A weaker-than-expected jobs report along with statements by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan that the current market turmoil was identical to previous ones has sent the stock market into a tailspin today, pushing down the Dow Jones Industrial Average by more than 200 points.
Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE: MER), Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GS) and Bear Stearns Cos. (NYSE: BSC), which like other financial stocks have been hit hard because of subprime concerns and the ongoing credit crunch. Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG), Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) all dropped as well showing how difficult safe havens are to find.
The wild swings in the market will continue for some time as investors continue to fret over whether Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will cut interest rates later this month. So far, Bernanke has sent the market mixed signals, indicating at best that he's monitoring the situation closely and hinting that he'd like to avoid cutting interest rates if possible.
In fact, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson told Bloomberg Television that the decline in payrolls wasn't "totally surprising" and said he was confident that the economy would expand in the second half of the year. That doesn't sound like someone who feels that a rate cut is needed immediately.
With a lame-duck administration, there is little incentive for officials in Washington to stick out their necks to do much of anything.
Fear, uncertainty and doubt will rule the day for a while more, it seems.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
9-07-2007 @ 3:11PM
jordan04n said...
Rumors are killing the market and Greenspan didn't help. The little guy gets hammered and the short sellers make a killing because they want the market to go down.
9-07-2007 @ 3:49PM
Mort said...
The "little guy" shouldn't be in this market. The bubble in housing and real estate is being corrected, just like tech did in 1999-2000. Excesses always get corrected. People who gambled on housing and real estate and silly loan agreements will feel pain.
9-09-2007 @ 12:15AM
wildbill said...
The root of the problem bears a similarity to the old pyramid scheme applied to a flip this house mentality. As long as the market went up it worked. This was not confined to the U.S. and cracks are showing in the U.K. with some indication that it is also in Europe and Japan. This is far too complicated for a short commentary. I suggest to all investors to start checking the news around the world - not just at home. CYA, or you are apt to lose it.