Market Update: Stocks End Week Deep in the Red; Dow and Nasdaq Both Bloodied
The Nasdaq Composite Index
and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
were walloped today as both ended solidly lower.
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Sector Watch
Defensives relished this latest bit of weakness in tech stocks, with oil, tobacco and drug stocks bouncing. Blue-chip ExxonMobil(XOM Quote) was up 1.6% to $85.86. The stock's been beaten down in the past couple days, so the recovery was a nice breather for the stock. The American Stock Exchange Oil & Gas Index was 2.1% higher. The American Stock Exchange Pharmaceutical Index was rising 0.5% and the American Stock Exchange Tobacco Index was lifting 1.4%. There was one pocket of tech that wasn't being completely killed today. The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index ended only 0.7% lower, despiote some positive help from Rambus(RMBS Quote). The stock was getting a nice boost from news that Japanese company Toshiba will more than triple its output of Rambus DRAM chips, which use technology from Rambus that speeds up memory chip performance. The faster chips are twice the price of commodity DRAMs and are used by Sony(SNE Quote) to make 3-D graphics for its PlayStation 2 and by Intel(INTC Quote) for its new Pentium 4 microprocessor. Rambus was up 7.2%. Back to topBonds/Economy
prices are up as weakness in equities has brought investors' focus back to notes and bonds. The money market is also consolidating after absorbing $32 billion in government debt that was auctioned over the last three days. The long end of the market is showing greater strength, with the 30-year up by half a point. A $5 billion auction of three-year notes from Freddie Mac should keep the trading volume up today. Next week, $21 billion worth of three- and six-month Treasury bills will be sold. The benchmark 10-year Treasury note
lately was up 15/32 to 99 25/32, lowering its yield to 5.028%. Analysts will once again be hoping for Federal Reserve
chairman Alan Greenspan
to hint of more rate cuts as he addresses the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday. In the wake of the Fed's two January cuts, the Bank of England cut interest rates yesterday and the Japanese central bank followed through with a cut overnight. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill said in his round of conversations with television networks yesterday that he agrees with Greenspan's recent view that the economy is near zero growth. O'Neill estimates the present growth rate at 0.5% - 0 .6%. But he expressed confidence that technology-led productivity gains would take the nation to a "golden era of economic prosperity" as 80% of their contribution was still to be realized. His statements suggest that last quarter's higher-than-expected productivity gains amid a weakening economy were due to structural improvements in supply-chain management techniques. There is no economic news today. Back to top
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,405.83 | 1,102.35 | 2,190.86 | 34.82 |
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