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    Dow falls 512 in steepest decline since '08 crisis

    NEW YORK (AP) — Gripped by fear of a new recession, the stock market suffered its worst day Thursday since the financial crisis in the fall of 2008. The Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 500 points, its ninth-steepest decline.

    The sell-off wiped out the Dow's remaining gains for 2011. It put the Dow and broader stock indexes into what investors call a correction — down 10 percent from their highs in the spring.

    "We are continuing to be bombarded by worries about the global economy," said Bill Stone, the chief investment strategist for PNC Financial.

    Across the financial markets, the day was reminiscent of the wild swings that defined the financial crisis in September and October three years ago. Gold prices briefly hit a record high. Oil fell even more than stocks — 6 percent, or $5.30 a barrel. And frightened investors were so desperate to get into some government bonds that they were willing accept almost no return on their money.

    It was the most alarming day yet in the almost uninterrupted selling that has swept Wall Street for two weeks. The Dow has lost more than 1,300 points, or 10.5 percent. By one broad measure kept by Dow Jones, almost $1.9 trillion in market value has disappeared.

    For the day, the Dow closed down 512.76 points, at 11,383.68. It was the steepest point decline since Dec. 1, 2008.

    Thursday's decline was the ninth-worst by points for the Dow. In percentage terms, the decline of 4.3 percent does not rank among the worst. On Black Monday in 1987, for example, the Dow fell 22 percent.

    Two weeks ago, investors appeared worried about the deadlocked negotiations in Washington over raising the ceiling on government debt. As soon as the ceiling was raised, investors focused on the economy, and the selling accelerated.

    On Thursday, growing fear about the weakening U.S. economy was joined by concern in Europe that the troubled economies of Italy and Spain might need help from the European Union.

    The European Union has already given financial assistance to Greece and Ireland, two countries that have struggled to pay their debts. A financial rescue package for Italy or Spain might be more than the group of countries can handle.

    Traders also unloaded stocks before Friday's release of the government's unemployment report for July, which is expected to show weak job growth and perhaps a rise in the unemployment rate, which is 9.2 percent.

    Together, they produced "a perfect storm of selling," said Ryan Larson, head of U.S. equity trading for RBC Global Asset Management.

    Until a week ago, Wall Street had mostly convinced itself that the U.S. economy would improve in the second half of the year. Gas prices were falling, and Japanese factories were resuming production after disruptions from the March earthquake.

    Then one report after another began to show that the economy was much weaker than first thought.

    Click graphic for an explanation of why the stock market plunged. (Reuters/Graphic)Click graphic for an explanation of why the stock market plunged. (Reuters/Graphic)

    Manufacturing is barely growing. The service sector, which covers about 90 percent of the American work force, is growing at the slowest rate in a year and a half. People spent less in June than in May, the first decline since September 2009.

    And the overall economy is expanding at the slowest pace since the end of the Great Recession. It grew at an annual rate of just 0.8 percent for the first six months of this year, raising the risk of another recession.

    In an indication of how frightened investors are, Bank of New York Mellon said it would start charging large investors to hold their cash because they are depositing so much. The bank's clients include pension funds and large investment houses that are selling stock and need to deposit the proceeds.

    Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist for Janney Montgomery Scott, an investment firm in Philadelphia, said his clients saw the move from stocks into cash as "a parking lot to sort things out."

    "With the scars of 2008 still fresh," he said, "some clients don't want to miss the chance to pre-empt further damage should it come."

    Wells Fargo Advisers, a financial management company in St. Louis, said clients were more nervous.

    "I wouldn't say they're totally panicking. But obviously nerves are rattled," said Scott Marcouiller, chief technical market strategist there. "And I think that is simply because of the speed of the decline."

    Other market indicators reinforced the risk-averse mood. Gold, which is seen as a safe investment when the stock market is turbulent, set a record price, $1,684.90 an ounce, before falling to finish the day at $1,659. Adjusted for inflation, gold is still far below the record reached in 1980.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.42 percent, its lowest of the year, and the yield on the 2-year Treasury note hit its lowest ever, 0.265 percent. Bond yields fall when demand for bonds increases.

    The yield on the one-month Treasury bill fell to almost nothing — 0.008 percent. Investors were willing to accept paltry returns in exchange for holding investments they believed to be stable.

