Dow plunges 679 for 6th triple-digit loss in a row

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TIM PARADIS and MARTIN CRUTSINGER | October 9, 2008 10:48 PM EST | AP

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Traders gather at a post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Thursday Oct. 9, 2008. Stocks plunged in the final minutes of trading Thursday, sending the Dow Jones industrials down more than 675 points, or more than 7 percent, to their lowest level in five years after a major credit ratings agency said it was considering cutting its rating on General Motors Corp. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK — A runaway train of a sell-off turned the anniversary of the stock market peak into one of the darkest days in Wall Street history Thursday, driving the Dow Jones industrials down a breathtaking 679 points and deepening a financial crisis that has defied all efforts to stop it.

Stocks lost more than 7 percent, $872 billion of investments evaporated, and the Dow fell to 8,579. When the average crashed through the 9,000 level for the first time in five years in the final hour of trading, sellers had only begun to hit the gas pedal.

As bad as the day was, even worse was the cumulative effect of a historic run of declines: The Dow suffered a triple-digit loss for the sixth day in a row, a first, and the average dropped for the seventh day in a row, a losing streak not seen since 2002.

"Right now the market is just panicked," said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's in New York. "Nobody wants to take on any risk. Everybody just wants to get their money and put it under the mattress."

It all took place one year to the day after the Dow closed at its record high of 14,164. Since that day, frozen credit, record foreclosures, cascading job losses and outright fear have seized the market and sapped 39 percent of its value.

Paper losses for the year add up to an staggering $8.3 trillion, according to figures measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index, which tracks 5,000 U.S.-based companies representing almost all stocks traded in America.

It was the second straight day that Wall Street was rocked by a final-hour sell-off, but this one was particularly shocking.

Most of the day was relatively calm, and the trading floor was quieter than usual because of the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. Wall Street awoke to news the federal government was brandishing a new weapon against the financial crisis _ considering seeking an equity stake in major U.S. banks in order to stabilize them.

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But that step appeared to be as ineffectual as the others Washington has rolled out in recent weeks, including a $700 billion bailout of the financial industry, a coordinated interest rate cut by central banks around the world and direct lending by the Federal Reserve to private companies to provide them with short-term cash.

Acquiring a stake in the banks would be yet another startling intervention by the government in the free market, but economists said President Bush was left with little choice because of the credit markets, where tight lending has choked off the everyday cash that is the lifeblood of the economy.

"In normal times, this would be out of the question, but in the present dire situation, I think the government should be employing all the powers that it can," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University, Channel Islands.

After the closing bell, shellshocked traders and bankers gathered at Bobby Van's Steakhouse and downed beers and drinks to chase the ghastly numbers. One Wall Streeter joked things had gotten so bad that he should apply for a job as a waiter.

"It was an ugly day, there's no ways to put it," said another customer, Alan Valdes, director of floor operations for Hallard, Lyons. "Guys were frustrated, just fed up. ... We're in an area no one has been in since 1930."

Wall Street has been teetering on the brink of panic for a month now, vulnerable to any bad news. Thursday's sell-off was triggered when a major credit rating agency put General Motors Corp. and its finance affiliate under review to determine whether it should be downgraded.

Stock in GM, one of the 30 components of the Dow Jones industrials, lost 31 percent of its value and closed at $4.76 _ its lowest in more than half a century, since the Korean War began.

For the Dow, it has been nothing short of a free fall:

_The average is down 2,338 points, or 21 percent, in the last four weeks, since the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy escalated a long-running credit crunch into a full-fledged crisis.

_The point decline Thursday was the third-worst in Dow history. The worst, 778 points, came less than two weeks ago.

_Of the last 19 trading days, there have been 11 triple-digit losses _ including the unprecedented six straight. The six gains have all been triple-digits, and only one of them was enough to make up the losses of the day before.

_The Dow now stands only about 1,300 points above its lowest close of the bear market that followed 9/11. In a market as volatile as this, that gap can be closed in a couple of trading days, or less.

In fact, triple-digit declines can happen almost in an instant.

On Thursday, the Dow was above 9,200 after 1:30 p.m. and still above 9,000 after 3 p.m. The pressure to sell was so intense that the Dow kept dropping precipitously for 10 minutes after the 4 p.m. closing bell as the day's losses were tabulated.

In percentage terms, the drop in the Dow exceeded the day the markets reopened after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. It was not close to the 22.6-percent decline on Black Monday in 1987, the last stock market crash.

