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发表于 2008/10/24 09:33:31
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Broader stock indicators were mixed Thursday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 11.33, or 1.26 percent, to 908.11, and the Nasdaq fell 11.84, or 0.73 percent, to 1,603.91.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies fell 12.05, or 2.40 percent, to 489.92.
While the major indexes were mixed, declining issues outnumbered advancers by about 5 to 3 on the New York Stock Exchange, where consolidated volume came to 7.05 billion shares compared with 6.60 billion shares traded Wednesday.
The credit markets again showed signs of easing after locking up when Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. declared bankruptcy in mid-September.
An auction of $988 million in debt from failed bank Washington Mutual Inc. fetched a substantially higher price than was seen for a similar auction of Lehman Brothers debt earlier in the month. The sale priced $988 million of WaMu debt at 57 cents for every $1 of debt sold compared with the 8.625 cents on the dollar that a $4.92 billion sale of Lehman debt garnered.
Besides indicating greater confidence in WaMu's debt, the auction also indicated some investors are becoming more willing to wade into risky debt following a range of coordinated moves by governments around the world to build confidence in the credit markets.
But a significant improvement in credit markets, which is expected to help revive lending to businesses and consumers, will take time, although there are signs of gradual easing. The rate on three-month loans in dollars -- known as the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor -- was unchanged at 3.54 percent. The rate fell to that level on Wednesday and is the lowest since Sept. 24.
And while demand for short-term Treasury bills rose, yields are well above where they were last week. The three-month bill, regarded as the safest assets around, yielded 0.94 percent, down from 1.01 percent late Wednesday. Last week the yield was at 0.20 percent, indicating investors were willing to trade the slimmest of returns for a safe place to keep their money.
The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 3.66 percent from 3.60 percent late Wednesday.
The dollar was mixed against other currencies after jumping to multiyear highs Wednesday, while gold prices fell.
Light, sweet crude rose $1.09 to settle at $67.84 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell to a 16-month low on Wednesday as an increase in U.S. crude and gasoline stocks fed beliefs that weakness in the economy is eroding demand for energy.
Among individual stocks, Amazon.com rose 33 cents at $50.32 after trading as low as $43.31. SanDisk Corp. hurt the Nasdaq after falling 95 cents, or 9.4 percent, to $9.14. The stock has fallen sharply for two days following word that Samsung Electronics Co. dropped a bid to acquire the maker of flash memory components.
Goldman Sachs fell $6.13, or 5.3 percent, to $108.58, while Dow Chemical rose $3.23, or 10.5 percent, to $24.43.
Blue chips in the Dow that drew buyers included Boeing Co., up $3.61, or 8.4 percent, at $46.52, and 3M Co., which rose $3.35, or 5.8 percent, to $61.54.
Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 2.46 percent. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 1.16 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 1.12 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 0.38 percent.
AP Business Writer Stephen Bernard in New York contributed to this report. |
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