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About 2.9 billion shares traded hands on the New York Stock Exchange, which is less than average but normal for a late-summer week. Also Friday, the Commerce Department said factory orders rose 2.8 percent in July on surging demand for autos and commercial planes. However, orders for core capital goods
-- a key measure of investment spending -- dropped 4 percent. That was that figure's fourth decline in five months. Investors seemed more focused on Bernanke's comments and the overall higher factory orders, though. Other shares with big moves on Friday included: Facebook set a new low. Downgrades by analysts pushed it down $1.03, or 5.4 percent, to $18.06. Its previous intraday low was $18.75. Facebook is down 52 percent from its $38 initial public offering price. US Airways Group Inc., up 2.5 percent after disclosing that it signed a confidentiality agreement that signals the beginning of talks with American Airlines for a possible merger. Zumiez fell 9.4 percent after the specialty sports and clothing retailer said its third-quarter earnings would be lower than analysts had expected. Science Applications International Corp. rose 3.4 percent after saying it will split at the end of next year into two businesses, with one focusing on national security, engineering and health customers, and another focused on government customers. Stocks in Europe were mixed. The German DAX and the CAC 40 in France both rose about 1 percent. The FTSE 100 in Britain fell 0.1 percent. The dollar fell, with the euro rising to $1.258, and the Japanese Yen rising against the dollar to 78.33.
[Associated
Press;
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