had helped grease the economy's wheels.

But Larry Smith, chief investment officer at Third Wave Global Investors in Greenwich, Conn., said tightness in credit markets and high oil prices continue to weigh on the economy and the stimulus package won't deliver a permanent fix.

"Tax rebates have been a very effective way of propping up the economy in the second quarter, and less so in the third quarter," Smith said. "To fix the economic growth problems, you have to restore liquidity to the system."

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The Dow Jones industrial average fell 205.67, or 1.78 percent, to 11,378.02, continuing its string of erratic, triple-digit daily swings.

Broader stock indicators also declined. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 16.88, or 1.31 percent, to 1,267.38, while the Nasdaq fell 4.17, or 0.18 percent, to 2,325.55.

During the month of July, the Dow inched up 0.25 percent, the S&P fell 0.99 percent, and the Nasdaq rose 1.42 percent. It was certainly a better showing than in June, during which the Dow dropped 10.19 percent, the S&P fell 8.60 percent, and the Nasdaq lost 9.10 percent.

Bond prices jumped following the economic readings. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 3.95 percent from 4.05 percent late Wednesday. The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Light, sweet crude fell $2.69 to settle at $124.08 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after rising more than $4.50 on Wednesday. Oil has fallen more than $20 since hitting a high above $147 on July 11, raising hopes that inflation pressures could ease.

Thursday's stock market pullback follows bets investors made this week that the beaten-down financial sector would rebound and that the Labor Department's employment report on Friday would show a less gloomy jobs market.

But other stock rallies have fizzled in recent weeks. Investors have remained concerned about the housing and credit markets, the health of financial companies and the effect of high commodities prices.

The latest GDP reading, which reflected consumers cashing tax rebate checks, still shows the economy grew at a faster pace than the weak 0.9 percent seen in the first quarter. But revised numbers also revealed for the first time that the economy shrank in the fourth quarter last year.

The mixed economic figures are making it hard for investors to have much conviction, observers say.

"I think in the short run, it's going to be a tug-of-war between the optimists and the pessimists," said Jack Caffrey, equities strategist at JPMorgan Private Bank. "I think both sides are going to be able to find enough information to support their case."

At some point one side will give in, he said.

"The challenge is, you can't identify what the catalyst is that will change psychology."

Investors sifted through a flurry of quarterly profit reports for clues about the economy.

Exxon Mobil Corp. reported second-quarter earnings of $11.68 billion, the largest quarterly profit ever by a U.S. corporation. But the per-share earnings fell well short of Wall Street's forecast, which assumed that record crude prices would push earnings even higher. The stock fell $3.95, or 4.7 percent, to $80.43 and weighed on the Dow industrials.

The Walt Disney Co. fell $1.32, or 4.2 percent, to $30.35 after the company reported a slowdown in the U.S. advertising market in the current quarter and weak box office results in the period that ended in June.

Motorola Inc. jumped 96 cents, or 12.5 percent, to $8.64 after posting a surprise profit for its second quarter. The company said it shipped more cell phones than in the first quarter.

Eastman Kodak Co. reported a second-quarter profit but the results missed Wall Street's forecast. The stock declined $1.13, or 7.2 percent, to $14.64.

In other news, Wall Street applauded Bristol-Myers' offer $60 per share for ImClone, a 30 percent premium to ImClone's closing price of $46.44 Wednesday. Bristol-Myers, which already owns about 17 percent of ImClone, is a U.S. partner for the colon and head and neck cancer drug Erbitux. ImClone surged $17.49, or 37.7 percent, to $63.93. Bristol-Myers slipped 39 cents to $21.12.

Declining issues outpaced advancers by about 3 to 2 on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated volume came to 5.16 billion shares, up from 5.06 billion shares.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 4.34, or 0.60 percent, to 714.52.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average closed up 0.07 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 fell 0.16 percent, Germany's DAX index rose 0.30 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 0.19 percent.

___

On the Net:

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

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

NEW YORK — Wall Street sank Thursday, after weak readings on economic growth and the job market touched off renewed concerns about the financial health of businesses and consumers. The Dow Jones...
NEW YORK — Wall Street sank Thursday, after weak readings on economic growth and the job market touched off renewed concerns about the financial health of businesses and consumers. The Dow Jones...
 
