![]()
- Why the Health Care Bill Is Facing a Tough Senate Fight
- Home Prices Start to Stabilize In the US as Sales Pick Up
- Former SEC Lawyer Pleads Guilty in NY Fraud Case
- Flaw in US Data Overstates Growth, Productivity
- Do You Know Your Coca-Cola Myths?
- 'The Onion' as Trading Indicator? Ask Radio Shack
- iPhone, App Strategy the 'New Dot Com?'
- Google to Buy Mobile Ad Firm AdMob for $750 Million
- Goldman Sachs Head Says Banks Do 'God's Work'
- Profiting From Natural Gas: Strategists
- S&P Stocks Trading at New 52-Week Highs
- Shopping for Answers
- 3 Hot Mid-Cap Stock Picks: Portfolio Manager
- Busch: G20 Affirms Weak Dollar
- 'Nice Opportunities' in Health Care Sector: Stock Picker
- Stocks To Play With Health Reform: Analysts
- Are You Making These Costly Investing Mistakes?
- Career Cross Training
MOST SHARED
- Flaw in US Data Overstates Growth, Productivity
- Home Prices Start to Stabilize In the US as Sales Pick Up
- Israel: Leader of Business Innovation
- McDonald's October Sales Top Estimates
- Why Health Care Bill Is Facing Such a Tough Fight in Senate
- iPhone, App Strategy the 'New Dot Com?'
- China to Raise Gasoline, Diesel Prices by 7%
- Kraft Turns Hostile in $16 Billion Bid for Cadbury
- Solid 3-Year Auction Gives Boost to Treasury Prices
Stocks turned lower Wednesday as investors got defensive ahead of earnings season, rotating into pharmaceuticals and out of techs.
NYSE Euronext said it was informed by authorities that nyse.com was hacked but added that it "has not and could not impact" trading.
Stocks hit their lowest level in 10 weeks on Tuesday amid growing doubts about the economic recovery and jitters about earnings. Validating investor fears about the economy, an Obama economic adviser suggested that a second round of stimulus may be needed.
On Wednesday, a White House budget official said the Obama administration is NOT discussing a second stimulus.
"No one in the administration is talking about a second stimulus at this point," Robert Nabors, of the Office of Management and Budget, said at a House hearing on the $787 billion stimulus plan. "What we are focused on right now is implementing the recovery act that Congress has already passed," he said.
Financials were among the hardest hit today, with Bank of America [BAC
Loading...
()
] the top percentage decliner on the Dow.
Stocks had opened higher Wednesday amid some select buying, including Alcoa, which led the Dow in morning trading.
But by late morning, Alcoa [AA
Loading...
()
] retreated ahead of earnings from the aluminum giant after the closing bell. Analysts expect a third straight loss.
Alcoa is the first Dow component to report and marks the unofficial start to earnings season. Analysts expect the season to be another downer, projecting a 36-percent decline in S&P 500 earnings for the second quarter, which would be the eight straight quarter of declines. Commodities stocks are expected to lead the decline given the sharp dropoff since last year's peak.
Oil stocks including ExxonMobil [XOM
Loading...
()
] and Chevron [CVX
Loading...
()
] skidded as crude fell below $62 a barrel.
Crude continued to slide even after a report showed crude supplies shrunk by 2.9 million barrels last week, as traders continued to worry about proposals from both sides of the Atlantic to crack down on specualtion in oil markets.
Reflecting these hard economic times: Family Dollar [FDO
Loading...
()
] reported its profit jumped 36 percent, beating expectations, as cost-conscious consumers headed to the dollar store for bargains on staples.
One economic beacon came out of the housing sector: Mortgage applications rose 11 percent last week as mortgage rates again receded.
The 30-year fixed was at 5.32 percent overnight, according to Bankrate.com.
Google [GOOG
Loading...
()
] rose after the search giant announced late Tuesday plans for a PC operating system based on its Chrome Web browser that will challenge Microsoft [MSFT
Loading...
()
]'s Windows operating system.
Overall, however, techs were lower as investors worried that the stalled recovery would crimp tech spending, and instead moved back into defensive stocks like pharmaceuticals.
Amgen [AMGN
Loading...
()
] shot up more than 15 percent after an osteoporosis drug met trial goals.
Johnson & Johnson [JNJ
Loading...
()
] and Merck [MRK
Loading...
()
] were the two biggest percentage gainers on the Dow.
And insurers got a boost amid buzz about a potential compromise in the Obama administration's push for a public health-insurance alternative that investors see as less harmful to private insurers and hospital operators.
This morning, the administration announced a deal with three hospital groups that is expected to save $155 billion in health-care spending over the next decade, mainly by lowering charges for health services to the poor and elderly.
Pharma analyst Leerink Swan said movements in the sector would remain difficult to predict as health-care reform is in progress and the economy remains in flux.
Still to come: Results from a 10-year Treasury auction are due out at 1 pm ET today following a successful 3-year Treasury auction on Tuesday. Plus, consumer credit is due at 3 pm.
— Peter Schacknow contributed to this article.
Still to Come:
WEDNESDAY: Consumer credit; Earnings from Alcoa after the bell
THURSDAY: Chain-store sales; weekly jobless claims; wholesale trade; Fed's Duke speaks; Earnings from 3Com
FRIDAY: Import/export prices; international trade; consumer sentiment
Send comments to .
- Cramer did the research and found eight stocks that lead the pack. Read on to get his top picks.
- On the anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, many in the former Eastern Bloc recall communism fondly.
- Software, biotech firms, even banks are watching a particular Supreme Court argument today.
- CEOs try their hands at comedy and find that running a company may be an easier task.
- Dow Chemical is building a filter that uses reverse osmosis to purify contaminated H2O.
- A nascent website aims to make renting high-end dresses as easy as renting a movie.