Still, it is becoming increasingly clear that Washington has ever fewer places to reach in its toolbox to stop, or perhaps even slow, the crisis. Among the options still left are buying up foreclosed properties and making direct loans to homeowners, both of them hard for free-market supporters to swallow.

Speaking in the afternoon before the market closed, President Bush told an audience on the South Lawn of the White House that the economy was going through a "very tough stretch." But, he said: "I'm confident in our economy's long-term prospects."

After the market closed, the White House said Americans should remain confident despite the market plunge, and Bush planned to speak from the Rose Garden on Friday morning _ though he was not expected to unveil any new policy proposals.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid asked Bush on Thursday to call an emergency meeting of the G-8 industrial nations' heads of state to address the continuing global credit freeze and instability in world markets. The G-8 comprises France, Germany, Italy, Great Britain, Japan, the United States, Canada and Russia.

In the markets Thursday, the broader stock indicators registered similar declines to the Dow's. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 7.6 percent to the 909 level, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 5.5 percent to 1,645.

Meanwhile, the credit markets remained stubbornly locked-up. The benchmark rate that banks charge each other for loans, known as Libor, rose to 4.75 percent from 4.52 percent a day earlier, signaling banks are still afraid to make loans because they worry they won't be paid back.

"The story is getting to be like that movie Groundhog Day," said Arthur Hogan, chief market analyst at Jefferies & Co. "Everything we're seeing is historic. The problem is historic, the solutions are historic, and unfortunately, the sell-off is historic. It's not the kind of history you want to be making."

Adding to Wall Street's nervousness, a ban on short selling _ a process in which investors borrow shares of stock and essentially bet the value will fall _ expired.

With three and a half weeks before voters elect Bush's successor, there was also no immediate comment on the Wall Street action from the presidential candidates, Democratic Sen. Barack Obama and Republican Sen. John McCain.

Earlier in the day in Dayton, Ohio, Obama took aim at McCain's plan to have the government absorb the full cost of renegotiating mortgages for borrowers under strain from the dramatic decline of the values of their homes.

McCain rolled out the idea at the second presidential debate earlier this week, a forum in which he also told voters it was important to have a steady hand in the White House during a time of economic crisis.

___

AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Tom Raum in Washington and Patrick Rizzo in New York contributed to this story.

NEW YORK — A runaway train of a sell-off turned the anniversary of the stock market peak into one of the darkest days in Wall Street history Thursday, driving the Dow Jones industrials down a br...
NEW YORK — A runaway train of a sell-off turned the anniversary of the stock market peak into one of the darkest days in Wall Street history Thursday, driving the Dow Jones industrials down a br...
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- BethStuart I'm a Fan of BethStuart 13 fans permalink

I would hope that Obama's macro-economics team is involved in crafting strategy. It includes a former Fed Chairman, two former secretaries of the treasury and a former president of the council of economic advisors. Here is the link:

http://econ4obama.blogspot.com/2008/06/obama-economic-advisors-and-economic.html

McCain's chief economic advisor is Phil Gramm.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 AM on 10/10/2008
- karela I'm a Fan of karela 83 fans permalink

It may have been based on greed instead of overt hatred, but the results are the same. Wall Street, because it wasn't monitored with sufficient regulation, has taken the nation and the world to the brink of economic ruin. As a result of their behavior many people will die. Some of them will die in wars, some will die because of starvation, some will die because wealthier countries will have less money to give to charity, but when all is said and done, more people in the world will die as a result of this mess than have died because of any act of terrorism-­--possibly more than have died as a result of all combined acts of terrorism. John McCain is apparently very concerned about an act of domestic terrorism forty years ago where a small bomb went off in a cloak room when no people were present as a protest against a war. I am much more concerned about this situation that John McCain has directly assisted. He did it in the Keating mess and didn't learn. He fought very hard to deregulate Wall Street and this is the result. The cause may not be hate or religious zealotry, but the results are the same. The current situation is the direct result of

FINANCIAL TERRORISM.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 10/10/2008

Let's pray that the McCain folks decide to STOP trying to step in with POLITICAL CALCULATIONS regarding how Treasury and Fed should utilize the $700 billion dollar bailout/rescue package.

John has played this like an "issue" for the past three weeks - alternately avoiding discussion regarding the economy and "STEPPING IN" to "lead us."

Barack Obama realizes that POLITICS HAS NO APPLICATION HERE.

WE HAVE LEADERSHIP. And, THEY GET IT. The folks at the Treasury and Fed aren't debating "conservative" versus "liberal" ideals. There is precisely ZERO discussion regarding "looming socialism."