    The sell-off was broad. All 10 industry groups in the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell. Energy companies lost almost 7 percent, materials companies were down 6.6 percent, and industrial companies lost more than 5 percent.

    For a time, Kraft Foods was the only stock to rise among the 30 that make up the Dow industrials. Kraft announced Thursday that it would split in two, with one company focusing on snacks and the other groceries. But the selling eventually dragged Kraft under, too, and its stock finished down 52 cents, at $33.78.

    Steep stock market losses like the ones of the past two weeks can be self-reinforcing. A drop in stocks erodes household wealth and raises doubts about the economic outlook.

    The result can be what economists call a vicious cycle. Stock losses take a toll on consumer confidence and make people more reluctant to spend money. Consumer spending makes up 70 percent of economic output in the United States.

    Kevin Cook, senior stock strategist for Zacks Investment Research in Chicago, said investors' worst fears probably won't come true.

    "This is not 2008 again," he said. "We don't have a liquidity crisis, we don't have a credit crisis — this is just profit taking."

    Cook said he believes the S&P 500, which closed Thursday at 1,200.07, will trade between 1,150 and 1,250 between now and Oct. 1, at least until investors have enough information to determine whether the economy is in recession again.

    Even taking into account the recent declines, stocks are still considered to be in an impressive bull market that began March 9, 2009, when the market reached its recession low.

    The Dow closed that day at 6,547. Since then, it is up about 74 percent.

    One year ago, the Dow closed at 10,680. About a month later, the stock market began a rally that took the Dow almost to 13,000. The catalyst was an announcement by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke that the Fed was preparing to launch a program to buy $600 billion in government bonds to keep interest rates low and help stocks rally.

    The sell-off now comes at a time when corporate profits are growing. For the S&P 500, a measure called the forward price-to-earnings ratio has fallen to about 12, well below its long-term average of 16. That means that investors who buy now are paying less for each dollar in profits.

    Based on what an investor now pays for corporate profits, stocks are now trading at their lowest levels in 20 years, said Tim Courtney, chief investment officer of Burns Advisory Group in Oklahoma City.

    But few companies were spared in the sell-off Thursday. Just three of the 500 stocks in the S&P 500 moved higher. General Motors fell 4 percent despite beating analyst estimates for its quarterly earnings.

    ___

    AP Business Writers Dave Carpenter in Chicago, Paul Wiseman in Washington and Pallavi Gogoi and Seth Sutel in New York contributed to this report.

     

    2,138 comments

    • Wheezer  •  9 mths ago
      [The service sector, which covers about 90 percent of the American work force, is growing at the slowest rate in a year and a half.]

      So what kind of goods do we MANUFACTURE?
      • Chowyunpat 9 mths ago
        Even though we might not manufacture many goods here, that is not the problem. The main problem is President Obama's strident anti-business stance and policies that will ensure very little business growth and very few start ups. You are going to see a scenario like the one in Atlas Shrugged where the successful will just stop doing business, become a reality. The middle class will get hurt the most, the one segment of American Society that Obama the Destroyer claimed to be helping.
      • rpgd 9 mths ago
        Exactly at least one on here understands the problem. No offense to the people who work at Mickey D's or Wally World.

        But we have to do something that adds Value that can be sold abroad. Not just pass money back and forth among ourselves
      • Trollbreath 9 mths ago
        Actually, this is what happens when you run your economy like a casino.
    • LARRY  •  9 mths ago
      Blame whoever you want, blame one party then blame the other, hell blame them all......the only truth that will ever fix our economy and begin to get our country out of debt is to once again become a country that actually has a manufacturing infrastructure that can produce quality goods and stop our government from it's wildly irresponsible spending and entitlement programs.
      • ChristopherD 9 mths ago
        That means right sizing the unions
      • Steve 9 mths ago
        how about entitlements are expected benefits from paying into for entire lives? why would you take grandma and grandpa's insurance away
      • Jobsite 9 mths ago
        You realize the average retired person receives 3 to 5 times more in medicare benefits than they ever invested into the system.
    • Jeffo  •  9 mths ago
      "Gripped by fear of a new recession" NEW are they kidding!!! This is the same one we have been in. There was no REAL recovery just smoke and mirrors. Large corporations and jobs being sent oversees will prevent this economy from recovering.
      • Chowyunpat 9 mths ago
        The Obama administrations economic policies will ensure that companies will continue moving jobs overseas, that few small business will be started, and that many successful people will limit what makes them successful or just stop being successful altogether.
      • westo 9 mths ago
        yeah it's nothing new.. we've been on a gradual decline ever since.. i'd say the 50's
      • Kyriakos 9 mths ago
        You got it Jeffo! I too believe its the same - over ten years old - recession!
    • gene  •  9 mths ago
      I thought this was suppose to happen if the debt ceiling WASN'T raised. LOL what a joke.
      • Judy 9 mths ago
        that was one of threats
      • ElCabon007 9 mths ago
        Judy,
        YOU and the IDIOTS in the WH are believing this CRAP
      • celloman79 9 mths ago
        Dear Mr. ElCabon007,

