10 Sep 2008 | 09:27 Wall Street Surrender Gains
Stocks on Wall Street ended the session sharply lower, with the Dow closing
down 280 points erasing nearly all of the gains posted in the previous
session. Weakness in the financial sector sent the markets lower on negative
news on Lehman Brothers.

The major averages which fell further in the final hour of the session,
closed at their worst levels of the day. The Dow closed down 280.01 points
or 2.4% at 11,230.73, the Nasdaq closed down 59.95 points or 2.6% at
2,209.81 and the S&P 500 closed down 43.28 points or 3.4% at 1,224.51,
marking the largest one day percent decline since February 2007.

Weakness was broad-based, 91% of the S&P 500 components posted a loss and
all ten of the economic sectors settled in negative territory. Volume was on
the heavy side, with 1.7 billion shares exchanging hands on the NYSE.

If we look sector wise the financial sector, which fell by 6.6%, acted as
the main drag on the market, with Lehman Brothers sparking much of the
selling interest. Lehman Brothers plunged 45% as traders speculated about
the firm's capital position after reports indicated that a state-run Korean
bank is no longer in talks to buy some or all of Lehman. However, Reuters
said that a Korean official denied the reports. Shares of Lehman Brothers
fell further after Standard & Poor?s put the investment bank?s credit
ratings on Credit Watch with negative implications. S&P stated that the drop
in Lehman?s stock could hinder the company?s ability to raise capital.

The energy sector plunged by 6.4% got clipped as energy commodities fell
3.6%. The losses came on expectations that Hurricane Ike would spare
production in the Gulf of Mexico and OPEC would leave its oil output
unchanged. Crude prices fell a steep 4.2% to $101.87 per barrel, which is
the lowest level since April.

Adding to the selling pressure, the National Association of Realtors
released a key report on pending home sales. In the report, the NAR said
that that pending home sales fell by 3.2% in July following an upwardly
revised 5.8% increase in June. Pending sales fell 7.5% in the Northeast and
10.6% in the West, while the Midwest was up 2.8% and the South was flat.
Hurt by the disappointing report on pending home sales, housing stocks
showed considerable weakness as well. The Philadelphia Housing Index fell
6.9 percent, reversing the gain posted in the previous session.

Going in detail index wise, the majority of the Dow Jones stocks ended the
session with notable losses, sending the blue chip index sharply lower. Of
the 30 stocks that make up the Dow, only 5 ended the session with gains.

AIG led the Dow lower on fears that the company?s exposure to the mortgage
markets may force the company to raise fresh capital. Shares of the insurer
ended the day down 19.3 percent. With the decline, the stock gave back all
of the gains posted in the previous two sessions, closing at its worst level
in well over ten years.

Other financial stocks inside the Dow closed sharply lower as well,
including Citigroup, Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase. Citigroup closed
down 7.1%, Bank of America closed down 6.4% and JP Morgan Chase closed down
5%.

Reversing most of a gain posted in the previous session, American Express
also saw significant selling pressure. Shares of the credit card issuer fell
5.6%, although they remain in a nearly two-week trading range.

Amid fears a global economic slowdown, Caterpillar posted a substantial loss
as well. The construction equipment manufacturer ended the session 5 percent
lower, extending a recent downtrend. With the decline, the stock closed at
its worst level in well over a year.

Pfizer, Exxon Mobil and Home Depot also showed considerable weakness. Pfizer
ended the session 4.7 percent lower on news that it will withdraw all
marketing applications globally for its skin treatment drug dalbavancin.
Exxon Mobil closed down 4.6 percent, compared to a 3.4 percent decline by
Home Depot.

On the other hand, Coca Cola ended the session with a notable gain. Shares
of the beverage maker closed up 0.9%, extending a recent up trend.
McDonald?s also ended the day sharply higher. The stock saw a gain of 1.2%,
adding to gains posted in the past two sessions. Earlier in the day, the
company reported 8.5% growth in its global comparable sales for the month of
August, helped by its popular breakfast menu, Olympic-related marketing, and
extended hours.

In Commodity market, the gold closed lower for a seventh straight session,
hurt by a stronger dollar and lower crude oil prices. December gold ended
down $10.50 at $792 an ounce, its lowest closing mark of 2008. Gold touched
as low as $780.20 an ounce earlier in the day.

The Crude-oil futures dropped almost 3% to close at their lowest level since
April as concerns waned over potential damage to energy infrastructure in
the Gulf of Mexico from Hurricane Ike, and comments from a key oil
producers' meeting in Vienna indicated a likely decision to leave output
quotas unchanged. Crude for October delivery fell $3.08, or 2.9%, to close
at $103.26 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It dropped as far
as $103.15 during the session to mark a fresh five-month low. Prices
extended their decline into electronic trading evening to drop below $102
per barrel.

Earlier on the day, the stock markets across the Asian region closed sharply
lower, as traders did some profit taking following Monday's rally. The
Japanese Nikkei 225 average closed down 1.8%. Hang Seng China Enterprises
tracked Shanghai stocks lost 2.79% to 10,825.25 while the benchmark Hang
Seng index closed down 1.46% at 20,491.1. The BSE Sensex declined 0.41% to
14,883.4.

The major European markets also ended the session lower after trading in a
mixed fashion earlier in the day. The French CAC 40 Index closed down 1.1%,
while the German DAX Index ended the session 0.5% lower. The U.K?s FTSE 100
Index finished the day down 0.6%.

Looking ahead the economic calendar features the Mortgage Bankers
Association weekly report on mortgage applications, which will be followed
by the Energy Information Administration weekly data on crude oil
inventories.


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