Stocks end worst week mixed after wild session

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TIM PARADIS | October 10, 2008 07:48 PM EST | AP

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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Friday, Oct. 10, 2008. Wall Street capped its worst week ever with a wild session Friday that saw the Dow Jones industrials rocket within a 1,000 point range before closing with a relatively mild loss and the Nasdaq composite index actually end with a modest advance. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK — Wall Street capped one of its worst weeks ever with a wild session Friday that saw the Dow Jones industrials gyrate within a 1,000 point range before closing with a relatively mild loss and the Nasdaq composite index actually ending with a modest advance. Investors were still agonizing over frozen credit markets, but seven days of massive losses and the possibility of further government support for the markets tempted some investors late in the session.

The Dow lost 128 points, giving the blue chips an eight-day loss of just under 2,400, or 22.1 percent. The average had its worst week on record in both point and percentage terms. The Standard & Poor's 500 index, the indicator most watched by market professionals, posted its worst weekly run since 1933.

The latest loss also means the Dow is down 40.3 percent since reaching a record high close of 14,164.53 a year ago, on Oct. 9, 2007. The S&P 500, which reached its high of 1,565.15 the same day, is down 42.5 percent.

Investors suffered a paper loss for the day of about $100 billion, as measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 index. For the week, investors lost $2.4 trillion, and over the past year, the losses have piled up to $8.4 trillion.

But there were signs Friday that some investors believe the market is near a bottom. On Thursday, selling accelerated in the last hour of trading. The Dow was down 221 points at 3 p.m. but closed down 679 points an hour later. On Friday, the Dow was down 468 points at 3 but rocketed 790 points and was up 322 points just after 3:30. It then sold off but closed down only 128.

And the Russell 2000 index, which tracks the movements of smaller company stocks, had a 4.66 percent gain Friday; small-cap stocks are often first on investors' shopping lists when they think a market turnaround is at hand.

"Nobody wants to miss the bottom," said Anton Schutz, president of Mendon Capital Advisors, who said of the Dow's performance, "I view it as a victory that we only finished down 100."

Some investors may have been placing bets ahead of the weekend meeting of officials from the Group of Seven nations, who gathered in Washington to discuss the economic meltdown. One of the potential remedies expected to be reviewed at the meeting is for governments to guarantee lending among banks.

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"Everyone is hoping for really good news that can invigorate some buying and break this credit freeze, but your guess is as good as mine as to whether that will happen. I think people are desperate for action," said Jon Biele, head of capital markets at Cowen & Co. "It truly is remarkable to watch what's happening."

Still, Friday's widely mixed finish was proof that Wall Street still has a long list of troubles, and trading is likely to remain volatile when the market reopens on Monday.

"This kind of volatility in the market tells you that there are huge disagreements among investors about what the fundamentals are, about what the outlook is," said Ethan Harris, managing director and chief U.S. economist at Barclays PLC.

The hair-trigger mentality of the market _ a reflection of the intense anxiety on the Street _ was evident from the opening bell. The Dow fell 696 points in the first 15 minutes, recovered to gain more than 100 before that first hour was over and then turned sharply lower again. It spent much of the session with a deficit between 300 points and 500 points, regaining some ground and then falling again _ until the last hour, when the average had swings spanning hundreds of points that took the Dow up as much as 322.

Investors have shuddered the past month over a credit market that remains frozen, posing a threat to the economy by making it harder and costlier for businesses and consumers to get a loan. But Friday's gainers included financial stocks, the ones most decimated by the credit crisis.

Harris said policymakers likely will continue to do what is needed to revive the credit markets. Actions taken so far by central banks, among them the Federal Reserve, have included increased lending and interest rate cuts.

"The deeper problem is not the stock market drop but the freezing up of the credit markets and that's the root problem and they have to keep applying the antifreeze until it works," Harris said.

The major indexes' sharp swings Friday were likely exacerbated by the computer-driven "buy" and "sell" orders that kicked in when prices fell far enough.

