- EU Opens Probe in BHP Billiton Bid for Rio Tinto
- Worse Car Sales Decline Expected in Western Europe
- Euro Banks Need to Raise $90-$140 Billion: Goldman
- BSkyB Mulls $4 Billion Bid for Spain's Digital Plus: FT
- On the Bright Side, Shopping Bargains Abound
- Euro Stocks Fall as Goldman Note Hits Banks
- Return of Asian Currency Crisis Is Unlikely: ADB
- European Shares Set to Open Flat as Holiday Shuts US
- Airbus to Sell Five A380s to Japan's ANA: Nikkei
- Bowyer: Back to Monarchy in Land Rights?
- Parking Cash in European Telecoms
- Bargain Stocks: Nokia, Spectra, Incitex Pivot
- Sticker Shock: Fast Money's Inflation Special
- Our Favorite Inflation Trades
- Warren Buffett's Annual Stock Gift to Gates Foundation Worth $1.8B This Year
- That '70's Trade
- The Villain Of Our Story
- The Blame Game
- Challenges abound for Bush at last economic summit
- U.S. share of foreign visitors slips, experts say
- Employers use federal law to deny benefits
- 1,000 protest G-8 summit in Japan; police arrest 4
- FBI probe latest setback for beleaguered Detroit
- Argentine Congress debates export tax
- S&P places XL Capital on watch for downgrade
- EU widens Billiton-Rio Tinto probe
- ADB says Asian economies remain robust
- Irish unemployment hits 5.7 percent
Closing Glance: Telecom services
NEW YORK - Shares of the largest telecommunications companies finished Wednesday lower after record oil prices dragged the broader market down.
How some key telecom stocks performed Wednesday:
Verizon Communications Inc. rose 10 cents to $35.63.
AT&T Inc. fell 41 cents to $32.89.
Sprint Nextel Corp. fell 9 cents to $8.74.
Qwest Communications International Inc. fell 22 cents, or 5.7 percent, to $3.65.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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