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    Greek turmoil sends US and world markets lower

    NEW YORK (AP) — A wave of selling swept across Wall Street and stock markets around the world Tuesday after Greece's prime minister said he would call a national vote on an unpopular European plan to rescue that nation's economy.

    The Dow Jones industrial average finished down nearly 300 points. It swung in 100 point bursts throughout the day as investors reacted to sometimes conflicting headlines about the next steps in Greece's long-running debt crisis. Treasurys and other assets considered safe surged. The stocks of major banks, including Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, were hit hard.

    Intense selling roiled markets in Europe. Italy's main stock index dropped 6.8 percent. France's fell 5.4 percent and Germany's fell 5 percent.

    The value of the dollar rose, and bond prices jumped so dramatically that analysts said they were stunned. Analysts said the bond action reflected fears that the turmoil in Greece would tear at the fabric of Europe's financial system and create a crisis that could engulf the entire European Union, which together forms the world's largest economy.

    "This brings all of the concerns about Europe back to the front burner," said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James. "If this ends up turning into a financial catastrophe in Europe, then no one will escape it."

    The prime minister of Greece said unexpectedly Monday that he would put the European rescue plan to a popular vote, the first referendum to be held in Greece since 1974.

    The plan requires banks that hold Greek national bonds to accept 50 percent losses to help keep the Greek economy afloat. It also beefs up a European bailout fund and requires banks to strengthen their financial cushions.

    There were also late reports that Greek lawmakers dissented from the plan, raising the possibility that Greece's government would not last until a confidence vote on Friday.

    International creditors have demanded that Greece enact painful tax increases and drastic cuts in public welfare programs, and Greeks have shown their hostility to those measures in violent protests and strikes.

    If the European rescue falls through and Greece defaults on its debt, the ripple effect would be global. Europe could fall into recession, hurting a major market for American exports, and banks could severely restrict lending.

    It was only last Thursday that European leaders announced a deal that they believed would be a turning point in the two-year debt crisis. Banks agreed to take bigger losses on Greek debt and to boost their levels of cash, while the European Union increased the size of its bailout fund. Global stock markets surged after the plan was unveiled. Now, those gains seem to be fleeting.

    "The stock market is expressing disgust with Greek politics and a lack of confidence that Italy and Spain will generate the growth needed to pay down their debt," said Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co.

    The Dow fell 297.05 points, or 2.5 percent, to close at 11,657.96. It was the biggest drop since Sept. 22. The Dow has lost 573 points, or 4.7 percent, in the last two days.

    The S&P 500 lost 35.02, or 2.8 percent, to 1,218.28. Some analysts took comfort that the S&P closed above 1,215. A drop below that level would erase nearly all of the market's gains in October. The Nasdaq composite dropped 77.45, or 2.9 percent, to 2,606.96.

    Pfizer Inc. was the only company in the Dow stock to rise. It gained 0.4 percent after its income and revenue beat Wall Street's estimates. General Motors Co. sank 9.8 percent after its October sales came in lower than Wall Street analysts were expecting.

    Financial companies in the S&P 500 dropped 4.7 percent, the biggest loss among the 10 company groups that make up the index.

    Bank of America Corp lost 6.3 percent. JP Morgan Chase & Co. dropped 5.9 percent, and Citigroup shed 7.7 percent.

    Tuesday's sell-off came after an almost uninterrupted rally in October that was largely due to higher confidence in Europe's latest financial rescue plan for Greece and signs that the U.S. economy was not falling into another recession.

    The S&P 500 rose from 1,099 on Oct. 3 to 1,285 Friday, or 17 percent. The last two days, it's given up one-third of that gain.

    "The market is being held hostage by a random event that is overshadowing everything else," said John Canally, an economist at LPL Financial. Canally noted that the U.S. economy continues to expand. Retail sales came in better than expected in September and auto sales increased in October.

    In the United States, the market sank Monday before the surprise Greek announcement. MF Global Holdings, a securities firm led by former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine, was driven into bankruptcy in part because of its holdings of European debt. The selling accelerated after the Greek announcement, and the U.S. market opened with a drop of almost 300 points.

