Thursday, August 9, 2007

Dow Falls over 380 Points

Last Update: 4:10 PM ET Aug 9, 2007

NEW YORK (NEW YORK) -- U.S. stocks posted steep losses on Thursday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average losing over 380 points for its second worst day of the year, amid a resurgence of credit-market concerns. The Dow ($INDU :$INDU

The Dow Jones industrial average (down 387.18 to 13,270.68, Charts) tumbled 387 points, or 2.8 percent, its biggest one-day point and percentage loss since Feb. 27, when it plunged 416 points on worries about a global growth slowdown.

The blue-chip barometer had opened weakly on Thursday, briefly pared some losses in the morning after the New York Stock Exchange instituted trading curbs, but then resumed its downward path.

The broader S&P 500 (down 44.40 to 1,453.09, Charts) index dropped almost 3 percent. The tech-fueled Nasdaq Composite (down 56.49 to 2,556.49, Charts) index fell nearly 2.2 percent.

Two Goldman funds hit the skids

Fears about the subprime mortgage market and the credit crisis resurfaced Thursday after BNP Paribas, France's biggest bank, said it was halting withdrawals from three of its top funds because it can't value their assets in the current market.

Additionally, AIG, one of the world's largest insurance companies, warned Thursday morning that it is seeing mortgage delinquencies spreading from subprime to prime. The company also reported higher-than-expected quarterly earnings late Wednesday. AIG (down $2.18 to $64.30, Charts, Fortune 500) lost 2.5 percent, recovering from a 5 percent plunge at the open.

The news sent stocks tanking, however, equities were already vulnerable to a decline, following a robust three-day market surge earlier this week, that followed a big selloff.

"We had a market that was deeply oversold, had an enormous rebound, and then was vulnerable to a setback," said Steven Goldman, market strategist at Weeden & Co. "Today's news is acting as a catalyst for that setback."

Seeking to calm credit worries, the European Central Bank (ECB) added cash to money markets. However, the move seemed to have the opposite effect, increasing investor concerns rather than easing them.

The ECB loaned at least $130 billion in overnight funds to banks at a 4 percent rate. The Federal Reserve added $24 billion to temporary U.S. reserves in its regular overnight operations, an amount that some traders said was larger than usual, but not comparable to an infusion of money along the lines of the ECB, Reuters said.

Stocks have seesawed dramatically over the last few months on worries about the tightening of credit after a period of widespread liquidity. The continued fallout from the subprime mortgage market - loans made to consumers with less than ideal credit - has been an ongoing worry on Wall Street this year, amid the slumping housing market.

While the credit worries are legitimate, the stock reaction has been intensified by an already choppy market, said Ron Kiddoo, chief investment officer at Cozad Asset Management.

"We're in a volatile place," Kiddoo said, "and there's an overreaction to the news and rumors here that's feeding into that volatility."

Concerns about credit and the housing market aren't likely to disappear anytime soon, Goldman said. Yet, going forward, the equity market is probably in a better place to absorb the unrest than it was a month ago, since many of the stock indexes are well off their 2007 highs.

Additionally, the "financial underpinnings of the market remain positive in the long term," Kiddoo said.

The next month or so is bound to be choppy, the analysts said, as is typical in August, but stocks could stabilize and recharge for the classic fourth-quarter advance.

Asian shares tumble on Wall Street sell-off

Last Update: 8:47 PM ET Aug 9, 2007

HONG KONG -- Asian indexes dropped sharply early Friday after reports of liquidating hedge funds caused more credit market-related anxiety and triggered a sell-off on Wall Street. Financial shares across the region were hit hard, with big losses in banking issues such as Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (JP:8306 : JP:8306

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