![]()
- Who Were the Biggest Winners And Losers This Year?
- GE, Comcast Complete Deal Over NBC Universal: Source
- US May Raise Rates Before Jobs Recover: Fed's Plosser
- Cramer: Watch Tech Stocks Wednesday
- Stocks Likely Don't Need Santa to Keep Rally Going
- Larry Kudlow's Open Letter to Tiger Woods
- Super Fantasy Christmas Gifts of 2009
- AIG Slashes US Debt Under Deal With New York Fed
- Seamstress Fined $5.7 Million for Insider Trading
- 8 Stocks to Gain on Obama's Afghan Plan: Analysts
- BofA On Proposed Changes In The Housing Bailout Program
- The Future of The Media Landscape
- November Auto Sales Muddle Along
- Busch: What Obama Won't Say Tonight
- Stick with Equities—Avoid Emerging Markets: Laszlo Birinyi
- Pfizer Chomps On A Carrot
- Predictions 2010: Technology
- Predictions 2010: Consumers
MOST SHARED
Stocks finished off their lows but still logged a triple-digit loss Thursday as the Fed's lowered outlook and disappointing economic data rattled investor confidence.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost about 130 points, or 1.5 percent. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq were down nearly 2 percent.
One of the big things weighing on the market today, was the Standard & Poor's downgrade on the UK economy to "negative" from "stable."
It not only raised doubts about the UK's credit rating but also stoked concern about the U.S.'s credit rating.
"The market views those two countries — the UK and the U.S. — as relative twins," Pimco's Bill Gross told CNBC.
He doesn't think the U.S. will lose its triple-A rating anytime soon, but the market views it as an increasing possibility, he said.
A slew of economic data that came out this morning disappointed investors already feeling less optimistic after the Fed slashed its full-year outlook for the economy and projected an increase in unemployment.
The Philadephia Fed branch reported its gauge of regional manufacturing activity improved slightly in May — to minus-22 from minus-24 — but missed economists' target.
Initial jobless claims dropped by 12,000 to a seasonally adjusted 631,000 last week, slightly higher than expected, and continuing claims surged to another record.
Adding to the worry on the trading floor: This is one of the weeks that the jobless report was sampled for the payrolls report.
The Congressional Budget Office backed the worries about unemployment, saying the economy will start growing again in the second half but unemployment will keep rising through 2010, peaking above 10 percent.
Investors shrugged off the morning's one better-than-expected data point: Leading indicators rose 1 percent in April, the first increase since last June.
“We’re certainly at a point now when these so-called green shoots have to actually develop into some kind of actual plants,” Steve Massocca, managing director of Wedbush Morgan, told CNBC.
For this stock-market rally to continue, we’re going to have to see some actual improvements in the economy, Massocca added.
Energy stocks including ExxonMobil [XOM
Loading...
()
] and Chevron [CVX
Loading...
()
] led the decline as oil prices [US@CL.1
Loading...
()
] fell amid this fresh wave of worry about the economy.
Bank stocks, which typically lead market retreats, actually enjoyed some gains after Goldman Sachs upgraded some names in the sector, citing capital raised by the banks and second-quarter earnings prospects.
Goldman rates Morgan Stanley at "buy" and PNC, US Bancorp and Wells Fargo at "neutral." Trust banks such as Bank of New York Mellon, Northern Trust and State Street were upgraded to "attractive."
Caterpillar [CAT
Loading...
()
], Alcoa [AA
Loading...
()
] and Home Depot [HD
Loading...
()
] were the biggest percentage decliners on the Dow.
Boeing [BA
Loading...
()
] skidded 2.9 percent as the economic worries took a toll on industrial companies. Still, the aerospace giant backed its full-year outlook of $4.70 to $5 a share, said it has adequate financing for 2009 and that it's on track to cut 10,000 jobs this year.
Seven Dow stocks finished higher, including General Motors [GM
Loading...
()
], which shot up 33 percent amid news that GM and the UAW have reached a tentative agreement that would cut labor costs and overhaul the retiree health-care plan.
And, the government is getting close to providing more funding for GMAC, which would help the company provide more loans for GM and Chrysler vehicles.
Rounding out the top three Dow gainers, in percentage terms, were JPMorgan [JPM
Loading...
()
] and Citigroup [C
Loading...
()
].
Xerox [XRX
Loading...
()
] fell 1.2 percent after the copier maker named Ursula Burns as CEO, succeeding Anne Mulcahy, who will retire July 1 but will remain chairwoman of the board.
Barnes & Noble [BKS
Loading...
()
] rose 3 percent after the bookseller beat expectations and raised its outlook, helped by cost-cutting efforts and better-than-expected sales.
OpenTable [OPEN
Loading...
()
] soared 59 percent on its debut on the Nasdaq. Shares of the online restaurant-reservation service were priced at $20 late Wednesday, well above the expected range of $16 to $18. It's the first Nasdaq IPO of 2009.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was back on Capitol Hill, testifying before a House Appropriations subcommittee that the Obama administration is considering setting up an agency to better protect consumers from practices that led to the current financial crisis. On Wednesday, he told a Senate panel that the financial system was "starting to heal."
And Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser will speak on the economic outlook at 7 pm in New York.
Send comments to .
- Will the Fed raise rates? Will the dollar continue its slide? CNBC experts weigh in on the year ahead.
- Goldman Sachs has forbidden employees from gathering in private holiday parties of 12 or more.
- Do you have what it takes to run your own business? Ask yourself these questions.
- Heavily armed pirates in Somalia have set up a sort of stock exhange to fund their hijackings.
- Since its launch in 1998, Google has become a primary force on the Internet. How much do you know about the company?
- A famed author has written all his work on an old typewriter that is now up for auction. The NYT reports.