    In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note sank to 1.96 percent from 2.16 percent late Monday, a steep drop. Bond yields fall when their prices rise as investors buy assets that are considered to better hold their value during a slowing economy. The dollar rose to $1.36 for every euro.

    The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond sank from 3.38 percent Friday to 2.96 percent Tuesday.

    "That's the biggest change that I've seen in my career," said Guy LeBas, chief fixed income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott. "It's obscene."

    The yields of Italian debt spiked to their highest level this year, another sign that investors are concerned that the debt crisis could spread to the larger economies of Europe. The yield on 1-year Italian government bonds soared 48 percent to 5.17 percent.

    The yield on the 10-year German bund plunged to 1.78 percent, a 23.5 percent fall from the day before. The German economy is seen as the strongest in Europe and the most likely to repay its debt.

     
    • Robert  •  St. Louis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      What sheep we are. The Greek economy is the same size as Minnesota's economy. The world dog is being wagged by the a Greek tail.
      • Neil 6 mths ago
        ah yes, but that wouldn't make headlines would it?!
      • gizmosellschickens 6 mths ago
        Think more that meets the eye Greece is poltical cover for Germany and France bad bank problem. Greece is the peg boy for the EU.
      • Eli 6 mths ago
        The main goal is to get Europe to sign on to banker derivatives. Even the EU admits that the numbers they are coming up with to solve the problem are completely arbitrary. They need to do like Iceland did and tell the banks no to their phony debt.
    • Mem  •  Baltimore, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Is there a politician nowhere, who has not gone mad?. Whatever happened to leadership?.
      • Gemini5472 6 mths ago
        They know what to do but they are afraid of even mentioning or hinting at the solution(s)! If my history doesn't fail me isn't this the kind of situation that gave Hitler a chance to initiate his madness?!
      • nikki 6 mths ago
        why would you expect leadership from an elected official when for every person in washington for instance there are 7 people lobbying them for big business and making sizable donnations to political campaigns
      • mark d 6 mths ago
        Greek politics, follow the leader by voting : Yes or NO. If yes you going to shut the hill up let do my job, if no find another leader. Like Abbas in Palestine.
    • Joe  •  6 mths ago
      Overspending, bailouts and living beyond one's means are the cause of this.
      • JJ 6 mths ago
        Oddly familar to the US Economy eh?
      • minute man 6 mths ago
        yes joe and america is next
      • Dee 6 mths ago
        All this overspending has done is make the wealthy a bit nervous and then wealthier. They, in turn, now have more money to pump into the election and get a big return on that investment. So what's the problem?
    • William H  •  6 mths ago
      The US under Bush and Obama are doing the same thing that got Greece where they are now. When banks make bad loans, they go bankrupt. That is how capitalism works. Banks are NOT too big to fail, unless they are politically connected (crony capitalism) with crooked politicians (socialists, by any other name still socialists). Let the banks fail, thats how capitalism works.
      • Deschutes Drifter 6 mths ago
        Perfectly stated!
      • Doug 6 mths ago
        Dodd and Frank got a bill passed that required lenders to finance very shaky home loans for "the disadvantaged". Well, money got loose, housing prices went up and "the disadvantaged" failed to pay the debt they never could have paid in the first place. While that was going on, lenders were packaging, reselling all the crummy loans with some good ones to get the junk off their books. When everything collapsed it was like musical chairs with two seats and five people when the tune stopped.
      • steve from the city 6 mths ago
        Totally right
    • my_2_cents_4u  •  6 mths ago
      uncertainty --- turmoil--- falling markets--- selloffs (but somebody's buying right?)--- better news/crisis fades--- buyers buy---- markets rise---- selloff buyers now sell--- more bad news
      --- uncertainty---- turmoil.................
      • Netherworld 6 mths ago
        Every time stocks go down, the media reports it like it's the end of the economic world. Then stocks go up and the media tells us, never mind, everything is okay.
        Until I see the market drop over 10% for a few days, I'm not convinced.
      • Bmmmmooooney 6 mths ago
        well said
      • steve from the city 6 mths ago
        Reality of life in Obamaville!
    • P.  •  New York, United States  •  6 mths ago
      globalism is an idiotic economic system, my thanks again to all those past and present "leaders" that got us into this mess
    • commonman  •  6 mths ago
      we the US are on the exact same path as Greece.
      but America is full of blind people, we can not see it, and think we are immune.
      i cant wait till the slap comes to wake people up. im sure there will be allot of crying "who let this happen" the answer is, YOU let it happen, by being blind.

