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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, July 17, 2002

Gloomy mood sets in over Wall Street

By Amy Baldwin
Associated Press

NEW YORK — Wall Street wobbled again yesterday, dropping sharply at the opening, stabilizing on soothing words from Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and then falling sharply again in late afternoon amid investors' continuing anxiety about the market's own dynamics.

Anthony Corso conducts trading in shares of pharmeceutical giant Merck on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Aspirin was the prescription for investors at the end of the day yesterday with Wall Street in a blue mood.

Associated Press

The Dow Jones industrials closed its seventh straight losing session down more than 160 points, a slight improvement over an earlier loss of 232, while the tech sector gave up a respectable gain and also finished lower.

"People are just fed up. ... It is a very emotional market," said Barry Hyman, chief investment strategist at Ehrenkrantz King Nussbaum.

Investors remained very nervous after eight weeks of heavy selling, including big price swings Monday, when the Dow fell as much as 439 before recovering to a loss of 45 by the close.

The Dow finished yesterday down 166.08, or 1.9 percent, at 8,473.11. The Dow has fallen more than 900 points in seven straight losing sessions, four of which have been marked by triple-digit drops. The last time the Dow had a longer unbroken losing stretch was the eight trading days before and after the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

The market's broader indicators also stumbled yesterday. The tech-heavy Nasdaq composite index slipped 7.36, or 0.5 percent, to 1,375.26. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 16.99, or 1.9 percent, to 900.94.

Greenspan told the Senate Banking Committee that the economy is on its way to a full recovery, although it will keep feeling the effects of last year's recession. Greenspan also said the Fed will not start raising interest rates until the economy shows further strengthening.

Greenspan's words temporarily heartened investors who have been worried about companies' second-quarter earnings and outlooks for the remainder of the year.

But investors still were mindful of their concerns about earnings and a series of corporate bookkeeping scandals, and they were unable to overcome their case of nerves as the afternoon wore on. Such worries have led to eight straight losing weeks.

At this point, Wall Street's huge losses are themselves helping to drive stocks lower, analysts said.

The market "tends to feed on itself on the downside just as it fed on itself on the upside for seven years," Hyman said.

Caterpillar dropped $2.19 to $43 after its second-quarter earnings missed analysts' forecast by 15 cents a share.

General Motors fell $2.08 to $45.84 despite posting second-quarter earnings that were 21 cents a share higher than analysts expected. GM added to losses from last week when several brokerages downgraded the stock, citing among their reasons concerns about the company's ability to finance its pension plan.

Intel declined 76 cents to $18.36 ahead of its earnings. After the market closed, the chip maker reported results that missed analysts expectations by 4 cents a share, and announced 4,000 job cuts. Intel shares rose 26 cents in the extended trading session.

But Johnson & Johnson rose $1.10 to $50.10 on second-quarter earnings that exceeded analysts' expectations by 2 cents a share.

Analysts expect investors to continue their retreat until they see earnings growing again. While companies are reporting second-quarter results in line with or above analyst expectations, the numbers so far haven't been enough to shake the market out of its slump.

Analysts attributed blue chips' recent losses, larger than those in the long-battered tech sector, mostly to relatively high prices. While tech prices have been crumbling all year, blue chips have fared better and have enjoyed more rallies. So far this year, the Nasdaq is down about 29.5 percent, while the Dow is off 15.5 percent.

"The blue chips for the longest time stayed above water," as far as earnings go, said Joseph V. Battipaglia, chief investment officer at Ryan, Beck & Co. LLC. "And, only now are there concerns about their valuations being sustained or earnings turbulence."

Declining issues led advancers about 3 to 2 on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated volume came to 2.22 billion shares, below Monday's 2.36 billion.

The Russell 2000 index, which tracks smaller company stocks, fell 1.81, or 0.4 percent, to 407.27.