"Fear has been running rampant all over the Street. Fear and greed, that's what rules the Street. I think the carcass has been stripped to the bone," said Dave Henderson, a floor trader on the New York Stock Exchange for Raven Securities Corp. "The mood, it swings with the market. When we went positive, the euphoria down there was awesome. It's like at a football game."

The Dow fell 128.00, or 1.49 percent, to 8,451.49. At its low point Friday, the Dow was down 696.68 at 7,882.51, some 600 points above its low in Wall Street's last bear market, 7,286.27, reached Oct. 9, 2002. It crossed the line between gains and losses 32 times during the session.

Its close was the lowest since April 25, 2003.

Market index stats again told how horrific the run has been on Wall Street:

_ The Dow lost 1,874.19 points, or 18.2 percent, during the week. Its dismal performance outdid the week that ended July 22, 1933, which saw a 17 percent drop _ and back then, during the Great Depression, there were six trading days in a week.

_ The Dow has fallen for eight straight sessions _ the longest losing streak since the eight days of declines following the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, when the blue chips lost 1,038.12, or 10.8 percent.

_ It's been the worst run for the Dow since the nearly two-year bear market that ended in December 1974 when the Dow lost 45 percent.

_ Since hitting their record highs a year ago, the Dow has lost 5,713 points, or 40.3 percent, while the S&P 500 is off 665.90 points, or 42.5 percent.

Beyond the Dow, broader stock indicators were mixed Friday.

The S&P 500 index fell 10.70 or 1.18 percent, to 899.22. The 18.2 percent drop for the week was the S&P's steepest decline since the week ending May 21, 1933; its worst loss was in 1929, when it fell 19.9 percent. The index lost 200.01 points for the week.

The Nasdaq composite index rose 4.39, or 0.27 percent, to 1,649.51. For the week, the Nasdaq lost 297.88, or 15.3 percent.

The Russell 2000 rose 23.28, or 4.66 percent, to 522.48. For the week, the Russell fell 96.92, or 15.64 percent.

Decliners led advancers 2-to-1 on the New York Stock Exhange, where consolidated volume came to a record 11.2 billion shares, compared with 8.14 billion traded Thursday.

Most major central banks around the world slashed interest rates this week after continuing problems in the credit market triggered concerns that banks will run out of money. Analysts have described the mood on trading floors this week as panicked at times, with investors bailing out of investments on fears there is no end in sight to the financial carnage.

A stream of selling forced exchanges in Austria, Russia and Indonesia to suspend trading, and those that remained opened were hammered. The rout in Australian markets caused traders there to call it "Black Friday."

European stocks sank Friday, with Britain's FTSE-100 falling 8.85 percent, German's DAX declining 7.01 percent, and France's CAC-40 ending down 7.73 percent. In Asia, the collapse of Japan's Yamato Life Insurance caused already nervous investors to pull even more money out of the market _ the Nikkei 225 fell 9.6 percent.

An index considered to be Wall Street's fear gauge reached record highs on Friday in another sign of massive investor anxiety. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, known as the VIX, rose to an all-time intraday high of 76.94 Friday. The VIX, which usually trades under 50, tracks options activity for the companies that make up the S&P 500.

Still, prospects of further government help and, perhaps, attractive prices helped parts of the financial sector show signs of life. Big national banks were among the gainers, including Bank of America Corp., which rose $1.24, or 6.3 percent, to $20.87. Some smaller banks also rose, including Fifth Third Bank Corp., which advanced 67 cents, or 6.9 percent, to $10.40.

Not all financials enjoyed a bounce, however. Morgan Stanley Inc. fell $2.77, or 22 percent, to $9.68 as investors worried that even with a major investment from Japan's Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group the company was still facing troubles. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. fell $12.55, or 12 percent, to $88.80.

Financials were most prominent among the stocks that rose in the S&P 500, though technology stocks generally advanced. Apple Inc. rose $8.06, or 9.1 percent, to $96.80, while eBay Inc. rose 77 cents, or 4.8 percent, to $16.73.

Investors appeared unfazed by final results arriving in afternoon trading from an auction Friday that set the price of debt issued by now bankrupt Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. at 8.625 cents on the dollar, down from a preliminary estimate of 9.75 cents.

