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For the calendar year, the limp May left the Dow up 1.4 percent, the S&P up 4.2 percent and the Nasdaq up 8.5 percent. Two months ago, all three indexes were up more than twice as much. The month's most spectacular market blunder was Facebook, which debuted on the Nasdaq exchange May 18 at $38 a share. By Thursday's close it had fallen more than $8 from there. The stock's first day was complicated by technical problems at the Nasdaq, and questions later emerged about whether Morgan Stanley, which helped take the company public, had told only select clients about an analyst's negative view of the stock. JPMorgan Chase stock lost 23 percent of its value during the month after the bank disclosed a surprise trading loss of $2 billion or more
-- a black eye for CEO Jamie Dimon, who has built a reputation as a master of risk management. Then there was Europe. Troubles in Greece dominated headlines for much of the month, but Spain has been the market's albatross this week. It will have to spend almost $24 billion to bail out one of its biggest banks. There is still no agreement over how to solve Europe's debt crisis: Stronger countries like Germany want governments to cut spending, but voters in weaker countries like Greece have shown they are in no mood for more fiscal pain. On Thursday, the European Union demanded that Spain provide more details about how it plans to finance the overhaul of its banking sector. Spain's key stock market index was flat, while Greece rose nearly 3 percent. Borrowing rates for Spain fell somewhat, suggesting investors were feeling a little better about that country's finances. "Greece is a failed chemistry experiment," said Michael Strauss, chief investment strategist at the Commonfund investment firm in Connecticut. "But we are more worried about Spain because of its size and the scope." Strauss said he advised clients to take money out of stocks in early spring, when the S&P was above 1,400, or about 90 points higher than where it closed Thursday. Strauss expects the index to return to 1,385 before the year is over, though he cautioned such a gain might not last. May's results are a familiar template. In both 2010 and 2011, the market rose for several months before falling in May because of concerns about debt in Europe. Linda Duessel, market strategist at Federated Investors in Pittsburgh, argued that this May's decline was only natural after the run-up at the beginning of the year. "After you get a good run, you get a correction," Duessel said. "Corrections are a very normal part of the cycle." Among the stocks making big moves Thursday: Talbots, the women's clothing chain, rose $1.15, or almost 90 percent, to $2.44 after announcing that it will be bought by a private company, Sycamore Partners. TiVo, the maker of digital video recorders, fell 42 cents, or 4.7 percent, to $8.54 after posting a first-quarter loss.
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