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Adding to the market's worries, Swiss bank UBS AG reported a third-quarter loss of about $542 million, due to hefty accounting charges. Britain's FTSE 100 tumbled 2.1 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 1.9 percent, and France's CAC-40 dropped 2.3 percent. Earlier Tuesday, Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 1.8 percent. Markets in Japan were closed for a holiday. The outlook for financial firms is anything but clear. Analysts continue to warn that banks face more heavy losses on loans in the coming quarters. On Monday, financial stocks briefly pulled the market lower after Jon D. Greenlee, the Federal Reserve's associate director for banking supervision and regulation, told lawmakers that "significant stress and weaknesses" remain in the financial system. Bond prices rose in early trading Tuesday. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, slipped to 3.41 percent from 3.42 percent late Monday. In other trading, the dollar rose against other major currencies. Gold prices added about $9 to $1,063, while light, sweet crude fell 80 cents to $77.33 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Among the day's economic reports, analysts are expecting factory orders to have risen 0.8 percent in September, after falling by that amount the month before. The Commerce Department is scheduled to release the report at 10 a.m. Eastern time.
[Associated
Press;
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