By Kate Gibson
U.S. stocks on Thursday tried but failed to halt declines from
extending into a third day as investors weighed the impact of
Europe's financial troubles on Wall Street.
"While the situation in Europe will potentially have only a
small impact on the U.S. recovery, it remains an important export
and import market for many countries and the euro is second only to
the dollar as a universal transaction currency," Fred Dickson,
chief market strategist at Davidson Companies, wrote in a note.
After brief bursts into positive territory, the major U.S. stock
indexes lapsed, as the euro again fell to a 14-month low against
the dollar and crude-oil futures traveled to two-month lows under
$80 a barrel.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) fell 52.30 points, or
0.5%, to 10,815.82 with 25 of its 30 components on the decline, led
by Bank of America Corp. (BAC), off 2.6% and General Electric Co.
(GE), its shares falling 2.4%.
The S&P 500 Index (SPX) dropped 6.87 points, or 0.6%, to
1,159, with financials and utilities down the most among its 10
industry groups.
The Nasdaq Composite Index (RIXF) shed 14.71 points, or 0.6%, to
2,387.58.
For every three stocks on the decline one was rising on the New
York Stock Exchange, where nearly 353 million shares traded as of
10.50 a.m. Composite volume topped 1.9 billion.
"U.S. companies with substantial European exposure may get hurt,
as products with a dollar cost basis suddenly have become more
expensive in Europe," Dickson added.
As Greece looked to a $144 billion rescue from the International
Monetary Fund 15 other nations that use the euro to help cover its
debt, some questioned if some of the nations helping foot the bill
- namely Portugal and Spain - would eventually need to be bailed
out as well.
U.S. economic data was mixed, while retailers reported April
sales slowed from March's robust gains, with a majority of those
reporting missing expectations.
Gap Inc. (GPS) was among the underperformers, its shares down 4%
after the apparel chain reported same-store sales dropped 3%.
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF) shares declined 6.4% after the
teen-clothing seller after its same-store sales fell 7%.
Ahead of Friday's jobs report for April, the Labor Department
reported initial claims for unemployment benefits fell by 7,000
last week to 444,000.
The government data is expected to show the U.S. economy added
between 189,000 to 200,000 jobs last month, while the rate of
unemployment held at 9.7%.
Separately, the Labor Department on Thursday said U.S.
productivity climbed 3.6% in the first quarter.
In Washington, Treasury Secretary timothy Geithner and former
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson pitched financial reform, telling
a fact-finding panel the economic crisis came in large part because
regulators didn't have the power to limit risk. .