 

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- Grannysue See Profile I'm a Fan of Grannysue permalink

But But Bushy came out today and said, things are lookin up! Oh, yea I forgot it is lookin up for EXXON and all the stockholders and profiters, That's what the twit meant!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 PM on 07/31/2008
- lisakaz2 See Profile I'm a Fan of lisakaz2 permalink

The overall direction is down, down, down and I got the retirement account to prove it. These stooges, including those greedy b's in DC forgot the first rule of a mass economy -- you cannot ignore let alone destroy the masses. Who is left to buy? The 1% cannot carry the status quo on its own. Duh!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:33 PM on 07/31/2008
- brerol See Profile I'm a Fan of brerol permalink

In two consecutive days the Dow increases by a total of 4%. And not a word from Huffpo. And the next day it drops almost 2% and Huffpo is all over it. Talk about selective attention.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:23 PM on 07/31/2008
- KQuarksSuperKollider See Profile I'm a Fan of KQuarksSuperKollider permalink

The only fact that matters is that the DJIA is lower now than at the end of 2000. So in the Bush years there has been a net loss in the Dow which proves the first MBA president was a total economic failure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 07/31/2008
- ErnestineBass See Profile I'm a Fan of ErnestineBass permalink

Bollocks...HP had articles on the increases.

"Talk about selective attention."...riiiiiiiiiiiiiiight.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 07/31/2008
- aaronburr See Profile I'm a Fan of aaronburr permalink

The market is very volatile right now; lots of variables. What would be really impressive would be a Huffpo headline trumpeting one of the DOW's three digit up swings, like Tuesday (+266.48) or Wednesday (+186.13) with the same breathless excitement shown when it goes down.

When it goes up we see words like "rises" or "moves higher". When it goes down we see "drops" or "tanks". People might almost think you were trying to talk down the economy or have an agenda for only bad economic news. Nah, that couldn"t be it, could it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 PM on 07/31/2008
- Wiredwilly See Profile I'm a Fan of Wiredwilly permalink

The entire Nation has tanked by pandering to Bush and the Central Bankers.
Enough is enough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 PM on 07/31/2008
- MetalCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of MetalCanuck permalink

The inflated currency bubble is popping along with the credit bubble. This is going to get bad of a lot of people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 07/31/2008
- UnbiasView See Profile I'm a Fan of UnbiasView permalink

You mean the people that use their credit card as a bank card?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 PM on 07/31/2008
- MetalCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of MetalCanuck permalink

Thats right, and people who bought houses they could not afford. I wasn't stupid enough to do it and I knew it back in 2001 even though at the time I didn't know anything about economics what so ever. SO really there is NO excuse other than stupidity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 08/01/2008
- ErnestineBass See Profile I'm a Fan of ErnestineBass permalink

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 07/31/2008
- falco See Profile I'm a Fan of falco permalink

The thieves at the non-Federal Reserve and their American royalty banksters and politicians are done with Amerika. They took us for all we got, created every war in this century for profit, and now they are on to China and India. Thank the Rothschilds (who subsidized the Rockefellers, Morgans, and all the other elite monopolists) for it is their nepharious new world order schemes that got us here. Problem, reaction, solution. Their trick is to make sure we don't see that it is them who creates the problem. No, it is all our fault (and the terrorists, who they created) - the subpprime crisis, too much on our credit cards, SUVs, pollution, environmental disasters, global warming. You name it, we get blamed. Now we are going to cry "help". And the same nepharious forces who really created the problems will come to our rescue. Can you say one world government? It'll help consolidate their monopoly. Hope you bought water and bullets with your rebate because things are not looking good.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 07/31/2008
- Srkdqltr See Profile I'm a Fan of Srkdqltr permalink

Well..... the companies keep laying off.. the government keeps laying off.. they send a lot of jobs out of the country.. and what is going to happen??? Is the economy supposed to be robust? They started this with outsoursing .. everything... now the bulk of the middle class can't afford to buy .. cars, houses, soon the electronic companys will feel the pinch. Those of you with incoms .. spend spend spend..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 PM on 07/31/2008
- repugnicansfearme See Profile I'm a Fan of repugnicansfearme permalink