The auction was for credit default swaps, which are contracts used to insure against the default of financial instruments like bonds and corporate debt. Traded in a $60 trillion, unregulated market, many of the instruments have fallen sharply because of their ties to bad mortgage debt. Those big losses and nervousness about who holds what CDS has made financial institutions hesitant to lend to one another. The auction could help the market determine which companies are most at risk from CDS losses.

___

AP Business Writers Joe Bel Bruno, Sara Lepro, Madlen Read and Dan Strumpf in New York contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

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

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

NEW YORK — Wall Street capped one of its worst weeks ever with a wild session Friday that saw the Dow Jones industrials gyrate within a 1,000 point range before closing with a relatively mild lo...
NEW YORK — Wall Street capped one of its worst weeks ever with a wild session Friday that saw the Dow Jones industrials gyrate within a 1,000 point range before closing with a relatively mild lo...
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Time to invade Iran!. Bankrupt America, before leaving office. Have those welfare cases eating each other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:57 PM on 10/10/2008
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul 32 fans permalink

No. They will be eating rich people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 10/10/2008

Fat cats are definitely tastier.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:31 AM on 10/11/2008
- wittgene I'm a Fan of wittgene 3 fans permalink

AMERICA=BR­ITIAN=FINA­NCIAL CRISIS=IRA­Q=GOOD=LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 PM on 10/10/2008
- dolphy I'm a Fan of dolphy 46 fans permalink

Until we get the consumers to have enough real money and good paying jobs, until we get corruption out of business, until we fix the mortgage mess and until we get common sense regulations and taxation for all businesses, the economy will continue it's downward spiral.

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

Add the need to reign in absurd usury rates, and that pretty much sums it up, dolphy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 PM on 10/10/2008

Until is a lonely word, and "until" seems never ending. I've been working for 8 years, and I my life was steadily progressing, "until" this terrible events.

Until all your UNTILS come to fruition, everything I built slowly are evaporating before my very eyes. My AIG stocks is worthless, 401K is just depleted.

At 27, 'am just starting my financial future, and I am going broke.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:53 PM on 10/10/2008

The notion that the volume of stocks traded in a day is controlled by individual investors is quaint.
Price movements such as this last hour is deliberate jamming, maybe originating in the futures market.
Todays last-hour "reprieve" was probably induced by treasury itself (they are authorize to interfere in just such manner) to make sure people weren't brooding over the weekend with another loss day.

The fact that you can see this interfering player on the simple volume chart (see ^TV.N) indicates it took a lot of continuous firepower: it wasn't followed on with buying by individual speculators, imho.

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

Don't click on any links that have tinyurl in them! They are viruses!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:24 PM on 10/10/2008

thanks, wondered what that was about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 10/10/2008
- Chaucea I'm a Fan of Chaucea 8 fans permalink
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Goina be interesting to see what happens on Monday (Columbus Day) when the stock market is open... yet banks are closed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:44 PM on 10/10/2008

George Bush has done exactly what he wanted to do. Make his buddies rich. So the stock market is hurting. After 8 years of the oil companies and all the other friends of Bush's getting rich. What do they care about America and its people. And yes not forget about this little war. This has made a lot of Bush's buddies very, very, very RICH. Who cares who has lost a loved one in this war as long as the republicans make money. Greed - Greed - Greed and more GREED. So lets put Mccain in Office. And let the GREED keep going.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:38 PM on 10/10/2008

when people have some free time, a new sport evolves. Maybe even shows on TV.

http://www.zippyvideos.com/210292006586365/nastymeds/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 10/10/2008
- wendynyc I'm a Fan of wendynyc 11 fans permalink

We need to go back to the drawing board - real investments in products and ideas - real investment - real wages for Americans - right here in America!

The biggest thing we have going for us is the most productive work force in the World!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:31 PM on 10/10/2008

Which reminds me people, we need to re-instate the Royalties Act, that is the Oil Companies must start paying those royalties when the cost of a barrel of oil goes is over $34/barrel. This was suspended by Clinton, and the Rethugs took advantage of it.

