Established 1999
 
8,000 companies from
USA,Canada and India.
 
   
Search over 25,000 News & Earnings Archives    
 
Market Update : 
Averages Suffer Deep Depression
Author: Elena Todorova
123jump.com
Last Update: 12:10 PM EST February 27 2007


(Continued)

Email article | Print article

U.S. market averages suffered considerable weakness on Tuesday morning, with Dow Jones falling as low as 120 points. The blue-chip index was weighed by steep declines in shares of Alcoa, down 3%, Caterpillar, down 2.4%, Dupont, down 2%, and General Motors, falling 3%. Better-than-expected existing homes sales and a rise in consumer confidence failed to offset the negative sentiment generated by a steeper-than-expected drop in durable goods orders in January, but helped limit losses.

 
6:30AM Europe is lower on Tuesday on weakness in banking sector.
European markets were lower on Tuesday. By mid morning, Frankfurt Xetra Dax shed 1.5% to 6,927.34, the CAC 40 in Paris lost 1.6% to 5,669.2 and London FTSE 100 fell 1.5% to 6,339.6.

Advancers

GKN, U.K. maker of car and airplane parts, rallied 8.7%, as the company said full-year profit more than tripled to 177 million pounds or $347 million after it sold more plane components and reduced spending on reorganization.

Reuters Group advanced 1.4% as Credit Suisse Group raised its recommendation on the world largest publicly traded provider of financial data to outperform from neutral.

Decliners

Austrian Raiffeisen International, which has substantial operations in Russia and Ukraine, fell 6.3%. Erste Bank, which also has businesses across central and eastern Europe, shed 3.4%. National Bank of Greece, which owns Finansbank of Turkey, fell 3.3%. Bank of Piraeus lost 3.1%.

BHP, the world largest mining company, lost 3.9% and Rio Tinto, the third biggest, declined 3.5%. Xstrata, the world fourth-biggest nickel producer, dropped 4.8%.

ABB, the Swiss engineering group, fell 4.6% after Deutsche Bank downgraded the stock from hold to buy. Shipping and port operator Möller Maersk was also hit by its exposure to emerging markets. The company, which owns shares in shipyards in Russia and China, also said that proposed tax changes in Denmark would have severe negative consequenses. The shares fell 4.2%.

Oil and gold

Crude oil traded little changed, near a nine-week high in New York, on speculation rising fuel demand and refinery shutdowns cut U.S. gasoline supplies. Crude oil for April delivery was at $61.48 a barrel, up 9 cents, on the New York Mercantile Exchange in early trade in London. Brent crude traded at $61.47 a barrel, up 14 cents, on the London-based ICE Futures exchange.

Gold fell in London after two days of gains to a nine-month high prompted some sales by investment funds. Gold for immediate delivery declined $1.40, or 0.2%, to $685.15 an ounce in early trade in London.

Currencies

The euro advanced against the U.S. dollar Tuesday, hitting two-month highs, after Alan Greenspan warned that the United States could be in a recession later this year. His remarks Monday night supported the euro to $1.3211 in morning European trading, hitting two-month highs, and above the $1.3185 it bought in New York late Monday. The British pound was barely changed, moving to $1.9652 from $1.9644. The dollar dropped to 119.58 Japanese yen from 121.04 yen.
  1  2  3 More: Market Update Archive

 


 

350 Fund Managers Interviews - 10-year Annual earnings on 4,600 U.S. companies - 20-quarter Earnings on 3,800 U.S. companies - 3,200 U.S. IPO Prospectuses
- 2,100 Economic data releases from U.S., EU, UK, India, HK and Australia. 10-year Annual reports on 3,500 U.S. companies -
U.S. Earnings Calendar with 4,800 companies - 90,000 10-K reports - 26,000 Global markets news archive - 2,200 Earnings Conference Call Summaries

© 1999-2008 123jump.com. All rights reserved