Updated with Treasuries, stock and commodity prices
Oil barreled more than $2 lower and the major indices in New York closed more than 2.5% lower Thursday after a disappointing jobs report spoiled the end of the holiday-shortened week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished down 223.32 points, or 2.6%, at 8280.74, while the S&P 500 lost 26.91 points, or 2.9%, to 896.42. The Nasdaq Composite declined 49.20 points, or 2.7%, to 1796.52. For the week, the Dow lost 1.8%, the S&P 500 gave up 2.4%, and the Nasdaq ended down 2.3%. All 30 Dow stocks were in negative territory on Thursday. The biggest percent losers on the Dow included industrials Alcoa(AA Quote), Caterpillar(CAT Quote), which lost 4.7% and 4.4%, respectively, and JPMorgan Chase(JPM Quote), down 4.4%. Integrated oil stocks also fell as crude oil futures slumped $2.51 to $66.80 a barrel, a day after the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration reported that gasoline and distillate inventories increased more than expected last week. PetroChina(PTR Quote) and Chesapeake Energy(CHK Quote) gave up 4.3% and 5%, respectively. Stocks sank lower across sectors after the U.S. government reported that 467,000 jobs were lost in June -- about 100,000 more than expected. That's up from a downwardly revised 322,000 job losses in May. The number of people unemployed for 27 weeks or more increased by 433,000 to 4.4 million, while the overall unemployment rate rose to 9.5% from 9.4%. Since the start of the recession in December 2007, the number of unemployed persons has increased by 7.2 million, and the unemployment rate has risen by 4.6 percentage points, according to the report. Those data were all the more unnerving because they followed disappointing consumer confidence data earlier in the week and also prior data that indicated consumers were increasing saving, says Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer's Investment Research. "You have consumers that are losing their jobs, not very confident and they're hoarding their money, and as we all know, you need consumers to spend to get the economy going," says Detrick. "So when you add it all together some of that recent action we've seen is definitely negative and the stock market is selling off." (Click below to listen to my entire conversation with Detrick.)
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,058.64 | 1,070.52 | 2,150.87 | 36.33 |
Oil *
72.02
|
|
UP
150.25
|
UP
13.78
|
UP
24.82
|
UP
0.41
|
10 Yr
3.63%
SPDR Gold
105.45
|
|
+1.52%
|
+1.30%
|
+1.17%
|
+1.14%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |
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