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Stock market extends its slide for 2nd week

Dow ends down 588 after early 1,000-point fall
Vincent Napolitano, at his booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, was among the stunned traders who saw the Dow Jones industrial average plunge almost 1,100 points in the first four minutes of trading. Stocks recovered somewhat, with the Dow ending 588 points down in what is a disconcerting extension of market weakness sparked by big drops in Chinese stocks.

U.S. stocks slid Monday, with the Dow Jones industrial average briefly plunging more than 1,000 points in another chapter of a selloff that began last week, a selloff that has sent a shiver of fear from Wall Street to Main Street.

Stocks regained some of that ground as the day wore on, but the Dow finished with a loss of 588 points, the eighth-worst single-day point decline and the second straight fall of more than 500.

The slump – part of a global wave of selling touched off by signs of a slowdown in China, the world’s second-largest economy – triggered worries among Wall Street professionals and ordinary Americans who are saving for retirement or a down payment on a house.

With the lease on her car up, insurance worker Deirdre Ralph of Wayne, New Jersey, had planned to get a less pricey vehicle and invest the savings. Now she’s having doubts.

“That money, I wanted to take and put it toward my retirement,” said Ralph, 61. “Should I? Or should I just have a great old time?”

The Dow ended up losing 588.47 points, or 3.6 percent, closing at 15,871.35. As scary as the sell-off was, the Dow’s decline doesn’t even make the list of the Top 10 biggest drops in percentage terms.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index slid 77.68 points, or 3.9 percent, to 1,893.21, and is now in “correction” territory, Wall Street jargon for a drop of at least 10 percent from a recent peak. The last market correction was nearly four years ago.

The Nasdaq composite shed 179.79 points, or 3.8 percent, closing at 4,526.25.

All three major indexes are down for the year.

“There is a lot of fear in the markets,” said Bernard Aw, market strategist at IG.

U.S. stocks have been on a bull run for more than six years, after bottoming out in March 2009 in the aftermath of the financial crisis and the Great Recession. The rout began in China last week and continued relentlessly on Monday, when the country’s main stock index sank a disconcerting 8.5 percent.

China concerns aside, U.S. stocks have been primed for a selloff for several months, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist and economist for Wells Capital Management.

“I’ve been of the view since late last year that this market is in a vulnerable position,” he said. “It’s gone almost straight up for six years.”

Stocks have kept rising even as corporate earnings growth has slowed. The price-earnings ratio for the S&P 500, a measure of how much investors are willing to pay for each dollar of company earnings, climbed as high as 17.2 in March. That was the highest level in at least a decade, according to FactSet.

The Dow plummeted 1,089 points Monday within the first four minutes of the opening bell as traders dumped shares. But a wave of buying by bargain-hunters cut the Dow’s losses by half just five minutes later.

The U.S. market slide was broad. The 10 sectors in the S&P 500 headed lower, with energy stocks recording the biggest decline, 5.2 percent, amid a slump in the price of oil. The sector is down almost 25 percent this year.

U.S. Treasurys surged as investors bought less-risky assets. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note fell to 2.01 percent from 2.04 percent.

Oil, commodities and currencies of many developing countries also tumbled on concerns that a slowdown in China might hurt economic growth around the globe. Crude oil closed below $40 a barrel for the first time since early 2009. Gold and silver also fell.

In Europe, Germany’s DAX stock index fell 4.7 percent, while the CAC-40 in France slid 5.4 percent. The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares dropped 4.7 percent.

In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei index fell 4.6 percent, its worst one-day drop since in over 2½ years. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell 5.2 percent, Australia’s S&P ASX/200 slid 4.1 percent, and South Korea’s Kospi lost 2.5 percent.

The Shanghai index suffered its biggest percentage decline in 8½ years. China is facing a slowdown in economic growth, the banking system is short of cash, and investors are pulling money out of the country.



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