Stocks tumble as Street worries about financials

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TIM PARADIS | October 7, 2008 06:43 PM EST | AP

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Traders Matthew Jones, center, and Paul Svachula, left, watch the markets in the S&P 500 futures trading pit at the CME Group in Chicago, Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2008. The misery worsened on Wall Street Tuesday, with stocks piling on the losses late in the session and bringing the two-day decline in the Dow Jones industrials to more than 875 points amid escalating worries about credit markets and financial sector. The Standard & Poor's 500 index declined 60.66, or 5.74 percent, to 996.23. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

NEW YORK — The misery worsened on Wall Street Tuesday, with stocks piling on losses late in the session and bringing the two-day decline in the Dow Jones industrials to more than 875 points amid escalating worries about credit markets and the financial sector.

The Dow lost more than 500 points and all the major indexes slid more than 5 percent. The Standard & Poor's 500 index saw its first close below 1,000 in five years.

Steps by the Federal Reserve to reinvigorate the dormant credit markets ultimately weren't enough to calm nervous investors. News about financial companies only added to their despondent mood.

"The calls I'm getting _ every money manager I deal with, and every client I talk to _ are just very emotional. This is a very, very emotional time, and most of them are taking steps to shore up their defenses, reducing exposure to stocks just to defend their portfolios," said Hugh Johnson, chairman and chief investment officer of Johnson Illington Advisors.

The magnitude of the stock market's plunge is reflected in the Dow's grim stats:

_ Tuesday's close was its lowest close in five years, since Sept. 30, 2003.

_ In just five trading days this month, and in the fourth quarter, it is down about 1,400 points, or 13 percent.

_ It has fallen 33.3 percent since its record close of 14,164.53, a year ago Thursday.

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_ Through Tuesday, it suffered its largest five-day point decline ever, and its largest five-day percentage drop since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks.

The Dow's percentage loss Tuesday was 5.11 percent, actually a better performance than the 5.74 percent suffered by the S&P, the market indicator most watched by traders and analysts. The Nasdaq composite dropped 5.8 percent.

The market's paper loss for the session came to about $700 billion, as measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index, which tracks 5,000 U.S.-based companies' stocks. So far this month, the loss has come to about $2.2 trillion.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned in a speech Tuesday that the financial crisis could prolong the difficulty the economy is facing. While his remarks were widely regarded as a sign that an interest rate cut could be in the offing, Wall Street appeared little comforted and focused on his downbeat assessment.

Earlier, the Fed announced plans to buy massive amounts of corporate debt to jump-start lending in the markets where many companies turn for short-term loans called commercial paper. The evaporation of faith that loans will be repaid has lenders weary and is making it more difficult and expensive for businesses and consumers to borrow.

The credit markets did show some slight signs of easing as demand for safe-haven investments decreased, though that offered little comfort to investors highly anxious about the extremely low lending levels and their impact on the economy. The markets seized up last month after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. filed for bankruptcy and the government stepped in to rescue insurer American International Group Inc.

The Fed's latest move to lubricate the credit markets stops short of a broad interest rate reduction that some investors say is necessary to restore confidence in the market. Other market watchers argue, however, that more focused steps like Fed's decision to buy commercial paper are what's needed.

Investors remain worried about financial companies like Bank of America Corp., which fell after slashing its dividend and reporting that its third-quarter profit fell 68 percent. The stock fell $8.45, or 26 percent, to $23.77 Tuesday. It was by far the steepest decliner among the 30 stocks that comprise the Dow industrials.

And a rumor that Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. was pulling out of a deal to acquire up to 24.9 percent of the voting shares of Morgan Stanley sent the investment bank's stock tumbling $5.85, or 25 percent, to $17.65. The companies denied the rumor, but the Street was panicky enough that it still sent Morgan Stanley and other financials tumbling.

Investors are fearful that financial companies will continue to face cash shortages even with efforts in Washington and by other governments to resuscitate lending.

"It's such a widespread loss of confidence and, to some extent, a race for the exits," Johnson said.

Stocks ended lower for the fifth straight session. The Dow fell 508.39, or 5.11 percent, to 9,447.11. The drop came a day after the blue chips fell below 10,000 for the first time in four years. The Dow skidded as much as 800 points on Monday before finishing with a loss of 370.

Broader indexes also fell. The S&P 500 index declined 60.66, or 5.74 percent, to 996.23, the first close below the 1,000 mark since September 2003. The Nasdaq composite index fell 108.08, or 5.80 percent, to 1,754.88.

The dollar was mostly lower against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Oil prices rebounded after plunging Monday to an eight-month low on concerns a global recession will undermine demand for crude. Light, sweet crude rose $2.25 to settle at $90.06 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Concerns about the credit markets still fed demand for the relative safety of government debt, though pressures eased. The yield on the three-month Treasury bill, which moves opposite its price, rebounded to 0.81 percent from 0.50 percent late Monday. Demand for short-term Treasurys remains high because of their safety; investors are willing to take extremely low returns just to have their money in a secure place.

