NEW YORK - Wall Street pulled back sharply Tuesday
as investors dealt with disappointing earnings reports and renewed concerns
about the mortgage lending market. The Dow Jones industrials fell more than 200
points.
DuPont Co. was the Dow's biggest loser after the chemical maker reported its
second-quarter profit growth was flat, as improving sales abroad balanced the
ongoing weakness in the US housing and automotive markets. Fellow Dow component
American Express Co. said late Monday its quarterly profit climbed 12 percent on
record card member spending. However, the nation's third-largest credit card
brand said cardholders are also shirking more payments.
Specialists work at their posts on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange, Tuesday morning, July 24, 2007.[AP]
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Tuesday's retreat was not surprising considering that the market's move into
record territory came before profit reports were released in earnest. Many
investors bet that reports would be more upbeat than they have turned out to be.
In addition, a profit warning from mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp.
Tuesday reminded investors that troubles in the subprime market persist.
According to preliminary calculations, the Dow gave up 226.47, or 1.62
percent, to 13,716.95. The drop was the average's biggest since March 13, when
the Dow tumbled 242 points, also amid concerns that the subprime woes could
infect the broader lending landscape.
Other major stock indicators also suffered steep declines. The Standard &
Poor's 500 index shed 30.53, or 1.98 percent, to 1,511.04. The Nasdaq composite
index lost 50.72, or 1.89 percent,closing at 2,639.86.
Declining issues outnumbered advancers by nearly 10 to 1 on the New York
Stock Exchange, where volume came to almost 2 billion shares, compared with 1.52
billion on Monday.
Following the Dow's move last week over 14,000 for the first time, it "seems
logically like the market needs to have some profit-taking," said Joe Ranieri,
managing director of US equity trading at Canaccord Adams.
The stock market will likely be driven by company earnings reports over the
next two weeks, he said, as investors try to get a sense of how well corporate
profits will hold up in the second half of the year.
The steady flow of earnings reports dictated Wall Street's direction on
Tuesday, after five back-and-forth sessions that saw markets rise one day only
to fall the next.
The shifts may have seemed sharp at times. But Todd Leone, managing director
of equity trading at Cowen & Co. noted that, as a percentage of the whole,
100-point swings in the Dow don't register the way they used to, when the index
traded at less than 10,000.
"I think we're in a range here," he said. "The market doesn't know what it's
looking for."
DuPont and American Express both sank after their earnings reports. DuPont
tumbled $3.36, or 6.3 percent, to $49.90, while American Express dropped $3.49,
or 5.4 percent, to $61.17.
McDonald's Corp., the world's largest restaurant chain, posted a loss after
taking a charge for the sale of its Latin American outlets. Excluding that
charge, it reported earnings per share that matched Wall Street expectations.
The Dow stock fell 95 cents to $51.55.
Dow component AT&T reported a 61 percent increase in second-quarter
earnings, lifted primarily by its buyout of BellSouth Corp. At the same time,
the telecommunications company reported fewer activations of Apple Inc.'s iPhone
than analysts expected when the much-touted device debuted just before the
quarter's end.
AT&T shares fell 35 cents to $39.68, while Apple's stock dropped $8.81,
or 6.1 percent, to $134.89. Apple is scheduled to report quarterly results on
Wednesday.
In what is perhaps a signal to Wall Street of more woes to come in the
mortgage lending market, Countrywide Financial posted sharply lower
second-quarter profit and slashed its earnings forecast as mortgage banking
earnings were cut in half. Its shares declined $3.56, or 10.5 percent, to
$30.50.
The largest US mortgage lender is used as one of the barometers of the
housing industry, which has continued to slump amid delinquencies and defaults
in subprime loans, or those made to borrowers with weak credit.
The troubles among subprime mortgage lenders have periodically rattled Wall
Street this year, leading to sudden plunges as investors feared that the
sector's problems would spread to other parts of the economy. The market has
generally recovered in a short period of time, but as Tuesday's trading showed,
it remains vulnerable to any bad news about mortgages or housing.
In other corporate news, Texas Instruments Inc. said late Monday that profit
fell from a year ago which was boosted by one-time gains. The largest supplier
of chips used in mobile phones saw its shares lose $1.72, or 4.5 percent, to
$36.46.
Meanwhile, oil prices receded further from last week's 11-month highs. Light,
sweet crude gave up $1.33 to end at $73.56 on the Nymex. Gasoline futures fell.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies dipped 23.76, or 2.84 percent, to
811.86.
Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average fell 0.21 percent. Britain's FTSE 100
dropped 1.90 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 1.73 percent, and France's CAC-40
fell 1.69 percent.