        Take a chill pill man. Judy didn't say what she believed, she simply made a statement of fact. There's a strong possibility that if you told us what your beliefs were, she would agree with you.
    • david  •  9 mths ago
      Tighten your belts folks. Here comes the next global recession. Maybe worse this time around.
      • raya 9 mths ago
        It almost seems that Ob*ma is planning this global collapse. He want it to happen.
      • Jacob Black 9 mths ago
        Wild guess...........internet bubble, housing bubble, fake money bubble, and people sold out to their political parties not to the USA?
      • Kyriakos 9 mths ago
        That's the problem when you expect corporations and super-rich people to create jobs voluntarily!
    • Strangelove  •  9 mths ago
      Who else thinks the economy is being destroyed on purpose? I do.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      Headline should read .
      Wall Street Afraid Puppets Will Be Voted Out Of Office.
    • dean h  •  9 mths ago
      A new recession????? That would imply the first one is over with! Not sure who you trying to fool with that line of crap!!
    • BB  •  9 mths ago
      Brother, can you spare a dime?
    • TerryM  •  9 mths ago
      "new recession"... really? How about 3 year old depression.
    • oncall  •  9 mths ago
      The kitchens on fire and were worried about setting the dinner table.
    • Fahim  •  9 mths ago
      Mark Twain said it best: “Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason.” .......Passed a debt ceiling, but too bad investors don't want to let a bunch of cry babies borrow.
    • Crazy Howie  •  9 mths ago
      This coming phase II of the 2008 recession is going to make phase I look like a picnic. Better strap yourselves in for this round, as it is going to be a whopper. The only positive thing will be that the price of gas will go down, but everything else will go up, up, up.
    • rock  •  9 mths ago
      Call it what they will but the 45 million on food stamps will call it a depression
    • DT  •  9 mths ago
      Hey voters, who are you going to screw us with next time....LMAO.
    • Wix  •  9 mths ago
      Weak financial institutions should not have been bailed out.
    • Michael  •  9 mths ago
      Without any sarcastic comments, partisan wisecracks or jokes, what would you do if you were President to create jobs in the United States? Your response needs to reflect the current environment in which corproations are already holding $2.5 trillion dollars in cash, there is a divided government in which two parties cannot or will not agree on stimulus, eliminating tax loopholes/cutting expenditures to trim the deficit, and more and more people are out of work or under employed. Seriously, without party shoutouts, bickering with each other and dumb wise cracks, what very specific acts would you take if you were President?
    • Get Off my lawn  •  9 mths ago
      Why do liberals think it’s bad to drill for our own oil but a good Idea to rape the soil to grow subsidized corn fuel that drives up the cost of all other food prices and has proven to not be better for the green earth than gas when North Dakota does both and has a 3.6% unemployment you can’t fix stupid and you can’t argue with a liberal. So the real question is why don’t liberals think?
    • brian  •  9 mths ago
      gas prices near 4dollars a gallon stock market collapse hmmmmm sounds like 2008. when are thet going to learn energy prices control the economy
    • Mike.  •  9 mths ago
      We all sit here fighting against each other-Republicans against Democrats-slinging our arrows back & forth...a nation of voters divided...Just what those scum in Washington want!! Think about it folks-read all of these comments & see for yourselves how we are just hammering away at each other,blaming & finger pointing...those sons of #$%$ are on their little 5wk "recess" now & probably love that we are focusing on knifing each other-Democrats against Republicans-while they sit back sipping their Martini's & they are free of our rath...Please,just think about it? I really believe Washington WANTS us divided & bickering while they run us into the ground-they have nothing to lose-it is us taxpayers who are & will pay the price.
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