Some investors moved out of longer-term Treasury bonds, which don't draw as much demand as shorter-term debt in times of fear. The yield on the 10-year note rose to 3.51 percent from 3.45 percent late Monday.

Investors are still hoping to see other moves from the Fed to boost confidence. Australia's central bank lowered interest rates by the largest amount since 1992 in a surprise move, and that reignited hopes that others, including the Fed and European Central Bank, might follow suit.

Though not giving the market a rate cut, the Fed has taken other steps to help unclog the credit markets. On Tuesday, policymakers provided more details about when it will make $900 billion in short-term loans available to squeezed banks.

The loans are made available to banks through auctions. The Fed, in coordination with other countries' central banks engaged in similar efforts, laid out dates that it will conduct the auctions through the rest of this year.

But write-downs of bad debt at Bank of America are a reminder to investors that troubles within the financial sector remain, according to Kim Caughey, equity research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group.

"I think we have weeks of volatility ahead of us," she said. "We're not overly optimistic but we're not indulging in doom and gloom either."

She said the arrival of quarterly results from corporations has made investors even more jittery, with investors seeking any information about how companies are faring. She said some companies could go under because of the tough economic conditions but that the stronger players would survive.

"You're going to get that Darwinian shakeout process. That's going to happen from the mom and pops all the way up to the big boys," she said.

Minutes from the Fed's last meeting described a U.S. economy that was slowing considerably and credit markets that were deteriorating rapidly. The meeting was held Sept. 16, the day after the failure of Lehman Brothers. The central bank's Open Market Committee found the risks from weaker growth and higher inflation were roughly equal; that was its rationale for leaving rates unchanged. Policymakers, who will meet again at the end of the month, left key interest rate unchanged at 2 percent.

About 2,800 stocks declined on the New York Stock Exchange, while fewer than 400 advanced. Consolidated volume came to 6.84 billion shares, compared with 7.81 billion shares traded Monday.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 36.96, or 6.20 percent, to 558.95.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 3.03 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.35 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 1.12 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 0.55 percent.

___

On the Net:

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

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

NEW YORK — The misery worsened on Wall Street Tuesday, with stocks piling on losses late in the session and bringing the two-day decline in the Dow Jones industrials to more than 875 points amid...
NEW YORK — The misery worsened on Wall Street Tuesday, with stocks piling on losses late in the session and bringing the two-day decline in the Dow Jones industrials to more than 875 points amid...
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When keys to the United States Treasury are in the hands of self-interest and scoundrels you can expect them to throw the money in every which direction to cover up their economic crimes. So, it is not an unwise action to exchange your dollars for gold or silver. The dollar is being shrunk to a third of its 2007 value as our "rule by committee" governance legislates our country into poverty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 10/08/2008
- gd h I'm a Fan of gd h 8 fans permalink
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Imagine that. People are emotional about losing all their money. That's real money, the kind you buy food and gas and electricity with. Too bad Wall Street has no idea what that means.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:35 PM on 10/08/2008
- juangault I'm a Fan of juangault 3 fans permalink

It's totally possible that this is the American equivalent of the meltdown that occurred in Japan, over it's hyperinflated real estate prices. It's been a long road since. So when is the Nasdaq going to be at 5,000 again?

Face it, we've been had. You're better off giving a dollar to the bum on the street, than to give $100 to your "investment specialist". The rich and the poor, the pigs and the mice, feeding off the workhorses of the middle class.

Nevertheless, I'm starting to smell blood in the streets, and the sweet siren of glorious Ponzi schemes are ringing in my ears.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:58 AM on 10/08/2008
- gd h I'm a Fan of gd h 8 fans permalink
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With all due respect to the sentiment, I'm not sure the mice are actually living off of anything any more. Remember all that de-regulation? They de-regulated all the safety net programs too, meaning--nobody has to provide any safety or security for anybody. So let's not be too hard on the truly needy here. They should be living off of the gross (I mean that figuratively, not an accounting term) profits of the oil companies and others who take unfair advantage to all of our detriment.
Given that, the mice--well, I don't see so many of them any more.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 PM on 10/08/2008

700B over the weekend, another 1.3T this week and its only Wed.

Congress should snap its fingers and impeach the entire administration.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 AM on 10/08/2008
- rkimball I'm a Fan of rkimball 3 fans permalink

not all bad news out there. under bush,more millionares & billionaires where created under his watch than any other time in american history. the rich got 30% richer just this year alone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 AM on 10/08/2008
- rkimball I'm a Fan of rkimball 3 fans permalink

the very same ceos that made off with millions of investors money then got huge severence packages & then a bail out are now treating themselves to million dollar spas. they are asking for another bail out.

this is not healthy for wall street. expect deeper corrections in the markets as greed rules.

also,as fingers point & nobody takes any blame, the working man can kiss their retirements good by.

the bottom line is the government does not want to investigate,hold accountability or prosecute. this will not bring trust back to wall street any time soon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:16 AM on 10/08/2008
- juangault I'm a Fan of juangault 3 fans permalink

I'm going to build a guillotine. Get it all ready to use when the time comes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:51 AM on 10/08/2008
- BillCarson I'm a Fan of BillCarson 5 fans permalink
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Mark Twain on the stock market...

