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Stocks Bounce Higher As Bond Woes Ease
Thursday January 31, 5:38 pm ET 
By Tim Paradis, AP Business Writer 


 

Stocks Erase Early Losses, Charge Higher Following Easing of Concerns About
Bond Insurers 

NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street ended a frenetic January with a huge advance
Thursday after investors set aside worries about bond insurers and grew more
optimistic that the Federal Reserve's interest rate cuts will indeed help
lift the economy. The Dow Jones industrials rose more than 200 points but
suffered its worst January in eight years. 

The day's trading emerged as a microcosm of the entire month, with the Dow
first falling more than 190 points, and then by late afternoon, soaring more
than 250. It capped a January that saw frequent triple-digit moves in the
blue chips as investors alternately anguished about the fallout from the
housing and mortgage crisis and celebrated any news that indicated the
damage might limited. 

Still, the major indexes ended the month with heavy losses, evidence of how
dejected investors have become. The Fed's 1.25 percentage points in interest
rate cuts, designed to stave off a recession, ultimately gave Wall Street
some reassurance that the economy might soon show signs of recovery --
although the market still gyrated after the latest 0.50 percentage point cut
on Wednesday. 

Bond insurer MBIA Inc. also mollified Wall Street Thursday when its chief
executive, Gary Dunton, told investors he is confident the company can
retain its crucial AAA credit rating and that MBIA will still be able to
raise fresh capital. 

The notion that bond insurers could perhaps avoid being felled by a rush of
claims over swaths of bad debt offered solace for investors who have for
months worried about the fallout from a sharp pullback in the housing market
and the resulting souring mortgage debt. 

"Today is really more of a relief rally because the Fed did what the Street
wanted. They did what was expected of them and the MBIA news relieved the
fears of some investors," said Ryan Detrick, strategist at Schaeffer's
Investment Research in Cincinnati. "For once there's actually maybe some
calm coming into Wall Street." 

The Dow rose 207.53, or 1.67 percent, to 12,650.36. 

For the month, the Dow lost 4.63 percent -- its worst January since losing
4.84 percent at the start of 2000. January's pullback was the steepest seen
in any month since December 2002. 

Broader stock indicators also jumped Thursday. The Standard & Poor's 500
index rose 22.74, or 1.68 percent, to 1,378.55, and the Nasdaq composite
index rose 40.86, or 1.74 percent, to 2,389.86. 

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 17.81, or 2.56 percent, to
713.30. 

Government bond prices rose. The 10-year Treasury note's yield, which moves
opposite its price, fell to 3.59 percent from 3.63 percent late Wednesday. 

The dollar was mixed against most major currencies, while gold prices rose. 

Oil prices slid. Light, sweet crude for March delivery fell 58 cents to
settle at $91.75 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. 

The rebound in stocks came even as reports on sluggish consumer activity and
higher jobless claims reflected weakness in the economy. However, along with
the Fed's rate decision, Wall Street this week awaited the Labor
Department's January report on payrolls and unemployment. Due Friday
morning, the reading could shape sentiment because a strong job market is
considered crucial to maintaining consumer spending, which accounts for more
than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity. 

MBIA's comments about its access to capital and the possibility of raising
more seemed to dampen unease about recent moves by rating agencies relating
to bond insurers. Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's have said
they are reviewing ratings on MBIA and other bond insurers. 

MBIA, which had been down sharply after reporting a $2.3 billion
fourth-quarter loss amid heavy write-downs, closed up $1.54, or 11 percent,
to $15.50. 

But MBIA's comments won't erase all of Wall Street's concerns about the
credit markets. 

"It seems to be a tug-of-war between 'Is this a systemic problem?' or 'Is
this more of a cyclical problem that can be corrected with sort of the
standard fare of monetary stimulus?'" said Kevin Gaughan, portfolio manager
and equity strategist at Wells Capital Management in Milwaukee. 

Economic readings could indicate how pervasive the troubles are. 

On Thursday, the Commerce's Department's personal consumption and income
report for December underscored the fact that the economy continued to
weaken as 2007 ground to its end. Consumer spending in December -- the
year's peak shopping season -- had its weakest performance since September
2006. The report's price index for personal consumption expenditures, a
gauge of inflation closely monitored by the Fed, rose 0.2 percent in
December from November levels. The department said personal incomes rose 0.5
percent last month. 

Separately, the Labor Department reported a startling jump of 69,000 jobless
claims in the latest week, pushing the total to 375,000. That the highest
level since early October and the largest increase since September 2005.
Thomson/IFR had forecast a gain of just 14,000 new claims. 

Thursday's stock market rally, helped gains in beaten-down sectors such as
financials and home builders, could relate in part to short sellers
maneuvering positions on the final session of the month. Traders who sell a
stock "short" bet its price will fall and are forced to step in and buy the
stock should it begin to rise. That purchasing can exacerbate rallies. 

Among financials, Citigroup Inc. rose 61 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $28.17,
while homebuilder KB Home rose $2.32, or 9.2 percent, to $27.50. 

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by about 3 to 1 on the New York Stock
Exchange, where consolidated volume totaled 5.22 billion shares, compared
with 4.64 billion shares seen Wednesday. 

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei closed up 1.85 percent. In Europe, London's FTSE
100 closed up 0.73 percent, Frankfurt's DAX lost 0.34 percent and Paris' CAC
40 slipped 0.08 percent.

 

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