Sponsored by: Investment Center

Something new in your business?  Click here to submit your business press release

Chamber Corner | Main Street News | Job Hunt | Classifieds | Calendar | Illinois Lottery 

Stocks fall as investors wait on Washington

Send a link to a friend 

[October 09, 2013]  NEW YORK (AP) -- The stock market's slow bleed got a little worse Tuesday.

The decline is the result of squabbling in Washington over raising the nation's debt limit and a government shutdown that has dragged on for more than a week. The stock market's moderate losses in the first days of the shutdown have accelerated this week as the U.S. has moved closer to an Oct. 17 deadline for lifting the government's borrowing authority.

Stocks opened flat, moved steadily lower and slumped in the final minutes of trading Tuesday. The loss added to a three-week decline that has knocked the Standard & Poor's 500 index down 4 percent since it hit a record high on Sept. 18.

Swings in the market will likely increase the closer the U.S. gets to the debt deadline without a resolution, said Randy Frederick, Managing Director of Active Trading and Derivatives at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.

"Virtually everyone expects that there will some sort of a resolution," Frederick said. "But I wouldn't be surprised if it only came right before the last minute."

The S&P 500 index dropped 20.67 points, or 1.2 percent, to 1,655.45. It was the biggest one-day drop for the index since Aug. 20. The declines were led by phone companies.

House Republicans have insisted that a temporary funding bill include concessions on President Barack Obama's health care law. The president wants a bill to simply reopen the government, without strings attached.

Obama said he had told House Speaker John Boehner he's willing to negotiate with Republicans on their priorities, but not under the threat of "economic chaos." Speaking at a press briefing in Washington Tuesday, the president warned that the U.S. risked a "very deep recession" if the debt ceiling wasn't raised.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 159.71 points, or 1.1 percent, to 14,776.53. The Nasdaq composite dropped 75.54 points, or 2 percent, to 3,694.83.

Nervous investors also dumped short-term government debt as they worried that the standoff in Washington could jeopardize the nation's ability to pay its bills, including interest on its debt, as early as next week if Congress doesn't raise the borrowing limit.

The yield on Treasury bills maturing in one month soared to 0.28 percent, hitting its highest level since the 2008 financial crisis. The yield was 0.15 percent the day before and close to zero at the beginning of October.

The yield, which rises as the price of the notes fall, has surged as managers of money-market funds become more wary of holding short-term government debt that matures shortly after the debt deadline.

There were other signs of increasing investor nervousness.

The VIX index, which rises when investors are more concerned about stock fluctuations, climbed to its highest level of the year.

"Unfortunately, we're just held hostage by what's going on in Washington," said Dan Veru, chief investment officer of Palisade Capital Management.

U.S. companies will start reporting earnings for the third quarter in earnest this week, giving investors something else to think about besides Washington.

[to top of second column]

Aluminum producer Alcoa, which was recently removed from the Dow, said Tuesday that it had swung to a profit in the third quarter, helped by demand from automakers and by cost-cutting moves. The company reported its earnings after the stock market closed.

JPMorgan and Wells Fargo are among companies releasing earnings this week.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note was little changed at 2.63 percent. The yield on the longer-term note has fallen in the past month, suggesting that investors see any potential default as a short-term phenomenon and are predicting that economic growth will remain subdued in the longer term.

Stocks also slumped the last time that the U.S. came close to hitting its debt ceiling in the summer of 2011.

The S&P 500 dipped 5 percent between the start of July and Aug. 2 of that year, when President Barack Obama signed into a law a bill that raised the debt ceiling and promised more than $2 trillion in cuts to government spending over a decade. Stocks extended their slide after S&P cut its rating on U.S. government debt on Aug. 5.

Analysts point out, though, that the global economy was in a far more fragile state two years ago than it is now. Europe was still in the throes of its debt crisis, the U.S. economy was weaker.

Even so, stocks recovered and ended the year flat. The next year, they rose 13 percent.

On Tuesday, the dollar fell against the euro and rose against the Japanese yen.

Among stocks making big moves:

  • Jamba plunged $2.53, or 19 percent, to $10.94 after the company cut its fiscal 2013 guidance, saying reduced spending by consumers hurt its sales in the third quarter.

  • Xerox fell 26 cents, or 2.5 percent, to $10.14 after the company said the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating accounting practices at one of its units.

  • McKesson rose $4.09, or 3.2 percent, to $133.72 after The Wall Street Journal reported that the health services company was in talks to acquire its German rival Celesio for about $5.1 billion.

[Associated Press; By STEVE ROTHWELL]

AP Markets Writer Ken Sweet contributed to this report.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

< Recent articles

Back to top