November 8 2007: 9:52 AM EST

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks retreated at the start of 
Thursday's session as Wall Street wrestled with surprisingly strong 
results from automaker Ford and lingering credit market fears.

The Dow Jones industrial average (Charts) lost 0.3 percent in the 
opening moments of trade, just a day after suffering one of its 
biggest point declines of the year.

The broader S&P 500 index (Charts) slipped 0.4 percent, while the 
tech-fueled Nasdaq (Charts) fell 0.9 percent.

Just a day earlier, major indexes tumbled nearly 3 percent lower, 
with the Dow industrials plunging 361 points, dragged lower by 
persistent credit market fears.

Offsetting those concerns were improved results from Ford Motor Co. 
(Charts, Fortune 500) that topped Wall Street expectations. Ford 
shares climbed 2 percent in morning trade on the New York Stock 
Exchange.

But those fears may continue to weigh on investors as Morgan Stanley 
(Charts, Fortune 500) announced late Wednesday it would take a $3.7 
billion writedown because of bad bets on subprime mortgages.

Late Wednesday, Dow component American International Group (Charts, 
Fortune 500) reported disappointing results after the closing bell 
Wednesday, blaming the battered housing market and tighter credit 
conditions.

And media giant News Corp. (Charts, Fortune 500) reported a decline 
in earnings from a year ago after Wednesday's closing bell, although 
it topped analysts' expectations, helped by strong box office 
results from films such as "The Simpsons Movie".

Retail sales eased for the second straight month in October, major 
retailers reported Wednesday, a worrisome sign for this yaer's 
holiday shopping season.


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