Why?

WELL, SUCH DISCUSSION IS IRRELEVANT.

We've a dual problem - the collapse of our financial system and a global market panic. Both of these are driving plummeting consumer confidence, hence falling expenditures and a screeching halt to growth on a global recession scale - in essence, just the sort of ripple effect that Ben Bernanke anticipated when he and a colleague partnered with a team of programmers to simulate what's happening right now.

Now, none of us - and certainly not Senator McCain - should be TELLING FED AND TREASURY WHAT TO DO NEXT.

For, what must be done is the very thing that John McCain's base finds ideologically unacceptable: The partial nationalization of our banking system(s) by the G7 governments that are meeting in Washington this weekend.

So, please, Senator McCain, SHHHHHHHHH­HHHHHHHHH!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 10/10/2008
- whizkid I'm a Fan of whizkid 28 fans permalink

How much of this decline has happened with Obama ahead in the polls?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:40 AM on 10/10/2008
- robodweeb I'm a Fan of robodweeb 116 fans permalink
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How much of this has hapened with Bush in the White House?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:43 AM on 10/10/2008
- Jessegirl I'm a Fan of Jessegirl 49 fans permalink

Your pss-jug is full.
Better to empty it, before you start a new one out of laziness.
Hey, do you ever pee in any of those empty pop cans around you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 AM on 10/10/2008
- Mogamboguru I'm a Fan of Mogamboguru 317 fans permalink
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Your i.d.i.o.c.y is impossible to overestimate...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 AM on 10/10/2008
- Chillinout I'm a Fan of Chillinout 125 fans permalink
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The more the market declines, the higher Obama's numbers are going to go. Americans know that the people that are mostly responsible for the mess we are in, cannot get us out of it.

They are looking for something the Republican just can't provide. Real and calm leadership in a time of crisis.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 AM on 10/10/2008
- Jessegirl I'm a Fan of Jessegirl 49 fans permalink

Yup.
This time "tough-talkin" just is not going to cut it.
BRAINS are going to actually matter this time.
Whiz is just mad that Hill couldn't cut it and O didn'.t NEED her after all!...LOL!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 AM on 10/10/2008
- MNmommy I'm a Fan of MNmommy 374 fans permalink
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Doucheborough is repeating the lie that the McCain campaign treatment of Obama is mild - he's bullying anyone in the way of that message.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 AM on 10/10/2008
- robodweeb I'm a Fan of robodweeb 116 fans permalink
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He talks one minute about how vicious the 2000 campaign was. Run by the same folks running McCain's campaign now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 10/10/2008
- Revanchist I'm a Fan of Revanchist 3 fans permalink

Definitely a bullying shill. His fear is palpable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 10/10/2008
- JahLenin I'm a Fan of JahLenin 2 fans permalink

It's sort of like Leno for the morning set. grovel, grovel, sorry rush......

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

This all looks good for the lehman credit default swaps today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 AM on 10/10/2008
- JahLenin I'm a Fan of JahLenin 2 fans permalink

No, it doesn't.

Unless you're a master of irony?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 AM on 10/10/2008
- nostalgia I'm a Fan of nostalgia 10 fans permalink

My prediction: Sarah de Wasilla will implode today on Black Friday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 10/10/2008

Thank you Barney Frank, thank you Chris Dodd, thank you Chuck Schumer, thank you Frankline Raines, thank you James Johnson. Frankie, enjoy the $5 million condo you just bought in D.C.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:33 AM on 10/10/2008
- robodweeb I'm a Fan of robodweeb 116 fans permalink
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Seems like Republicans were in the majority for quite a while.

Seems like if they were so concerned they could have done something.

Seems like Bush kept saying it was just a "speed bump", nothing to worry about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 AM on 10/10/2008
- Mogamboguru I'm a Fan of Mogamboguru 317 fans permalink
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Flagged for repeated, senseless copying and pasting.

Try something new, tro//.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 AM on 10/10/2008
- whizkid I'm a Fan of whizkid 28 fans permalink

Popeye and Bluto work for the same people.
The Not You Company.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:32 AM on 10/10/2008
- Jessegirl I'm a Fan of Jessegirl 49 fans permalink

Why do you like it when America is tanking?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:48 AM on 10/10/2008

The Dow has declined 39 % in the last year, My investments have only dropped 25%. Gee, I'm doing great in this economy !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 AM on 10/10/2008
- Chillinout I'm a Fan of Chillinout 125 fans permalink
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Hehehe

Mine have only dropped 18% I am really doing great!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 AM on 10/10/2008
- Mogamboguru I'm a Fan of Mogamboguru 317 fans permalink
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Gold rose 30 percent in the same period...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 AM on 10/10/2008
- mrJJ I'm a Fan of mrJJ 23 fans permalink

Hope you got your emergency cash out of the market when Cramer reccomended it

Jim Cramer: Obama is a recession. McCain is a depression!