      for Christians, the bible warns of the Nation of blind people, ever wonder who those people are? Its your neighbors. its yourselves. its us.
    • eadn  •  6 mths ago
      I have to say I tend to agree with a public vote on so serious a measure. The people will probably vote against it, but at some point, we have to let the world market naturally correct itself by the will of the people and quit propping up every Tom, Dick, and Harry.
    • charlie  •  6 mths ago
      "Pfizer Inc. was the only company in the Dow stock to rise. It gained 2 percent after its quarterly results beat Wall Street's estimates."

      if ever there was a sign of the apocolypts lol... global meltdown with zoloft to the rescue
    • Dr. Hfuhruhurr  •  6 mths ago
      U.S. Tax revenue: $2,170,000,000,000
      Federal budget: $3,820,000,000,000
      New debt: $1,650,000,000,000
      National debt: $14,271,000,000,000
      Recent (April) budget cuts: $38,500,000,000

      Let's remove 8 zeros and pretend it's a household budget:
      Annual family income: $21,700
      Money the family spent: $38,200
      New debt (this year) on the credit card: $16,500
      Outstanding balance on credit card: $142,710
      Budget cuts: $385

      Any Democrats (or Republican) proposing that we need to spend our way out of this mess needs to be IGNORED.
    • piggypitbull  •  Greenville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Ineptocracy

      Finally, a way to describe our current regime.

      Ineptocracy (in-ept-oc’-ra-cy) - a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers
    • JimC  •  6 mths ago
      This is what happens when you want government to give you everything.
    • Tom  •  6 mths ago
      This is were hope and change is taking America. Socialist govt. hand outs does not work, the lazy get more lazy and want more freebees. Hope and change spends 4 billion a day on wasted bankrupt solar energy companys, electric cars nobody wants. He will add 3 trillion in debt by the time the country votes the loser out office in 2012.
    • Outside The  •  Dallas, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Instead of Greeks voting on the rescue package, EU citizens need to vote on whether to keep Greece in the EU or not.
    • DiverMike  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  6 mths ago
      The market is NOT being "held hostage" by a random event. For too long economists have pretended the market is orderly, and intelligently thought- based. Untrue. Now one nation that never should have been given the credit that was extended to them, isstating simply that they will NOT do as required by tose that are asked to bail them out.

      Those who invested-lose. Its called the REAL free market. Next time, invest wiser. Avoid the gimmicks and too good to be true claims of phoney, biased, so called economists; or the actions of auto-trading programs.

      Slow down. Investigate your investment options in advance, and only then give them your money. Pretty much the way markets used to do, when CEO's and COO's represented stockholders and not themselves.
    • John  •  6 mths ago
      Weren't we better off before those geniuses came up with the notion of a global economy?
    • Erik  •  6 mths ago
      Hey I know why doesn't America take care of Americans first and say to hell with Greece? I mean afterall we know that Greece is well known for all of its exports of oil.... no no well they are the largest producer of textiles... no no well they are the largest consumer of money due to handout programs. Heck we gotta bail them out. Those poor Greeks will actually have to work for a living if we don't. As Americans we should all get a second job to pay for this.
    • akroyd_99  •  6 mths ago
      the one per cent thinks they can go impovershing the consumers and they will be able to keep on hauling in loads of profit, think again, a collapse is going to hurt all kinds of guys trying to get on that one per cent gravy train,
    • bangus  •  6 mths ago
      US markets tumbling? You mean the state-authorized gambling casinos run by greedy banks/investors/politicians?
    • JimC  •  6 mths ago
      The Greek government has run out of other peoples' money.
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