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It was back to business for Wall Street Wednesday.
Stocks opened lower as a layer of uncertainty was removed with the presidential election complete, leaving the market to return to worrying about the economy.
Barack Obama swept the White House in a decisive victory that, at last count, had him with 338 electoral votes to John McCain's 163, making him the first African-American president in U.S. history. He also soared past McCain in the popular vote.
In his victory speech Tuesday night, Obama said, "change has come to America."
But he was mindful of the tough job that lies ahead.
"Even as we celebrate tonight, we know the challenges that tomorrow will bring are the greatest of our lifetime — two wars, a planet in peril, the worst financial crisis of a century," he told a crowd of more than 125,000. "The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep," he said, but added: "I promise you, we as a people will get there."
He also reached across the aisle to McCain's supporters.
"To those Americans whose support I have yet to earn — I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your president, too," he said.
>>See complete election coverage at CNBC.com.
But, as Obama supporters reveled in the candidate's historic victory, Wall Street bowed out of the celebratory glow, turning instead to the grim reality of what lies ahead for the economy.
And traders didn't have to look far to be reminded of the economic challenges facing the 44th president.
The Institute for Supply Management reported its gauge of service-sector activity shrank more than expected in October, falling to 44.4. from 52.1 in October. Economists had expected a more measured drop to 49.
Private employers cut a larger-than-expected 157,000 jobs in October, payroll firm ADP reported. And, planned layoffs surged to their highest in nearly five years during October, with cuts in the financial and auto sectors leading the charge, according to a report from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
And, U.S. mortgage-application demand dropped by more than 20 percent last week amid a sharp decline in refinancing.
Indeed, Obama's presidential-election prize comes with an albatross—the buckling economy, saddled with the housing meltdown and worst financial crisis in 70 years—that has left Wall Street wondering how Obama will handle it and if he'll be able to jump-start confidence.
The two biggest bond insurers were facing intense pressures following poor earnings reports.
Ambac [ABK
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] tumbled more than 25 percent after the company reported a much bigger third-quarter loss, hurt by heavy investment write-downs and market losses. The quarterly results were hit by $2.7 billion of unrealized losses on credit derivatives contracts, and the loss of its top-level credit rating.
And competitor MBIA [MBI
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] was off about 20 percent after the company reported a much larger third-quarter net loss on Wednesday, hurt by increased loss reserves and net investment losses. The net loss widened to $806.5 million, or $3.48 a share, from $36.6 million, or 30 cents a share, a year earlier.
Energy prices surrendered some of their Tuesday gains, with oil off nearly $2 a barrel in morning trade.
Credit spreads continued to ease as well, with overnight and 3-month interbank lending rates again moving lower.
In other financial news, the big broker-banks are preparing for layoffs of up to 15 percent of their staffs as the economic slowdown continues to pound Wall Street.
Some of the biggest hits will come at Merrill Lynch [MER
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], where 10,000 employees could be jettisoned as a result of the merger with Bank of America [BAC
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].
JPMorgan Chase [JPM
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] is eliminating a group that traded the bank's own money in areas ranging from stocks to bonds to commodities, and will likely lay off some traders, according to Reuters.
Shares of Dell [DELL
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] rose after the computer maker, which is nearing the end of nearly 9,000 job cuts, has asked employees to consider taking up to five days of unpaid vacation and is offering voluntary severance packages.
Asian stocks were mixed, after an initial rally following the elections result, with the Nikkei closing up 4.46 percent.
European shares were lower, led down by banks after France's biggest bank BNP Paribas said its profit halved and with an Obama win already been priced in.
Still to Come:
WEDNESDAY: Weekly crude inventories; Earnings from Cisco and News Corp after the bell
THURSDAY: Monthly chain-store sales; weekly jobless claims; BOE, ECB announcements; Earnings from Anheuser-Busch
FRIDAY: Jobs report; pending-home sales; wholesale trade; consumer credit; Earnings from Ford, Sprint Nextel and Berkshire Hathaway
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