What will New York look like a year from now? The answer: bad and probably worse, and perhaps downright catastrophic. Three degrees of awful. The first step was passing the bank-bailout legislation. Now that it’s done—and if it didn’t get done we would have been looking at a guaranteed economic collapse—the critical issue will be presidential leadership. And while any president will be an improvement over the current one, there is a growing belief on Wall Street that Barack Obama has the capacity to lead us out of this wilderness while John McCain does not. I’ll go a step further: Obama is a recession. McCain is a depression.
snip
For all his talk of being a maverick, McCain looks an awful lot like President Bush on the credit crisis: He doesn’t seem to understand Wall Street or Main Street, he is dogmatically anti-regulation, and his economic team is a joke. Carly Fiorina almost destroyed the onetime best technology company in America, Hewlett-Packard, and Meg Whitman took eBay, the best dot-com player, and turned it into a mediocre franchise that has no growth. Both are perceived by Wall Street to be also-rans who are on the team because they have nothing else to do.continued
http://nymag.com/news/businessfinance/bottomline/51007

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 AM on 10/10/2008
- Venom5809 I'm a Fan of Venom5809 3 fans permalink

That was scary when Cramer said to take out what you need for 5 years.
When I watched him say that, I knew it was bad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 AM on 10/10/2008
- abby4ever I'm a Fan of abby4ever 232 fans permalink
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Nikkei just closed 9.6% down. That's a cr@sh, or it might as well be, where a 10% drop in one day is a cr@sh...unless that's just for the Dow or something. The Dax is down almost that much too. Dow futures down -292 now.

They keep talking on CNN that today's falls are, largely, because of a growing fear of a global recession.

It really is B l a c k Friday, Stark.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 AM on 10/10/2008
- MNmommy I'm a Fan of MNmommy 374 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 AM on 10/10/2008
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Tell me about it! Worldwide economic crash.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 AM on 10/10/2008
- emily00011 I'm a Fan of emily00011 33 fans permalink

Palin is friends with witch-hunters, secessionists, and rascist. She isn't fit to be called an American.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 AM on 10/10/2008

A truly stupid post!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:31 AM on 10/10/2008
- robodweeb I'm a Fan of robodweeb 116 fans permalink
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Which part isn't true?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:39 AM on 10/10/2008
- Venom5809 I'm a Fan of Venom5809 3 fans permalink

Their is video of her being blessed by the witch hunter and her giving him praise.
She encourages racism at her rallies, there is video of her supporters using racial epithets and she does not tell them to stop.
Finally, her husband was a long time member of the AIP a secessionist party and Palin even addressed them and encouraged them up to this year, all on video.

Any questions?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:59 AM on 10/10/2008
- whizkid I'm a Fan of whizkid 28 fans permalink

Get over the Palin hate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 AM on 10/10/2008
- AZ1 I'm a Fan of AZ1 permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:23 AM on 10/10/2008

Can't help it. I just can't stand ignorant , incoherent, fear mongering harpies who say things like " there's a special place in hell for women who don't support ( me ). "

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 AM on 10/10/2008
- abby4ever I'm a Fan of abby4ever 232 fans permalink
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Oh whiz, don't start that again. Any criticism of her that is strongly-worded, is h@te? Just as it was with Hillary?

That is just plain silly.

And you know it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 AM on 10/10/2008

Gee, and according to the left any criticism of Obama is racist. Get real!! It is hate, plain and simple.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 AM on 10/10/2008

Wachovia just lent the GOP $8 million to use for their House races. Can you say, "bribe?"

That's because they won't lend to small business and homeowners with good credit. Not to mention that bailout that is looking more and more like just a giveaway to the financial industry.

What a bad joke.

I want all these guys rounded up and jailed. NOW!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 AM on 10/10/2008
- Venom5809 I'm a Fan of Venom5809 3 fans permalink

I agree.
They should be led out the mansions at 3 in the morning in shackles and their pjs with cameras surrounding them.
Then the gates of the mansions should be chained and padlocked and all of their possessions seized.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 AM on 10/10/2008

No, give those mansions to families who were foreclosed on.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 10/10/2008
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