Here we go again: Stocks plunge on economic fear

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NEW YORK (AP) — More signs of economic weakness triggered
a global sell-off in stocks Thursday. The Dow Jones industrial average
fell more than 400 points in a return to the wild swings in the market
last week.
In the United States, there were reports that more
people joined the unemployment line last week than a week earlier,
gasoline prices contributed to higher inflation and manufacturing slowed
in the mid-Atlantic.
In Europe, bank stocks slid on worries about
the region’s debt problems. In Asia, Japan’s exports fell for the fifth
straight month.
The U.S. and European economies are "dangerously
close to recession," Morgan Stanley economists wrote in a report. "It
won’t take much in the form of additional shocks to tip the balance."
The
Dow Jones industrial average was down 409 points, or 3.6 percent, to
11,001 at noon. The Dow was down by as much as 528 points about a
half-hour into trading.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell
46 points, or 3.9 percent, to 1,147. The Nasdaq composite fell 105, or
4.2 percent, to 2,406.
Last week was one of the wildest in Wall
Street history. The Dow moved more than 400 points on four straight days
for the first time.
But stocks had been relatively stable this
week because investors were calmed by strong earnings reports. The Dow
had fallen 76 points Tuesday and risen four points Wednesday — the first
time this month that the average rose or fell by less than 100 points
on two straight days.
That ended Thursday. And with stocks down big, money flooded into U.S. Treasurys and gold, both
considered safer investments.
The
yield on the 10-year Treasury note briefly fell below 2 percent for the
first time, before recovering to 2.07 percent. Low yields show that
investors are willing to accept a lower return on their money in
exchange for safety. Demand for government debt has stayed high, and
yields low, even after Standard & Poor’s stripped the United States
of its top credit rating.
Gold rose $26.30 per ounce to $1,820.30
after earlier climbing to a record of $1,829.70. That’s up from $1,400
at the start of the year and more than double the price several years
ago. The price of gold has set one record after another, with some
investors looking for stability and others simply looking to cash in.
The
Morgan Stanley economists cut their forecast for growth in developed
economies this year to 1.5 percent from 1.9 percent. Over the past 20
years, growth for developed economies has been closer to 2.3 percent.
Among the disappointing U.S. economic news:
— 408,000 people applied for unemployment benefits last week, up from 399,000 the week before and the
most in four weeks.
— Inflation at the consumer level rose 0.5 percent in July, the highest since March. It had fallen 0.2
percent in June.

Manufacturing has sharply weakened in the Philadelphia region,
according to a report from the Federal Reserve. Manufacturing had been
one of the economy’s strongest industries since the recession ended in
2009, but its growth has slowed this year.
— The National
Association of Realtors said the number of people who bought previously
occupied homes dropped in July for the third time in four months.
The
fresh signs of economic weakness underscore the challenge for the
Federal Reserve as it tries to help the economy with prices rising and
the job market weak, said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris
Private Bank.
"Every time the economy got the sniffles, we had
the Federal Reserve standing by with tissues," Ablin said. "This time
around, I think the box is empty, and we’re going to have to go through
this alone. I think we can do it. It’s just not something we’re
accustomed to."
The Fed has already said it will keep short-term
interest rates super-low into 2013. But the risk of further stoking
inflation may keep it from taking additional steps, such as an
additional round of massive bond-buying.
In the meantime, worries
about European debt hang over the markets. A default by any country
would hurt the European banks that hold European government bonds, plus
American banks that have loans to their European counterparts.
"Europe
is the big question in the market, and nobody really knows what happens
from here," said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James.
On
Thursday, stocks in industries that depend on a growing economy fell
the most. Industrial stocks in the S&P 500 fell 5.4 percent,
technology stocks 5.1 percent and financial stocks 4.6 percent.
Crude
oil fell $4.11 per barrel to $83.47 on worries that a weaker global
economy will mean less demand. Falling prices for crude oil should work
their way to the gas pump, though, and bring household budgets at least
some relief.
Asian markets started Thursday’s drop. Japan’s Nikkei
225 index fell 1.3 percent. South Korea’s Kospi stock index fell 1.7
percent, and India’s Sensex index fell 2.2 percent.
The declines
extended to Europe. In London, the FTSE 100 index fell 4.5 percent after
a report showed that growth in British retail sales slowed more than
economists expected last month. Germany’s DAX index fell 6.5 percent.
___
AP Business Writer David K. Randall contributed to this report.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

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