Due to the disturbance in the Force in Vedic City/Fairfield?
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Updated at 12:26 p.m., Tuesday, February 27, 2007 

Global market plunge gives Dow worst day in 5 years

By MADLEN READ 
Associated Press 

NEW YORK — Stocks had their worst day of trading since the Sept. 11, 
2001, terrorist attacks today, briefly hurtling the Dow Jones 
industrials down more than 500 points on a worldwide tide of concern 
that the U.S. and Chinese economies are stumbling and that share 
prices have become overinflated.
The steepness of the market's drop, as well as its global breadth, 
signaled a possible correction after a long period of stable and 
steadily rising stock markets, which had not been shaken by such a 
volatile day of trading in several years.

A 9 percent slide in Chinese stocks, which came a day after investors 
sent Shanghai's benchmark index to a record high close, set the tone 
for U.S. trading. The Dow began the day falling sharply, and the 
decline accelerated throughout the course of the session before 
stocks took a huge plunge in late afternoon as computer-driven sell 
programs kicked in.

The Dow fell 546.02, or 4.3 percent, to 12,086.06 before recovering 
some ground in the last hour of trading to close down 416.02, or 3.29 
percent, at 12,216.24, according to preliminary calculations. Because 
the worst of the plunge took place after 2:30 p.m., the New York 
Stock Exchange's trading limits, designed to halt such precipitous 
moves, were not activated.

The decline was the Dow's worst since Sept. 17, 2001, the first 
trading day after the terror attacks, when the blue chips closed down 
684.81, or 7.13 percent.

The drop hit every sector of stocks across the market. Riskier issues 
such as small-cap and technology stocks suffered the biggest declines.

But analysts who have been expecting a pullback after a huge rally 
that began last October and sent the Dow to a series of record highs, 
were unfazed by today's drop.

And some investors also tried to put today's slide into a longer-term 
perspective.

"All who invest should feel grateful that we've had a great run for 
the last 12 to 18 months," said Joel Kleinman, a Washington, D.C. 
attorney, adding that he has learned to not read too much into any 
short-term ups and downs. "This is another day in the market."

Still, traders' dwindling confidence was knocked down further by data 
showing that the economy may be decelerating more than anticipated. A 
Commerce Department report that orders for durable goods in January 
dropped by the largest amount in three months exacerbated jitters 
about the direction of the U.S. economy, just a day after former 
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the United States may be 
headed for a recession.

"It looks more and more like the economy is a slow growth economy," 
said Michael Strauss, chief economist at Commonfund. "Moderate 
economic growth is good — an abrupt stop in economic growth scares 
people."

The market had been expecting the government on Wednesday to revise 
its estimate of fourth-quarter GDP growth down to an annual rate of 
about 2.3 percent from an initial forecast of 3.5 percent, and grew 
increasingly nervous today that the figure could come in even lower.

The housing market, which the Street had been hoping had bottomed 
out, also looked far from recovery after a Standard & Poor's index 
indicated that single-family home prices across the nation were flat 
in December. A later report from the National Association of Realtors 
said existing home sales climbed in January by the largest amount in 
two years, but the data didn't erase housing-related concerns, as 
median home prices fell for a sixth straight month.

But a growing feeling that Wall Street, which has had a big run-up 
since October, was due for a correction also played into today's 
decline.

"I think that the market was prepared to pull back. The constellation 
of issues that were worrying the market came to a head," said Quincy 
Krosby, chief investment strategist at The Hartford.

Just a week ago, the Dow had reached new closing and trading highs, 
rising as high as 12,795.92.

The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index was down 50.33, or 3.47 
percent, at 1,399.04, and the tech-dominated Nasdaq composite index 
was off 96.65, or 3.86 percent, at 2,407.87.

A suicide bomber attack on the main U.S. military base in Afghanistan 
where Vice President Dick Cheney was visiting also rattled the market.

China's stock market plummeted today from record highs as investors 
took profits when concerns arose that the Chinese government may try 
to temper its ballooning economy by raising interest rates again or 
reducing more of the money available for lending.

"Corrections usually happen because of a catalyst, and this may be 
it," said Ed Peters, chief investment officer at PanAgora Asset 
Management. "The move in China was a surprise, and when a major 
market has a shock it ripples through the rest of the market. With 
all the trade that goes on with China, there tends to be a knee-jerk 
reaction with that kind of drop."

The Shanghai Composite Index tumbled 8.8 percent to close at 
2,771.79, its biggest decline since it fell 8.9 percent on Feb. 18, 
1997. Since Chinese share prices doubled last year as investors 
poured money into the market after the completion of shareholding 
reforms, trading in Shanghai has been very volatile.

Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index dropped 1.8 percent, and 
Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur Composite Index fell 2.8 percent. Japan's 
Nikkei stock average fell a more moderate 0.52 percent, but European 
markets were rattled — Britain's FTSE 100 lost 2.31 percent, 
Germany's DAX index dropped 2.96 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 
3.02 percent.

Bond prices shot higher as investors bought into the safe-haven 
Treasury market, pushing the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury 
note down to 4.47 percent, its lowest level so far this year, from 
4.63 percent late Monday. The bond buying was sparked primarily by 
the durable goods orders, which the Commerce Department said fell 7.8 
percent, much more than what the market expected.

The durable goods drop raised the chance of the Federal Reserve 
easing interest rates later in the year — a possibility that makes 
the bond market an attractive place to be right now.

The hope for slowing inflation could be dashed, though, if energy 
costs keep rising. Oil prices initially fell today on worries that 
Chinese demand could be dampened should its economy slow down, but 
later rose on escalating tensions in the Middle East. Light, sweet 
crude for April delivery fell 62 cents a barrel to $60.77 on the New 
York Mercantile Exchange.

The dollar slipped against other major currencies, while gold also 
fell.

The Dow has been climbing at a steady rate since last summer, but 
over the past few trading sessions, stocks have pulled back on the 
worry that the market is due for a correction. Many analysts have 
noted that the Dow hasn't seen a 2 percent decline in more than 120 
sessions.

Data indicating a slower economy had recently been giving stocks a 
boost on the hopes that the Fed will lower interest rates, which 
could reinvigorate consumer spending and the struggling housing 
market. But the market may fall further before that happens, analysts 
said.

"If in a week or two, the psychology in the U.S. market turns to the 
realization that we're in a modest growth economy of 2 to 3 percent 
growth, that will help temper inflation pressures going forward. If 
that perception evolves, there's an increase in the likelihood that 
the Fed will be lowering rates rather than raising rates. 
Structurally, it's a development that should be good for the equity 
market, but it might be an event that unfolds after prices are 
lower," Strauss said.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by about 7 to 1 on the New 
York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 2.38 billion shares.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies dropped 31.03, or 3.77 
percent, at 792.66. 


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