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Dow Jumps 233 on Surprise Rate Cut

By MADLEN READ,
AP
Posted: 2007-08-17 17:17:23
(Aug. 17) - Stocks soared Friday after the Federal Reserve did what Wall Street was clamoring for and cut its key discount rate a half percentage point. The move quelled investors' credit worries at least for the time being and sent the Dow Jones industrials up about 230 points.

The Fed — which had resisted lowering rates despite weeks of market volatility, and instead added nearly $120 billion in liquidity into the banking system — cut its discount rate to 5.75 percent from 6.25 percent. The central bank acknowledged that the stock market turbulence that has pulled the Dow by hundreds of points a day was posing a risk to economic growth.

"People were kind of baiting the Fed into doing something, and finally they did," said Philip Dow, managing director of equity trading at RBC Dain Rauscher. "The playground monitor finally showed up, and it showed someone cares and someone is bringing rationality into the market."

But the central bank made no mention of lowering its target for the federal funds rate, which has stood at 5.25 percent for more than a year. The fed funds rate determines the rates that banks charge each other, while the discount rate only covers loans the Fed makes to banks. Many strategists believe the market won't settle down until the Fed lowers the fed funds rate target, considered a more significant benchmark.

If the market doesn't get that rate cut, Friday's gains may not stick, especially since it's likely there will be plenty more news in the coming days and weeks of further troubles in the lending industry. Any mention of problems at subprime lenders or funds that invested in mortgages has sent stocks skidding, and so have worries that tighter credit will stanch the flood of takeovers, which sent Wall Street to new highs earlier this year.

Still, the Fed made it clear this wasn't the only step it would take if the volatility continued. In its statement, the Fed said it "is prepared to act as needed."

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow Jones industrial average surged 233.30, or 1.82 percent, to 13,079.08.

Trading was still volatile throughout the day, with the Dow rising more than 320 points in early trading, giving up more than half those gains, and then gaining steam once more. However, the blue chip index stayed in positive territory the whole time. The Dow is more than 6 percent below its record close of 14,000.41 reached July 19, and fell more than 1 percent for the week.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 34.65, or 2.46 percent, to 1,445.92, and the Nasdaq composite index rose 53.96, or 2.20 percent, to 2,505.03.

Bonds slipped as stocks rose, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rising to 4.67 percent from 4.66 percent late Thursday.

Traders who bet on how the Fed might alter rates expect the central bank will lower the benchmark fed funds rate at its next meeting on Sept. 18. Some investors are hoping for a cut in that benchmark rate even sooner.

"If the cut in the discount rate succeeds in restoring confidence, then perhaps there is no need for the Fed to cut rates at the Sept. 18 meeting," said John Lonski, chief economist of Moody's Investor Service. He added, though, that the key line in the Fed's statement Friday was its willingness to take more steps to prevent market volatility from harming the economy.

"That means the Fed is prepared to make a rate cut if stability doesn't come," Lonski said.

Gains were seen in all sectors of the stock market, but financial stocks, which have been battered by the growing problems in mortgage lending, saw particularly heavy buying. Dow component JPMorgan Chase & Co. rose 3.4 percent, while Merrill Lynch and Lehman Brothers rose more than 6 percent.

The pummeled stocks of mortgage lenders also saw significant increases. The most actively traded stock on the New York Stock Exchange, and one of its biggest percentage gainers, was Countrywide Financial Corp. The home mortgage lender rose $2.48, or 13.1 percent, to $21.43.

Energy and industrial companies also strengthened notably. The biggest gainers among the 30 Dow companies were aluminum producer Alcoa Inc. and oil company Exxon Mobil Corp., which both jumped more than 4 percent.

Major European indexes recovered substantially after the Fed's announcement from steep declines in earlier trading. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 3.50 percent, Germany's DAX index rose 1.49 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 1.86 percent.

In Asian trading, which closed before the Fed lowered the discount rate, Japan's Nikkei stock average had plunged 5.42 percent as the yen continued its climb against the dollar. The dollar briefly dipped below 112 yen for the first time in over a year, suggesting that some investors were taking their Japanese currency out of higher-yielding dollar assets.

