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The Dow dropped below 10,000 Monday after global markets took a pounding amid fear that the credit crisis is spreading around the globe.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down nearly 500 points, or 5 percent, falling briefly below 10000, a level it hasn't seen in nearly four years. The Dow first hit 10,000 at the end of March, 1999. (Track the Dow winners and losers.)
The CBOE Volatility Index, the best gauge of fear in the market, soared to a record above 50.
News of more bank troubles in Europe emerged over the weekend, and Asian and European stocks plummeted between 4 percent and 5 percent.
"The fear of contagion is spreading on a daily basis, and that's why we are lower," Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Avalon Partners in New York, told Reuters. "We are not seeing any real shift in interbank cost of borrowing, which basically means that credit markets are still locked up."
"Some of the concern in the market is ... 'Did everyone wait too long? Have events begun to spiral that can't be reached back for?' You hope not. But there is some feel of that in the markets," Art Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS, told CNBC, while wearing, ironically, a Dow 10,000 hat.
Cashin said ideally we'd see a "capitulation selloff" today, maybe even into tomorrow morning, then get a "massive reversal."
Crude oil [US@CL.1
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] tumbled more than $4 a barrel to under $90 on fears that a global recession will dampen demand for energy.
Bank stocks took the hardest hit: Citigroup [C
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], Bank of America [BAC
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] and JPMorgan [JPM
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] were among the biggest drags on the Dow, all three down more than 5 percent.
Regional banks got clobbered: National City [NCC
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] was down more than 20 percent, while Sovereign Bancorp [SOV
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] fell more than 10 percent.
A House Oversight committee will hold hearings today on the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Former Lehman CEO Richard Fuld, who oversaw the demise of the venerable investment bank, will testify.
(Check out a timeline of Lehman's collapse.)
JPMorgan was accused of allegedly precipitating the collapse of Lehman Brothers [LEHMQ
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] by freezing Lehman assets days before it filed for bankruptcy protection, UK newspaper the Sunday Times reported.
Citing documents filed with a New York bankruptcy court late last week, the newspaper said that Lehman creditors have accused JPMorgan of freezing $17 billion in cash and securities on Friday, Sept. 12. Lehman filed for bankruptcy the following Monday.
The U.S. banking sector is facing more headwinds this week as a district court judge set a court hearing for Tuesday to decide whether an exclusivity agreement in Citigroup's [C
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] bid to buy Wachovia's [WB
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] banking assets prevents a competing deal by Wells Fargo [WFC
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] to go forward.
Eli Lilly [LLY
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] is snapping up ImClone [IMCL
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] for $70 a share. ImClone rejected a sweetened offer from Bristol-Myers Squibb [BMY
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]. The offer from Eli Lilly values ImClone, which makes the cancer drug Erbitux, at $70 per share, a premium of 51 percent to ImClone's closing share price on July 30, the day before Bristol-Myers made an offer of $60 a share.
EBay [EBAY
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] announced plans to reduce its work force by 10 percent and said it expects to beat its third-quarter earnings forecast. The online auctioneer also announced $1.3 billion in acquisitions — the Bill Me Later payment service and a Danish online-classifieds firm.
With hopes that the bailout package voted by Congress would calm the markets dashed, investors are now looking to the Federal Reserve to make the next move. Traders expect the Fed to slash the current 2 percent target Fed funds rate by a half point before its next meeting, Oct. 28.
>> Poll: Should the Fed Announce an Emergency Rate Cut?
UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling is considering a dramatic taxpayer-funded recapitalization of Britain's banks, the Financial Times reported on Monday on its Web site.
Germany offered a blanket bank deposit guarantee on Sunday in a bid to contain the spreading credit crisis as officials clinched deals to rescue Germany's Hypo Real Estate and recapitalize two other European banks.
It was followed by similar moves by Austria and Denmark, after Ireland issued the first such guarantee last week. Austria said it would raise the limit of guarantees from the current 20,000 euros -- but the new level is to be decided -- while Denmark guaranteed all deposits.
This Week:
MONDAY: House Oversight hearing on Lehman collapse
TUESDAY: Bernanke, Stern speak; Fed minutes; consumer credit; Earnings season kicks off with Alcoa, Yum Brands; Second presidential debate
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage applications; Fed's Plosser speaks; Pending-home sales; Weekly crude inventories; Earnings from Costco, Monsanto and Ruby Tuesday
THURSDAY: Retailers report Sept. sales; Bank of England announcement; Weekly jobless claims; Wholesale trade; Natural-gas inventories; Fed's Stern speaks; Earnings from Chevron
FRIDAY: Import/export prices; Trade gap; Treasury budget; Earnings from GE
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