Dow Plunges 773 Points
Dow Plunges 773 Points Save Email Print
Posted: 5:49 PM Oct 15, 2008
Last Updated: 5:49 PM Oct 15, 2008

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The economy lurched deeper into the doldrums Wednesday and took the stock market down with it, sending the Dow Jones industrials to a staggering 733 point loss and erasing any hopes that the convulsions that have shaken Wall Street for a month were over.

The daylong sell-off came as retailers reported the biggest drop in sales in three years and as a Federal Reserve snapshot showed Americans are spending less and manufacturing is slowing around the
country.

Piling up losses in a rough final hour of trading, the Dow ended the day down nearly 8 percent - its steepest drop since one week after Black Monday in 1987. The Dow has wiped out all but about 127 points of its record-shattering 936 point gain on Monday of this week.

Earlier this week, after governments around the world announced plans to use trillions of dollars to prop up banks, including a U.S. plan to buy about $250 billion in bank stocks, the market had appeared to be turning around - or at least calming down.

Instead, relentless selling gave the Dow its 20th triple-digit swing in the past 23 trading sessions, an unprecedented run of volatility. The Dow has finished higher on only one day this month. The loss of 733 points is the second-worst ever for the average, topped only by a 778 point decline Sept. 29.

The plunge in stocks put the nation's economic anxiety front-and-center as the two major presidential candidates, Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain, prepared for their final debate Wednesday night in Hempstead, N.Y.

In the meantime, the man they each hope to succeed met with his Cabinet. President Bush predicted "in the long run that this economy will come back."

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
expressed confidence that the government's radical efforts to stabilize the financial system and induce banks to lend again will eventually help the economy.

But Bernanke warned that even if the financial markets level off, the nation will not snap back to economic health quickly.

"Stabilization of the financial markets is a critical first step, but even if they stabilize as we hope they will, broader economic recovery will not happen right away," Bernanke told the Economic Club of New York.

Some analysts believe the economy jolted into reverse in the recently ended third quarter, while others predict it will shrink later this year or early next. The classic definition of a recession is back-to-back quarters of shrinking economic activity.

Two gloomy economic reports showed that the debate at this point is merely semantic.

The Fed's snapshot of business conditions around the nation, known as the Beige Book, showed economic activity weakening across all of the Fed's 12 regional districts. Consumer spending - which accounts for more than two-thirds of economic activity - slumped in most Fed regions. Manufacturing also slowed in most areas.

As shoppers cut back, retail sales dropped sharply in September. The 1.2 percent decline was the biggest in three years. Retail sales have fallen for three months in a row, the first time that's happened since the government began keeping comparable records in 1992.

Analysts had expected only a 0.7 percent decline. And as Americans watch their nest eggs shrink before their eyes on days like Wednesday on Wall Street, there's little reason to expect they will shop with gusto anytime soon.

Leaders of the world's top economic powers, the Group of Eight, said they would meet "in the near future" for a global summit to tackle the financial crisis. The group comprises the United States, Japan, Germany, France, Britain, Italy, Canada and Russia.

There was a dose of good news Wednesday: Oil prices dipped below
$75 a barrel for the first time in nearly 14 months, suggesting gas prices will keep falling. Oil prices have now plunged almost 50 percent since peaking at $147.27 in mid July.

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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Posted by: Jack Location: Pike County on Oct 16, 2008 at 11:22 AM
Here's the part that's just not gettin' through to these people. You can't lend money to people who don't have JOBS to repay you. You can't sell merchandise, food, gas, etc. if the people don't have the money to buy with. We need jobs to put money back into the economy. It doesn't make any difference how much money government puts into the banking system if we don't have the power to use it.

Posted by: JR Location: KY on Oct 15, 2008 at 08:35 PM
Excuse me, but the lawmakers allowed our jobs to go overseas. We once made typewriters, cars, appliances and clothing. Our jobs left thanks to you looking after others instead of your own. Now we now have no health insurance, we no longer have any kind of retirement that we can look foward to. We now work at Wendy's, Speedway or Dillards and are now left with anykind of job that we are trying to hold on to. And you want us to be able to eat out, buy a new car and support the economy and make it grow?? Mr Congressman, we are barely surviving and living from day to day, let alone helping what you call the economy.

Posted by: Barny Frank on Oct 15, 2008 at 07:24 PM
Thanks liberals again and all these people want to vote these kooks in even more my goodness wake up America!

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