WALL STREET JOURNAL
Stocks wrapped up their worst January on record with a final plunge on Friday.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished January down 8.84% on the
month. Perviously, the worst January for the Dow had been that of 1916,
when it fell 8.64%. Friday, the Dow dropped 148.15 points to 8000.86
after briefly dipping below the 8000 mark. The Dow has fallen five
straight months and in 12 of the last 15.
The S&P 500-stock index lost 2.28% Friday to end at 825.88, for
cumulative losses in January of 8.57%. Until Friday, its worst January
from 1929 onward occurred in 1970, when it lost 7.65%.
Both stock-market indexes are off by more than 40% from their 2007 highs.
Stocks popped at the open Friday, but spent most of the day in the
red. Traders cited fears that plans wouldn't go forward for a so-called
bad bank to soak up toxic assets from financial institutions, and bleak
economic news, in particular Friday's report of a 3.8% contraction in
fourth quarter GDP. It was better than the 5.5% fall that economists had
expected, but suggested the recession, now in its second year, is
cutting deep.
A slew of layoff announcements, skepticism of the Obama stimulus
plan, and a series of bleak earnings reports all crunched U.S. stock
markets over the course of the week. Those developments left investors
who exited stocks last year with little desire to put their money to
work in the markets, limiting any stock rallies.
"I don't think anyone is willing to put money to work until we get
clarity out of the new government," said Matthew Cheslock, managing
director at Cohen Capital Group LLC.
Investors have grown wary of efforts to right the ship. The Obama
stimulus plan has received a lukewarm reception among market
participants and buzz about the possible creation of a "bad bank" to
soak up toxic assets has waxed and waned, perplexing investors. After a
three-day jump to start the week, the bottom dropped out for stocks on
Thursday and Friday.
"There's been too much back-and-forth, it's a wishy-washy market,"
said Debra Brede, president of D.K. Brede Investment Management Company.
"One day you think [the government] is going to do something serious to
help the banks, and the next day it's not such a great idea. Markets
hate uncertainty, and it's not clear it's a good plan. We need to get
these banks cleaned up and move forward.".................................
No comments:
Post a Comment