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News about the U.S. economy has also been opaque, with every sign of
economic recovery met with another sign of economic slowdown. While
the unemployment rate falls, some analysts raise questions about the
quality of the new jobs being created, and others worry that the
high price of gas will prevent people from spending on
non-necessities, which is crucial to an economic recovery. The
average price for a gallon of gasoline jumped a nickel over the
weekend to $3.80. China, the superpower that has pushed the world
economy forward even as other countries flagged since 2008,
announced that its growth slowed at the end of last year. The market's knee-jerk nature has been highlighted in the past two weeks. The Dow generated positive buzz when it closed over 13,000 on Feb. 28, a milestone it hadn't reached since May 2008. But it's failed to close above that line again, and Tuesday's 204-point decline added to the uncertainty. "Everybody is stepping back and assessing whether the ride is over," Sica said. "It's almost as if investors get to a point where they scratch their head and say, `Does the market deserve to be here?'" Several companies made big moves: Defibrillator maker Zoll Medical Corp. jumped 24 percent to $92.94 after its board agreed to a buyout offer of $93 per share from Japan's Asahi Kasei Corp. Mattress maker Sealy Corp. climbed 6 percent after its second-largest shareholder, an investment firm called H Partners Management, asked the company to shuffle its board and blamed the company's problems on the largest shareholder, private equity firm KKR & Co. Harley-Davidson Inc. climbed nearly 3 percent after Citigroup analyst Greg Badishkanian raised his price target to $50 from $46, saying he expects higher sales in the first quarter. Luxury retailer Michael Kors fell 2 percent after the company, purveyor of $950 high heels, announced late Friday that some of its major shareholders would sell their shares earlier than expected.
[Associated
Press;
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