The dollar was mixed against other major currencies. Gold prices jumped.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by about 7 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 2.48 billion shares, down from 2.92 billion shares.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies added 17.20, or 2.24 percent, to 786.03.

Crude oil futures rose 98 cents to $71.98 a barrel. Traders have been tracking the path of Hurricane Dean, which is threatening to head west into the Gulf of Mexico, where many oil installations are located.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2007-08-15 15:22:27
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Recent Comments

1 - 10 of 1725
1725 comments

investag8ting 08:55:00 AM Aug 20 2007

I've lost over $100,000 in equity. I put down a large down payment and I can afford my fixed rate mortgage, but I'm so disappointed with what's happening with home values. I'm just going to sit on the sidelines and see what happens. I'm only going to buy the bare necessities for awhile. I mean one shoe already fell for me and is affecting the way I spend so I'm just waiting for the other shoe to fall. Right now my confidence and trust is low so I'm skeptical of the stock market. I'm living in Florida and the forclosures and for sale signs are all over the place.

dgm041153 05:15:08 AM Aug 20 2007

What your witnessing is the distruction of the American citizen's way of life. If it can be done here, it will be done all over the world. The big Money is making us all destroy each other, that's why the rich keep getting richer and thr poor/middle class keep looseing our standard economic way of life. Question is, where will the Big Money stop, the answer is simple, they won't !!!!! Who's next, Europe, Asia, etc., think about it. Big Money control's all government's, who doesn't have money in your Government's ????? 1 world economy, open border's, and 1 currency. The future is happening now !!!!!

johnwash3mar 12:12:00 AM Aug 20 2007

As the housing market goes, so goes the economy and so on and so on. Today is a global market, what happens in China will effect us. What happens in India will effect us. We are no longer the big manufacturer, we have become a service industry, good or bad. Can we become a manufacturer again, of course with new technology, new products, once its perfected out it goes(out sourced). We look at China and the debt we have to them, its our own doing! We're buying the stuff. Why ? its cheap$ Also demand pushed housing prices up. No one had to pay those prices, but somebody wanted it bad enough that they paid those ridiculous prices. Keep the confidence.

Wsolano80 09:58:00 PM Aug 19 2007

If you want to make money, do what Cheney did, invest in European bonds.

This shot in the arm will only stall the problems. No matter what people want you to think, DEMAND drives the economy. Unless buyers start getting the money Reaganomics has given to the investors, the markets suffer. It's inevitable. Pay workers more, the economy gains ground, cut wages and outsource your workforce, it falters. The failure to accept that is going to make the dollar lose even more ground to the europeans, hence buy european if you're looking for a quick buck.

People have been buying products on credit without the income to pay those debts, that revelation is what's causing the volitility. These "great economy figures" are more of a bubble than the "dot coms" were.

smokeyview 08:40:31 PM Aug 19 2007

any one that don't know what there doing should never buy stock
you need to leave that to them that know.
same goes for land. and other realestate

smokeyview 08:40:25 PM Aug 19 2007

any one that don't know what there doing should never buy stock
you need to leave that to them that know.
same goes for land. and other realestate

smokeyview 08:34:33 PM Aug 19 2007

people that contrubit nothing is gov. workers
and more over I have never seen any one get a job from the poor
and the gov. only robs the haves and gives to the have nots.
if I took your money from you and gave it to the poor, I would be put in jail.
clinton is a sick man, so is carter and gore is a fool

smokeyview 08:34:29 PM Aug 19 2007

people that contrubit nothing is gov. workers
and more over I have never seen any one get a job from the poor
and the gov. only robs the haves and gives to the have nots.
if I took your money from you and gave it to the poor, I would be put in jail.
clinton is a sick man, so is carter and gore is a fool

pegmatt34 06:30:13 PM Aug 19 2007

people who create a product are the people who have made this country great.people who have bled this country, without producing anything of value, stock brokers,real estate agents, car salesmen and the like, are destroying this great country.

dann1674 06:30:12 PM Aug 19 2007

i have only 30000 shs. of bac;where might i expect it to go by yearsend?

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1725 comments

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