http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080109/wall_street.html

Stocks Finish Higher in Late Rally
Wednesday January 9, 5:48 pm ET 
By Tim Paradis, AP Business Writer 


 

Stocks Rebound in Fractious Session As Investors Seek Bargains; Economic
Concerns Remain 

NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street finished a back-and-forth session sharply
higher Wednesday as investors sought bargains while also contending with
concerns about the strength of the economy and upcoming corporate results. 

The Nasdaq composite index showed its first gain in nine sessions and the
Dow Jones industrial average gained more 200 points in the final 90 minutes
of the session to end nearly 150 points higher. 

The gains at the end of a fractious session came ahead of a fourth-quarter
report from Alcoa Inc., which marked the unofficial start of earnings
season. 

Wednesday's session was as choppy as Tuesday's, when stocks tumbled amid
concerns about the economy. Unease about the economy has caused intense
market volatility since the start of the year, with stocks rising on hopes
for more interest rate cuts, and plunging as investors doubt that will be
enough. The market is also worried about how fallout from the mortgage and
credit crisis has affected corporate earnings. 

A prediction of a recession in 2008 by Wall Street's biggest investment bank
at times appeared to weigh on investors. Goldman Sachs said it expects
fallout from the housing slump and recent tightness in the credit markets
will spread to the broader economy this year. 

Countrywide Financial Corp. may have added to the seesaw trading, saying
Wednesday that the delinquency and foreclosure rate of home loans in its
portfolio surged in December. The stock in the nation's largest mortgage
lender had fallen sharply Tuesday amid bankruptcy rumors that the company
said were baseless. Countrywide fell 35 cents, or 6.4 percent, to $5.12. 

Wednesday brought little in the way of economic news and investors instead
awaited a speech by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke set for Thursday
that could give clues about the central bank's stance on the weakening
economy. 

Jennifer Ellison, principal with wealth management firm Bingham, Osborn &
Scarborough in San Francisco, said the market's rebound was gratifying. 

"I think it's a good sign that it ended on a positive note rather than
starting positive and ending negative," she said. "That's particularly
significant coming on the heels of the Goldman report." 

She expects, however, that volatility will remain as investors pounce on the
latest signals about the economy. 

"People are trading on one thing in the morning and then trading on a
completely different thing in the afternoon, more so than normal. I think
you can't put too much weight on anything that happens on this short-term of
a basis," she said of Wednesday's gains. 

The Dow, which had been down nearly 90 points in the session, finished up
146.24, or 1.16 percent, to 12,735.31. 

Broader stock indicators also rebounded. The Standard & Poor's 500 index
rose 18.94, or 1.36 percent, to 1,409.13, and the Nasdaq composite index,
which had been down more than 1 percent during the session, finished up
34.04, or 1.39 percent, at 2,474.55. 

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by about 3 to 2 on the New York Stock
Exchange, where consolidated volume rose to 5.11 billion shares from 4.62
billion shares Tuesday. 

The rebound Wednesday wasn't large enough to pull the Dow from the realm of
a correction, which is a 10 percent drop from a recent high. The blue chip
index is still off 10.1 percent from its Oct. 9 high. The S&P 500 is now
down 9.97 percent from its high. 

Bond prices fell in late trading Wednesday. The yield on the benchmark
10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 4.35 percent
from 3.84 percent late Tuesday. The dollar was mixed against other major
currencies, while gold prices rose. 

Light, sweet crude fell 66 cents to $95.67 a barrel on the New York
Mercantile Exchange after a government report showed domestic inventories
declined last week. 

Alcoa reported after the closing bell that its fourth-quarter profit jumped
76 percent, helped by the pending sale of its packaging and consumer
businesses. Earnings rose to $632 million, or 75 cents per share, from $359
million, or 41 cents per share, a year earlier. The results handily topped
Wall Street's expectations. 

Wall Street had been hoping the results would help indicate how well the
economy was holding up. Alcoa, one of the 30 stocks that comprise the Dow
industrials, finished up 25 cents to $31.25 and rose to $32.50 in
after-hours trading. 

Chemical maker DuPont Co. rose $2.03, or 4.8 percent, to $44.78 after
raising its fiscal 2007 profit forecast, citing better-than-expected
fourth-quarter sales. The company, which makes a wide range of products
including automotive coatings and genetically modified seeds, also lifted
its forecast for 2008. 

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 7.26, or 1.03 percent, to
712.12. 

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average closed up 0.49 percent. Britain's
FTSE 100 fell 1.32 percent, Germany's DAX index dropped 0.86 percent, and
France's CAC-40 fell 1.10 percent.

 

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