Market Updates

Nasdaq Down 2%; Plunges 24% in Six Months

123jump.com Staff
10 Mar, 2008
New York City

    Financial and insurance companies fell sharply as investors worried that the current quarter earnings may be lower than estimated. Bear Stearns led the decline after several of its uderwritten bonds were downgraded by a rating agency. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fell on the worries that they may need to raise capital in the face of rising losses. Merrill, Morgan Stanley, Bear Stearns, and Wachovia traded at several-year lows. Oil closed at a record high near $108 a barrel.

[R]10:00PM Frankfurt, 4:00PM New York, 8:00AM Sydney – Banks, brokerages, and insurance companies stocks traded at levels last seen five to ten year ago. Bear Stearns plunged 11% and Citigroup traded below $20.[/R]

Global Markets Update

U.S. stocks fell sharply on the familiar worries about the economic conditions and persistent weakness in the credit market. Dollar fell again and oil rose to a record high. Oil fell at the opening but quickly recovered from its loss of 1% to close at a record high. McDonalds reported a rise in same store sales in February on system-wide sales rise.

Nationwide ((NFS)) received $47.20 per share or $2.2 billion buyout bid from a controlling group of a shareholder. The group consists of Nationwide insurance companies and Nationwide Corp. The stock rallied after the news and traded above the offer price. The Nationwide stock traded as high as $65.50 last year and as low as $32 in the last five years. The company offer may be revised above $52 per share according to 123jump.com estimate.

Bear Stearns ((BSC)) plunged 10% after rumors circulated that it faces liquidity crunch. The company denied the rumors. Banks, brokers and insurance companies are trading at their lows last seen five to ten years ago. Fears of more credit market losses dragged stocks in the banking sector to their seven year lows. Bear Stearns closed at a level last seen in 2002, Fannie Mae at 1993 level, Citigroup at 1998, Lehman Brothers at 2004 level, and Merrill at the year 2000 level.

Familiar worries of the U.S. economic malaise dragged mining and banks lower in the UK. Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton declined 6% after the weak trading in the U.S. and in the European region. Copper, zinc, nickel, tin, and led prices in London declined. HSBC fell on the persistent uncertainty related to credit markets. Bovis Homes Group plunged 12% and led the home builder lower after it reported lower earnings and said that home prices may not rise in 2008. Persimmons dropped 4% and Taylor Wimpey lost 6%.


European Markets

In London FTSE 100 Index closed lower 70.80 or 1.24% to 5,629.10, in Paris CAC 40 index decreased 51.97 or 1.13% to close at 4,566.99 and in Frankfurt DAX index lower 65.91 or 1.01% to close at 6,448.08. In Zurich trading SMI decreased 119.14 or 1.66% to close at 7,055.01.

North American Markets indexes

Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 153.54 or 1.29% to a close of 11,740.15, S&P 500 closed down 19.99 or 1.55% to 1,273.38, and Nasdaq Composite Index traded down 43.15 or 1.95% to a close of 2,169.34. In Toronto TSX Composite closed lower 264.50 or 1.99% to close at 13,017.22.

Of the 30 stocks in Dow Jones Industrial Average, 3 closed higher, 27 closed lower, and none were unchanged.

Citigroup led the decliners in the index with a loss of 5.8% followed by declines in General Motors of 5.2%, in Bank of America of 4%, and in American Express 3.6%. McDonald’s led the gainers in the index with a rise of 2.2 followed by rises in Microsoft of 0.83%, and in Intel of 0.4%.

Of the stocks in S&P 500, 52 closed higher, 443 fell, and 5 were unchanged. Of the index stocks, none rose more than 3% and 104 stocks fell more than 3%.

Ambac led the decliners in the index with a plunge of 23% followed by losses in Countrywide of 14%, in Fannie Mae of 13%, in Freddie Mac of 11.8%, and in Bear Stearns of 11.37%. Apollo Group led the gainers in the index with a rise of 2.8% followed by rises in Medco of 2.65%, in General Mills of 2.4%, in Reynolds America of 2.4%, and in Constellation Brands of 2.3%.

South American Markets Indexes

In Latin Markets Brazil led the decliners in the region with a fall of 2.89% followed by decreases in Mexico of 1.38%, in Argentina of 1.37%, and in Chile of 1.11%. Peru fell 0.64% but Venezuela rose 0.37% and Colombia increased 0.13%.

Asian Markets

In Tokyo Nikkei 225 Index closed lower 250.67 or 1.96% to 12,532.13, in Hong Kong Hang Seng index increased 203.72 or 0.91% closed to 22,705.05. Australia ASX 200 index decreased 83.60 or 1.59% to close 5,180.40.

In South Korea Kospi Index decreased 38.80 or 2.33% to close at 1,625.17, in Thailand SET index closed lower 14.92 or 1.82% to 806.65 and Indonesia JSE Index edged decreased 128.59 or 4.84% to 2,527.87. Sensex index in India decreased 51.80 or 0.32% to 15,923.72. Malaysia plunged 9.50% or 123.11 to 1,173.22 on the election results.


Bond Yields decreased on 10-year U.S. bonds to 3.45% and on 30-year bonds declined to 4.46%.

Commodities, Metals, and Currencies

Crude oil increased $2.73 to close at $107.88 per barrel for a front month contract, natural gas increased 26 cent to $10.02 per mBtu, and gasoline futures increased 2.16 cents to close at 271.59 cents per gallon.

Gold decreased $2.40 in New York trading to close at $971.80 per ounce, silver closed down 46 cents to $19.79 per ounce, and copper for front month delivery decreased 12.65 cents to 379.50 per pound.

Wheat futures increased 58.00 cents in Chicago trading and closed at $11.63 per bushel. Sugar decreased 22 cent to 13.14 cents per pound. Soybean future closed down 2.250 cents to $14.06 per bushel.

Dollar edged lower and traded near a record low against euro to $1.5348 and edged lower against yen to 101.7250.

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