OCTOBER: This is one of the peculiarly dangerous months to speculate in stocks in. The other are July, January, September, April, November, May, March, June, December, August, and February.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 AM on 10/08/2008
- vietveter I'm a Fan of vietveter 17 fans permalink

That 700 billion we pizzed away was ill spent.

What do we have to show for it?

All we bailed out was some fat cats

The real problem is still in front of us

That money COULD HAVE BEEN

targeted where it might actually do some good for America

Great job, bailers. Thanks for nothing !!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 AM on 10/08/2008
- rkimball I'm a Fan of rkimball 3 fans permalink

i cashed in my 401k,paid the heavy penalties & taxes & will now go on a spending spree. i have lost 45% alone in less than a week.

yes,it was the wrong thing to do but i'll be spending what's left of my own retirement instead of some ceo spending it for me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:21 AM on 10/08/2008

You are right Xrepublican. The nature of this problem is such that desperate and massive cash injections and rate cuts are minor stopgap patches that only postpone the major crash by a few weeks. This is a crisis of confidence and mass panic and the more desperate the measures the harder the fall. we need calm controlled LEADERSHIP now to get out of this mess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 AM on 10/08/2008
- Daniel8168 I'm a Fan of Daniel8168 11 fans permalink

What is wrong with you people?! How can you even read a story like this?! Weren't you listening when McCain told us that the fundamentals of our economy are strong?!

Sheesh! You people are just having a mental recession - you whiners!

So, with that said, I wonder what McCain and his economic "brain" (yes, that is sarcasm), Phil Graham, are going to tell us about this little issue?

McCain: Great news my friends! The collapse of the global economy means that gas prices will plummet since there will be no demand for gas because no one will have jobs to commute to! Awww shucks! Don't thank me! I don't know as much about the economy as I should!

Graham: The global economy collapsed because you people wouldn't quit whining! Your whining made all these perfectly good toxic assets go bad! Shame on you!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 10/08/2008
- gd h I'm a Fan of gd h 8 fans permalink
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I love satire, thanks!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 PM on 10/08/2008
- mamacat I'm a Fan of mamacat 123 fans permalink

As I look at the global economic problems, it occurs to me that Reaganomics, deregulation, and the trickle-down theory have succeeded in bringing world markets to a standstill, or worse. Thanks a lot GOP, you did it to us again; 2008, meet 1929.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 AM on 10/08/2008
- Daniel8168 I'm a Fan of Daniel8168 11 fans permalink

Trickle-down economics is a fantastic idea - until you introduce human nature, i.e. GREED.

Essentially, among republicans, "trickle down economics" is code for, "We'll give corporations all your money, and if you're stupid enough, you can stand around and wait for some of it to accidentally fall out of their greedy, clammy, little corporate hands.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 AM on 10/08/2008
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Without trickle-down economics, we wouldn't have had the $50 hamburger.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:51 AM on 10/08/2008

Here's how I see the banks hoarding money and looking for handouts from governments all over the world.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5c/Reed_warbler_cuckoo.jpg

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 AM on 10/08/2008

You ain't seen nothing yet - unfortunately....

and with Bush hiding in he White House counting the days down (can I leave yet?....) and showing NOTHING remotely resembling 'leadership' - indeed looking scared out of his wits (do I HAVE to go out there and give a speech????? )..... well..... the US is looking like the Titanic - with NOBODY on the bridge

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 AM on 10/08/2008

A global crisis needs a global solution. Global confidence needs a global base of trust. US is out of action till 20 January so EU, Russia and China should invite UN to convene a new Bretton Woods Conference open to the next US Administration. With a global economic freeze to calm things, a new international basis must be agreed for currencies, markets, business, international relations and international law. Matters could move faster if, on 5 November Vice-President Cheney resigns and Bush nominates the new President-Elect to be Vice-President with same-day Senate approval. If Bush then immediately resigns the new President can take office and deal with the crisis immediately. For my money President Obama should invite his predecessor Bill Clinton to be Treasury Secretary. He wouldn't be the first ex-US President to serve in the Administration of one of his successors but he would be the first since the 19th century. As he sorted out the chaotic economic state of the union he inherited from Bush père, I believe that there would be global confidence in him to get a grip on the mess created by his son bush fils. The deal with EU, China and Russia should be to base all currencies on one global currency unit which, in turn, should be based on the sum total of the value of the one thing that doesn't change - all the land on the planet. It'd work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 AM on 10/08/2008
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