Wall Street: Monday close

13 April 2012

INTEREST rate fears drove a major sell-off which saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing below 10,000 for the first time since 10 December and all three major indexes hitting their lows for the year.

The dread that has sent stocks tumbling over the past four weeks intensified after Friday's employment report from the Labour Department - the United States gained 288,000 new jobs in April. Investors feared the news would prompt the Federal Reserve to raise rates as early as next month, and selling spread around the globe, sending overseas markets down.

'Of course, psychologically, 10,000 on the Dow has some short-term effects on the market,' said Stuart Freeman, chief equity strategist for AG Edwards & Sons. 'Long-term, the markets still look at corporate fundamentals, earnings, that sort of thing. But we do have some inflation and interest rate fears in play which could keep things lower, at least for now.'

The Dow fell 127.32, or 1.3%, to 9990.02 in heavy volume on the New York Stock Exchange. At one point, the Dow had been down 183.11.

Broader stock indicators were also sharply lower. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was down 11.59, or 1%, at 1087.11, its lowest since 17 December. The Nasdaq composite index dropped 21.89, or 1.1%, to 1896.07. The Nasdaq last closed below 1900 on 21 November.

Since Wednesday's close, the three major indexes have fallen sharply. The Dow is down 320.93, or 3.1%, the S&P 500 has tumbled 34.42, or 3.1%, and the Nasdaq has fallen 61.19, or 3.1%.

Wall Street has been gripped by a spasm of selling for four weeks as economic indicators grew more positive and investors worried that corporate profits would be eroded by an ensuing series of interest rate rises. Along the way, the market completely ignored a stellar batch of first-quarter earnings reports.

'Investors do have some incentive to lock in gains,' Freeman said. 'Stocks have done very, very well over the past 12 months, and this could be as good as it gets for the next few months. And you're seeing a lot of rotation into traditionally defensive sectors such as healthcare and consumer staples.'

Indeed, investors sent healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson up 15 cents at $55.45, while retailer Wal-Mart rose $1.32 to $55.22.

A number of industry bellwethers, including Dell, Wal-Mart and Cisco Systems, were expected to release earnings later this week. The latest Consumer Price Index report, a key measure of inflation, is also due on Friday.

'If we get positive news from Cisco and the CPI, that could set the stage for improvement over the next few weeks,' said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at Spencer Clarke LLC. 'It's not all doom and gloom, but investors need to pay more attention to risk preservation here until the investing environment turns a little more positive.'

There may be some relief in sight at the gas pumps, as Saudi Arabia's oil minister called on other oil producing nations to increase production. The call had a negative effect on petroleum stocks, with ChevronTexaco shedding $2.48 to $89.17 and Exxon Mobil losing $1.20 to $42.05.

Citigroup skidded $1.31 to $45.41 after it agreed to pay $2.65bn to settle investor class-action lawsuits stemming from the WorldCom scandal. The company also set aside a further $6.7bn for potential claims from former Enron investors.

SunTrust Banks, once thought of as a potential takeover target, joined the merger trend in the financial sector with a $6.98bn bid for National Commerce Financial, which would create the nation's seventh largest bank. SunTrust lost $5.08 to $61.80, while National Commerce fell 70 cents to $31.10.

Declining issues outnumbered rising stocks by about 8 to 1, with volume at 1.91bn shares, compared to 1.65bn on Friday.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies dropped 10.70, or 2%, to 537.86.

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