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The resignation of a key European Central Bank official combined with worries over a new recession in the United States led to a stock market sell-off Friday. The Dow Jones industrial average and Standard & Poor's 500 index have fallen for six of the past seven weeks. Before Monday, the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq had posted gains only one day this month, last Wednesday. Tenet Healthcare Corp. sank 10 percent to $4.52, the biggest drop among companies in the S&P 500. The hospital operator said it expects earnings to take a hit from a rise in patients using Medicaid, which pays hospitals less for treatment than private insurance. McGraw-Hill Cos. rose 4 percent to $40.26. The company said it will split into two public companies, one unit focused on education services and the other centered on markets, including the rating agency Standard & Poor's and J.D. Power and Associates. NetLogic Microsystems Inc. jumped 51 percent to $48.12 after Broadcom Corp. said it has agreed to acquire the maker of semiconductors for $3.7 billion. Bank of America Corp. rose 1 percent to $7.05 after the bank said it would slash 30,000 jobs as part of a cost-cutting drive. Wynn Resorts rose 2 percent to $151.72 after a unit of the casino operator said it had a signed a deal to build a resort in Macau. Casinos have been expanding their operations in the former Portuguese colony, considered the world's most lucrative gambling market.
[Associated
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