These royalties must be channeled back to "real industries" - our infrastructure and the environment. These alone will create enormous good paying jobs to Americans, not to mention upgrading our bridges and road that have deteriorated to the point of critical and dangerous condition. Imagine the initiatives we can develop for our environment.

These jobs will create wealth to Americans, and at the same time save our environment, and improve our infrastructure.

Just a thought from a 27-year-old gal. I am sure you guys know more than me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:46 PM on 10/10/2008
- Moxo I'm a Fan of Moxo 11 fans permalink

It's time to GWB's picture on the dollar bill and replace the '1' with '43 cents'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 10/10/2008
- GerryS I'm a Fan of GerryS 48 fans permalink
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sick and wrong-

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 PM on 10/10/2008
- hyjanks I'm a Fan of hyjanks 38 fans permalink

I just saw the first guy selling APPLES on a street corner in my town! Of course, it's apple pickin' time in Southeastern Colorado, but the flash back to apple sellers during the Depression nearly knocked me off my feet!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:29 PM on 10/10/2008
- Chaucea I'm a Fan of Chaucea 8 fans permalink
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Yep, it's not a matter of IF, but a matter of WHEN (and all signs point to: "Really Frickin' Soon").

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 PM on 10/10/2008
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 332 fans permalink
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Where can I get one of those dollar bills?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 10/10/2008
- DFL I'm a Fan of DFL 37 fans permalink
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THIS IS THE MESS THE CONSERVATIVES HAVE GIVEN US.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:10 PM on 10/10/2008
- rich misty I'm a Fan of rich misty 1043 fans permalink
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Absolutely: deregulation, free market greed permitted to run without any restraint

Where are the conservative cheerleaders now, posting about the tremendious success of the Bush/McCain/GOP economy

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 10/10/2008
- Forester I'm a Fan of Forester 101 fans permalink
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[insert sound of crickets here]

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 10/10/2008
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul 32 fans permalink

Brooks and Krauthammer are complaining that the GOP candidates are not good enough.

They are in denial - it's the idealogy that is bankrupt, not the choice of candidates.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:22 PM on 10/10/2008
- spinmas I'm a Fan of spinmas 3 fans permalink

so let me get this right...ca­pitalist are greedy and predatory and your worrying about socialism and communism, which is the least of the three evils? and if it boils down to God and Country then God is coming to take this crap apart and as far as country, we have sold it to evryone to fight Iraq!!! borrowed it all from china!..yo­u cheap labor which drives capitalism can go to where the sulpher burns...yo­u can't keep raping and raping wit disregard for how nature regulates and man has needs beyond the constraints of the haves that continually seek to exploit them...hav­e you seen how the rest of the world is gloating..­.I predicted all this some years ago in graduate school in albany ny....so its not that scary to me as it transpires­..I don't have anything to lose..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 10/10/2008
- Jessegirl I'm a Fan of Jessegirl 49 fans permalink

Boosh and the Republicans told us that we could spend billions on IrQ,
give billions in tax cuts and loans to big business,
and we wouldn't have to sacrifice.

Remember the first press secretary Boosh had (Ari).
I remember him remarking that people were "unpatriotic" if they didn't think
we could 'have and do it all'.
Something had to give folks.
And we're gettin it.

Oh and by the way, I remember the media (those talking-heads)
always pumping up the Repub spin, that the Dems were just "negative" for being so skeptical.
They loved to poke fun of those "angry" Dems back then too.
The media and the Republicans had one BIG party.
Don't be fooled by their sudden change of heart.
Okay, I'm done venting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:37 PM on 10/10/2008
- Chavez08 I'm a Fan of Chavez08 58 fans permalink
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So far, their sudden change of heart is benefiting Progressives and shining light on the fascists.

I'll give them a pass.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:45 PM on 10/10/2008
- Chavez08 I'm a Fan of Chavez08 58 fans permalink
photo

I thought I saw Smiths' "Wealth of Nations" hard-cover for sale on the sidewalk at Borders - $0.49, buy two and get a free hot chocolate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:03 PM on 10/10/2008
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