Thanks Huff Post!!! Keep those pictures of stock traders freaking out coming! I love to see these BS slingers suffer. Keep up the great work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 07/31/2008
- brerol See Profile I'm a Fan of brerol permalink

And to think this might be a trader who represents some state employee pension fund.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:39 PM on 07/31/2008
- stargazer13 See Profile I'm a Fan of stargazer13 permalink

well that secret meeting the house of reps had march 13 th any one care to guess what that was all about .maybe the collapse of our Country's money system as well as fisa just wondering any thoughts

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 PM on 07/31/2008
- mollysgran See Profile I'm a Fan of mollysgran permalink

I am thinking that you have it right. Others are having the same thoughts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 07/31/2008
- anastasiabeaverhousen See Profile I'm a Fan of anastasiabeaverhousen permalink

Gollygeewhillikers. Could this possibly be whe the media is talking about some stu pid ad from mcsame about brit ney spear s and paris hilton? THey simply wanted to avoid this story.....the REAL story of the day?????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 PM on 07/31/2008
- Destin See Profile I'm a Fan of Destin permalink

The article left out the fact that Wall Street was in a state of depression over ExxonMobil not meeting expectations after Wall Street set up the conspiracy to TRY and raise oil as high as $200 a barrel to maximize profits and insider trading. Didn't quite make it, so that's a big reason for the cleaning out going on. ;)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 07/31/2008
- yathink See Profile I'm a Fan of yathink permalink

Tears, buckets of tears for everyone who makes millions on the suffering of people who may not have enough to eat, who have been driven out of their homes by occupation, natural disasters, and foreclosure. Poor oil companies and their friends. Like John McCain? And Dick Cheney?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 07/31/2008
- jeersforfears See Profile I'm a Fan of jeersforfears permalink

A 1.9 % increase in the GDP is GOOD compared to what the gloom and doomers have been predicting. Listening to them, you'd think we've been in a NEGATIVE GDP swing since we can remember.

Any increase in GDP is good. It shows GROWTH in the economy. Being negative about not reaching the projected 2.4% is picayune.

Also, consumer confidence rose about 1% in July. Not much, but it's going north. That's bad news for liberal HuffPosters and Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:13 PM on 07/31/2008
- speedingpullet See Profile I'm a Fan of speedingpullet permalink

So, lets not acknowledge that the GDP for 4Q07 was -0.2%.....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 PM on 07/31/2008
- aaronburr See Profile I'm a Fan of aaronburr permalink

We shouldn't acknowledge it because its NOT TRUE:

http://www.bloggingstocks.com/2008/03/27/final-q4-2007-gdp-may-indicate-the-u-s-is-in-a-recession/

Final figure was +0.6%. Not great but a lot better than your misinformation. Learn to read.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 PM on 07/31/2008
- mollysgran See Profile I'm a Fan of mollysgran permalink

I am glad that you are so wealthy!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:13 PM on 07/31/2008
- Americatortures See Profile I'm a Fan of Americatortures permalink

At that rate consumer condidence will STILL be at its LOWEST LEVEL in over 20 years on election day!! LOL with your second place finish in that presidential contest!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:00 PM on 07/31/2008
- Americatortures See Profile I'm a Fan of Americatortures permalink

Yeah...by the time of the election it will only be about 68% of consumers feel negative !! LOL with your 235 electoral votes...if THAT many!!! You remind me of the japanese who saw the light of the atom bomb right before they got the full effects of what was coming....and thought the sun was coming up over the horizon!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 07/31/2008
- jeersforfears See Profile I'm a Fan of jeersforfears permalink

Consumer confidence is about 52%, woefully weak to be sure. But it is going up. Also, where the heck to you get your 68% negative consumer negativity by Nov? Same place you get all your slop; from the MSM and your own off-the-wall imagination.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080729.WBmarkets20080729104501/WBStory/WBmarkets

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:36 PM on 07/31/2008
- JoeBlough See Profile I'm a Fan of JoeBlough permalink

If you calculate it using the 1980 formula or the 1990 formula, the GDP has been negative for 3 years now

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 07/31/2008
- jeersforfears See Profile I'm a Fan of jeersforfears permalink

And if the dog doesn't stop to scratch his ear, maybe he'll catch the fly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 PM on 07/31/2008
- brerol See Profile I'm a Fan of brerol permalink