Monday Stocks Mixed as European Debt Woes Remain
February 8th, 2010 by Rachel PritchettDow now at 9,980, down 30 points today.
NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks traded mixed Monday as investors remained
wary about the strength of the economic recovery and mounting debt
in Europe.
The market’s major indexes held to a tight range and were nearly
unchanged in early afternoon trading, having recovered from an
early slide. Stocks have traded erratically in the past four weeks
as investors try to determine whether a global economic recovery is
sustainable.
Concerns are growing that some European countries including Greece,
Portugal and Spain might not be able to handle their mounting
levels of debt. Stocks have also been hurt by China’s plans to
contain economic growth and the Obama administration’s proposed
rules to restrict trading by large financial institutions.
The questions have investors on edge about whether the global
economy can maintain a recovery. Stocks have climbed for 10 months
on hopes of a rebound after hitting 12-year lows last March.
Investors are looking for fresh evidence of economic growth. The
recent troubles demonstrate a recovery might not be happening as
fast as some had hoped. The concerns have hit stocks. The Dow Jones
industrial average is down 713 points, or 6.7 percent, since
closing at a 15-month high of 10,725.43 on Jan. 19.
Brett Hryb, a portfolio manager with MFC Global Investment
Management in Toronto, said he was encouraged by the market’s
ability to hold its ground Monday as traders sort through questions
about debt in Europe.
Hryb said the concern is that the financial troubles in a country
like Greece will spill into other markets. “Clearly Greece itself
is nothing. It’s just a blip. It’s what the contagion could be,” he
said.
In midafternoon trading, the Dow fell 33.55, or 0.3 percent, to
9,978.68 after being down as much as 78 points after the opening
bell. On Thursday, the Dow traded below the psychological barrier
of 10,000 for the first time since November.
The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 0.93, or 0.1
percent, to 1,065.26, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 1.76,
or 0.1 percent, to 2,142.88.
Bond prices mostly fell, pushing their yields slightly higher. The
yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose to 3.59 percent
from 3.57 percent late Friday.
The dollar fell against other major currencies, while gold
rose.
Crude oil rose 69 cents to $71.88 per barrel on the New York
Mercantile Exchange.
Jerry Webman, chief economist at OppenheimerFunds Inc., said he
doesn’t expect that problems with rising debt loads in Europe will
cascade into other parts of the world’s economy, but he remains
cautious.
“Right now, when anybody says the word ‘contained’ I start to
tremble,” he said, referring to his skepticism about those who
downplay worries about Greece.
Webman is also concerned by the shrugs that have greeted corporate
earnings reports. Three out of four of the companies in the S&P
500 index that have reported results for the fourth quarter have
posted stronger sales and profit numbers than analysts forecast,
according to Thomson Reuters.
“The market is obviously not that enthusiastic about these good
bottom line and good top line numbers,” Webman said, adding that he
sees that as a reason to be concerned about the direction of
stocks.
In earnings news, the toymaker Hasbro Inc. said its profit surged
77 percent in the fourth quarter while drugstore chain CVS Caremark
Corp. said its earnings rose 11 percent. The results beat analysts’
estimates.
Hasbro jumped $3.88, or 12.6 percent, to $34.68, while CVS rose
$1.85, or 6 percent, to $32.92.
Advancing stocks narrowly outpaced those that fell on the New York
Stock Exchange, where volume came to 611.9 million shares compared
with 920 million shares traded at the same point Friday.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 1.74, or 0.3
percent, to 591.24.
Britain’s FTSE 100 rose 0.6 percent, Germany’s DAX index gained 0.9
percent, and France’s CAC-40 rose 1.2 percent. Earlier, Japan’s
Nikkei stock average fell 1.1 percent.


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