Market Recap: Dow Plummets Below 10,000 as High Anxiety Reigns

Traders continue to flee the equities market amid increasing economic uncertainty

by Elizabeth Harrow (eharrow@sir-inc.com) 2/8/2010 4:27 PM



Stocks took a turn for the worse today, showing very little of the bullish resilience that characterized Friday's afternoon rebound. In keeping with the recent trend, it was another dose of uncertainty that helped send stocks reeling. Traders are still considering the possible ramifications of near-crippling sovereign debt loads across the euro zone -- and now, the market is facing up to the fact that the U.S. central bank must begin to slowly unravel its wide-reaching stimulus efforts. A Wall Street Journal article on Sunday suggested that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke "will begin this week to lay out a blueprint for a credit tightening," bringing anxiety on the topic to a boiling point today. Although no unwinding efforts will begin for "at least several months," the sheer uncertainty regarding the Fed's plans was sufficient to send bulls scrambling for shelter, leaving stocks to start the week on a decidedly downbeat note.

CLOSING SUMMARY – INDICES

CLOSING SUMMARY – NYSE AND NASDAQ

In fact, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 9,908.39) notched its first daily close below 10,000 since Nov. 4, 2009. The blue-chip barometer settled on a loss of nearly 104 points, or 1%, as selling pressure accelerated into the close. Only two Dow components finished higher; Home Depot (HD) bucked the downtrend after a bullish brokerage note, while Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) also edged into the black. Meanwhile, Bank of America (BAC) and Travelers Companies (TRV) paced the 28 declining equities. Support from the Dow's 160-day moving average is lingering in the 9,800 level, and could help to stem any further weakness.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX – 1,056.74) also succumbed to overwhelmingly negative momentum, swallowing a loss of 9.5 points, or 0.9%. However, the SPX found support near the 1,050 region on an intraday basis. Finally, the Nasdaq Composite (COMP – 2,126.05) ended on a deficit of 15.1 points, or 0.7%, after briefly surging into positive territory around midday. The COMP's rally attempt was capped by its 120-day moving average, in the 2,152 area.

Turning to equities in focus, Hasbro (HAS) tagged a new annual high in the wake of its latest earnings report ... Cell Therapeutics (CTIC) plunged after the FDA expressed some reservations over its experimental lymphoma drug ... Baidu (BIDU) was targeted by a skeptical spread player ahead of its earnings report ... Whole Foods Market (WFMI) was buoyed by a bullish endorsement in The Wall Street Journal ... Put buyers placed their bets that Transocean Ltd. (RIG) will retreat from a critical round-number region ... and today's Quote of the Day comes from Seth Stevenson, the resident ad critic at Slate. In reviewing last night's Super Bowl commercials, Stevenson noted that E-Trade Financial Corporation's (ETFC) talking-baby spots seem to have veered way off course from their original purpose -- which was to underscore the site's ease of use. After taking in last night's gag about a philandering infant, Stevenson observed:

"The ads have now lost all connection to this logic. They're just a series of 30-second Look Who's Talking sequels."

But these weren't the only headlines hitting the Street today. Click on the links below for our Daily Option Blog coverage of:

And, in case you missed it, Andrea Kramer sampled some of the stocks heating up the options arena last week – including Nike Inc. (NKE) and Polo Ralph Lauren (RL) – in the latest edition of Options Stew. Click here to watch the video.

For today's activity in crude oil, gold futures, options, and more, turn to page 2.

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