Dow 10,000 Bulwark Fails, Raising Fears of a Deluge to Follow
SAN FRANCISCO -- The dam broke. The line in the sand was crossed. The "fortress" known as Dow 10,000 tumbled under a second straight frontal assault today. But as the market's version of Rome burned, the "new kingdom" known as the Nasdaq Composite Index was only slightly singed.
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Some Shining Stars in Tech
Still, there were some winners in the tech sector. Commerce One (CMRC Quote) leapt 18% after General Motors (GM Quote), Ford (F Quote) and DaimlerChrysler (DCX Quote) agreed to combine their online procurement operations. Commerce One will have an equity stake in the venture, as will Oracle (ORCL Quote), which rose 14%. Telecom stocks such as Telecorp PCS (TLCP Quote), up 13.1%, were in favor after Lehman Brothers made positive comments about the group. Puma Technologies (PUMA Quote) jumped 19.5% after the company posted results that bested expectations and set a 2-for-1 stock split last night. New issues also fared well. Intersil Holding (ISIL Quote) rose 116% from its IPO price while DigitalThink (DTHK Quote) gained 107%.Too Much of a Good Thing
The battle for Dow 10,000 may have been lost thanks to a sharp upward revision of fourth-quarter gross domestic product to 6.9% from an original 5.8%. That the report's inflationary component -- the implicit price deflator -- was unchanged at 2% didn't stop market players from fretting about how the Federal Reserve will react to the headline GDP numbers. (Oil prices rising back above $30 a barrel didn't help either.) The price of the 30-year Treasury bond fell 7/32 to 101 10/32, its yield rising to 6.16%. "Obviously the economy continues to grow much more strongly than anyone anticipated," said Lisa Cullen, strategist at Merrill Lynch. Today's release "reinforces the possibility the Fed is going to have to be much more aggressive than they have been in the last few months. Greenspan is under fire here. Clearly, they're going to keep [tightening] until we're down closer to 3% GDP [because] 6.9% is emerging-market territory." In the waning moments of today's session some traders expressed confidence that buyers will reemerge next week. But, clearly, the prevailing tone of trading was decidedly negative today. In New York Stock Exchange trading, 1.063 billion shares were exchanged while declining stocks bested advancers 1,805 to 1,163. In Nasdaq Stock Market action 1.813 billion shares traded -- the 10th-busiest session ever -- while losers led 2,225 to 1,940. New 52-week lows whipped new highs 229 to 53 on the Big Board while new highs led 325 to 121 in over-the-counter trading. Among other indices, the Dow Jones Transportation Average fell 29.04, or 1.2%, to 2351.26 and the Dow Jones Utility Average slid 5.54, or 1.9%, to 279.99. For the week, the Dow lost 3.5%; the S&P 500 fell 0.9%; the Nasdaq Comp rose 4.1%; the Russell 2000 advanced 2%; the DOT jumped 7.2%; the New Tech 30 hopped 9.4%; the Dow transportation average dipped 3.3%; the Dow utility average slipped 6.3%; and the Amex composite added 1.2%.For coverage of today's top stocks in the news, see the Company Report, published separately.
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,414.14 | 1,114.05 | 2,237.66 | 36.82 |
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