'Dow Jones'에 해당되는 글 2건

  1. 2008.10.21 The Wildest Ride by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.10.16 Worsening Economic Outlook Triggers Another Stock Sell-Off by CEOinIRVINE

The Wildest Ride

Business 2008. 10. 21. 23:56
The Volatility Index reached an all-time high of 81 on Friday. It normally hovers closer to 20.
The Volatility Index reached an all-time high of 81 on Friday. It normally hovers closer to 20. (By David Karp -- Associated Press)

The market's wild hour-by-hour swings have come to exemplify the turbulence of the financial crisis, but they're still puzzling for many market professionals.

The Dow Jones industrial average now routinely travels hundreds of points in a matter of hours, only to reverse direction in many cases. During a single day earlier this month, the Dow spanned 1,000 points for the first time in history. On another, a 400-point rally during the last hour of trading sent the Dow to a historic 936-point gain.

During the final hour of trading yesterday, the Dow surged more than 100 points.

Financial analysts suggest that the sharp ups and downs reflect investors' uncertainty about how quickly the financial crisis can be resolved and whether a recession will seep from the banking sector to other parts of the economy. Precipitous gains and losses have also been triggered as stocks reach pre-set selling or buying levels, prompting automated trading and causing investor whiplash, analysts said.

The largest swings have often occurred during the last hour of trading, prompting a closer look by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a nongovernmental regulator of securities firms. The end of the trading day is when institutional investors, including hedge funds and mutual funds, rush to meet client demands to pull cash out of the market, analysts said.

The gyrations have turned even seasoned market professionals into skittish investors, waiting for a news tidbit that will turn the market's mood and start a stampede in either direction. "Psychology and emotion are a big part of what moves the market," said Andrew Brooks, head of stock trading at T. Rowe Price. "We are clearly in a highly emotional and schizophrenic point."

The Chicago Board Options Exchange's Volatility Index, known as VIX, has become a daily ticker of investor anxiety. VIX measures the degree to which investors expect stocks to swing and is often called the "fear gauge." It closed at 70.33 on Friday, its highest close ever, and hit an intraday high of 81.17 last week. In normal times, it trades at about 15 to 20, analysts said.

"We have no idea where things are going. That is what high volatility means," said Robert F. Engle, a finance professor and director of the Center for Financial Econometrics at New York University.

The volatility measure declined to 53 yesterday as Wall Street celebrated early signs that government efforts to thaw the credit markets could be working.

But analysts said they expect the volatility to continue for some time, perhaps through the end of the year. The market volatility provides an opportunity for some traders to make money off abrupt changes, analysts said. "It's bad for us, but somebody is thriving on this volatility," said Ashwani Kaul, director of research at Thomson Reuters. "Whenever there is volatility, somebody is making money."

The last sustained period of volatility was from 2000 to 2003, after the collapse of the Internet bubble and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Engle said. "We have dramatically exceeded what happened in that period," he said.

But the current volatility does not compare with the Great Depression, Engle said. "The news during the Great Depression was even more dramatic. We had thousands of bank failures. We had 30 percent unemployment during some of the Depression," he said. "The stock market dropped 70 percent instead of the 35 percent to 40 percent we have now. It was a much bigger economic catastrophe."



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Skye Kim, right, checks the price on a dress at Fair Oaks Mall while shopping for homecoming at Lake Braddock. "Now we think more about price than we did before," Kim said.




Skye Kim, right, checks the price on a dress at Fair Oaks Mall while shopping for homecoming at Lake Braddock. "Now we think more about price than we did before," Kim said. (By Lois Raimondo -- The Washington Post)

Troubling new signs of a deep economic malaise touched off some of the worst stock market losses in history yesterday, a day after the government announced a massive intervention that officials hoped would boost investor confidence.

New data showed that consumers stayed away from malls, nixed plans for new cars and made do with old clothes in September, forcing the largest monthly decline in retail sales in three years. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke added to the gloom, cautioning that the nation should not expect an economic rebound any time soon.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 733.08, or 7.9 percent, its second-biggest point drop in history, while the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index, a broader measure, sank 90.17 points, or 9 percent, the most since the crash of 1987, infamously dubbed Black Monday.

The market declines came after the Treasury Department said it would spend at least $250 billion to take ownership stakes in financial firms and insure most forms of bank debt. Officials had hoped those measures would calm investors' nerves and heal the crippled financial system.

Bernanke said, "the turmoil in financial markets and the funding pressures on financial firms pose a significant threat to economic growth." His remarks appeared to signal that the central bank was open to lowering its benchmark interest rate, which it cut just last week to 1.5 percent.

The credit crisis has penetrated so deeply into the American psyche that consumers, whose spending is the most important component of economic activity, have become too scared to shop.


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"The consumer has been hit over the head by so many two-by-fours that the consumer may end up going into a coma here," said Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist for consulting firm Global Insight. "How do you bring them back?"

The rate banks charge each other for loans, a critical gauge of whether the government's proposal is working, has barely shown any improvement since the Treasury's new plan was unveiled. This rate, known as the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, remains higher than it was a week ago and about 61 percent higher than a month ago.

Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economics professor at Columbia University, said it was a "mystery" why Libor didn't drop after the government guaranteed lending between banks.

"Clearly, there still is some uncertainty . . . about the terms of the guarantee," said Stiglitz. "There could be uncertainty about the speed of collection. For someone in the market, that could be very worrying. We don't know how much of an injection is really required. There are a lot of unanswered questions."

Regulators pleaded for patience yesterday, saying it would take some time for the effects of the government's actions to work their way through the financial system.

"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 said in a speech to the Economic Club of New York. "Economic activity will fall short of potential for a time."


Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economics professor at Columbia University, said it was a "mystery" why Libor didn't drop after the government guaranteed lending between banks.

"Clearly, there still is some uncertainty . . . about the terms of the guarantee," said Stiglitz. "There could be uncertainty about the speed of collection. For someone in the market, that could be very worrying. We don't know how much of an injection is really required. There are a lot of unanswered questions."

Regulators pleaded for patience yesterday, saying it would take some time for the effects of the government's actions to work their way through the financial system.

"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 said in a speech to the Economic Club of New York. "Economic activity will fall short of potential for a time."




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