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Subject: Stocks fall sharply after Fed signals a pullback in bond purchases; overseas markets lower


Author:
big losses at the open Wednesday April 4, 2012
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Date Posted: 08:10:09 04/04/12 Wed
In reply to: WEDNESDAY 4/4/2012===166 pre open 's message, "FREEFALLIN==week 14 second quarter" on 21:52:27 04/03/12 Tue

..US stocks fall as Fed backs away from stimulus
Stocks fall sharply after Fed signals a pullback in bond purchases; overseas markets lower

By Pallavi Gogoi, AP Business Writer | Associated Press –
....
Share5EmailPrint.....Companies:...Sears Holdings CorporationSanDisk Corp.Bank of America Corporation . ..RELATED QUOTES.
.Symbol Price Change
SHLD 63.61 -4.45

SNDK 45.43 -4.62

BAC 9.21 -0.28

AA 9.82 -0.24

TRVC.DE 26.74 -0.29

......Related Content.
..
View Photo.
In a Feb. 8, 2012 photo Trader Gregory Rowe, left, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Wall Street was poised for fairly big losses at the open Wednesday April 4, 2012, with Dow futures and the broader S&P 500 futures 0.7 percent lower. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
....

NEW YORK (AP) -- Stocks opened sharply lower on Wall Street Wednesday after the Federal Reserve signaled that it may be less willing to provide more stimulus to the U.S. economy.

The Fed's policy makers were encouraged by recent reports of job growth in the U.S. and seemed more willing to allow the economy to move forward on its own. The Fed's signal came at a time when investors have become increasingly worried about the global effect of a recession in Europe and the ability of countries there to make large debt payments that are coming due.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 123 points to 13,076 in the first half-hour of trading Wednesday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 13 points to 1,399. The Nasdaq composite dropped 38 points to 3074.

The declines were broad. Nine of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index fell. Memory chip maker SanDisk Corp. plunged 9 percent, the most in the S&P, after the company cut its forecast for first-quarter revenue because of weaker demand and lower prices.

Minutes from the Fed's last meeting, released late Tuesday, started a sell-off that began in the U.S. and extended overseas. Ever since the financial crisis and deep U.S. recession, governments have worked actively to prop up economies damaged by the global downturn.

The government stimulus is one of the key reasons behind large market rallies from the lows they hit around three years ago. Central banks around the world, notably the Fed, have provided big injections of money into the financial system. There have been some hopes recently that the Fed would authorize another bond-buying program, which keeps rates low and pumps money into the financial markets, boosting stocks and commodities.

The dollar rose and commodities prices fell sharply. Gold plunged $47, or 2.8 percent, to $1,625 an ounce. Silver fell 5 percent, copper fell 2.4 percent and crude oil dropped 1.2 percent.

The stocks of materials and mining companies fell in response. Newmont Mining was down 3 percent, while Freeport-McMoran Copper fell 2.6 percent. Aluminum maker Alcoa Inc. fell 2.2 percent, one of the biggest declines among the 30 stocks in the Dow average.

Markets were also lower in Europe following weak demand at an auction for Spanish government debt. Germany's DAX fell 2.2 percent and France's CAC-40 fell 2.1 percent .

Spain has become the latest point of worry for investors after Greece received its second bailout from international lenders. Last week Spain announced austerity measures which will likely slow down its economy further and worsen its 23 percent unemployment rate, the highest among the countries that use the euro.

That concern was evident in the bond markets. The yield on Spain's 10-year bond spiked 0.20 percentage point to 5.61 percent after the country's borrowing costs rose sharply in a bond auction, a signal that investors' confidence in the Spain's finances is weakening. A month ago, that rate was below 4.9 percent.

The prospect of global economic weakness hurt bank stocks. Citigroup fell 2.7 percent; Bank of America 2.3 percent.

Sears Holdings Corp. fell 5 percent. The retailer is reportedly planning to sell the casual clothing line Lands' End that it acquired in 2002.

....@yahoofinance on Twitter, become a fan on Facebook .....Related Content...Summary Box: US stocks fall on Fed's dim outl …US stocks fall on worries about Europe's econ …US stocks fall after dimmer outlook from FedUS futures tumble as Feds wary of more stimul …Stocks rise, extending best start since 1998Wall Street ticks lower at open ahead of dataWall Street ends lower after Fed minutes.

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Wall Street tumbles on waning hopes of Fed stimulusSpanish borrowing costs jumped at bond auctions on Wednesday08:11:53 04/04/12 Wed


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