WORLD> America
Stocks sink after US government bailout of AIG
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-09-18 00:00

NEW YORK -- Wall Street stumbled again Wednesday, with anxieties about the financial system still running high even after the government bailed out the insurer American International Group Inc. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped nearly 250 points.


Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange September 17, 2008. US stocks extended losses on Wednesday, sending the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq off more than 3 percent, as a spike in inter-bank lending rates fanned fears that credit might be drying up in the global financial. [Agencies]

The Federal Reserve is giving a two-year, $85 billion loan to AIG in exchange for a nearly 80 percent stake in the insurer, after it lost billions in the risky business of insuring against bond defaults. Wall Street had feared that the conglomerate, which has its tentacles in various financial services industries around the world, would follow the investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. into bankruptcy.

"We dodged a bullet, but we want to make sure it's a complete ceasefire," said Jack A. Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank, noting that AIG still needs to unwind its investment positions, sell off assets, and possibly get more cash.

Furthermore, the two independent Wall Street investment banks left standing -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley -- remain under scrutiny. Morgan Stanley revealed its quarterly earnings early late Tuesday, posting a better-than-expected 7 percent slide in fiscal third-quarter profit and insisting that it is surviving the credit crisis that has ravaged many of its peers.

Lehman filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday, and by late Tuesday had sold its North American investment banking and trading operations to Barclays, Britain's third-largest bank, for the bargain price of $250 million. Over the weekend, Merrill Lynch, the world's largest brokerage, sold itself in a last-ditch effort to avoid failure to Bank of America Corp.

The ongoing troubles in the financial sector could exacerbate the problems facing the weak US economy. The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that new home construction fell by 6.2 percent in August to 895,000 units, the slowest building pace since January 1991.

Slumping demand for houses, sinking home prices and mortgage defaults have been the catalysts behind Wall Street's turmoil -- and the risky mortgage-backed assets held by the nation's banks are not apt to regain in value until the housing market turns around.

Related readings:
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 Lehman files for bankruptcy
 World stock markets sink on Wall Street crisis

A day after Wall Street regained some of Monday's nosedive, the Dow fell 249.15, or 2.25 percent, to 10,809.87. The blue-chip index is down more than 5 percent on the week, and has fallen more than 23 percent since reaching a record close of 14,164.53 on Oct. 9 last year.

Broader stock indicators also fell. The Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 31.49, or 2.59 percent, to 1,182.11, while the Nasdaq composite index fell 57.51, or 2.60 percent, to 2,150.39.

The stock market is likely to see heavy back-and-forth movement as traders continue to assess the flood of news that has poured in over the past several days.

On Monday, the Dow lost 504 points, the largest tumble since its drop following the September 2001 terror attacks. On Tuesday, it rose 141 points, after the Fed decided to leave interest rates unchanged.

"It's still uncertain ground we're treading. We just have to move on a daily basis," Ablin said. "We've moved from a no-news-is-bad-news environment to a no-news-is-good-news environment. We've turned the corner on that."

The government took other measures Tuesday to help alleviate the turmoil in the markets. The Treasury said it will start selling bonds for the Fed to aid it with its lending efforts, while the Securities and Exchange Commission said it will strictly prohibit naked short-selling starting Thursday.

Short-selling is when traders borrow shares of a stock they expect to fall and sell them -- if the stock does indeed fall, the traders buy the cheaper shares to cover the borrowed ones and profit from the difference. Naked short-selling occurs when sellers don't actually borrow the shares before selling them; it's a practice some say is partially responsible for the huge drop in the shares of investment banks like Lehman, Merrill Lynch and Bear Stearns Cos., which JPMorgan Chase & Co. bought earlier this year.

Bond prices wavered Wednesday. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, slipped to 3.42 percent from 3.43 percent late Tuesday. The dollar was lower against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Crude oil rebounded $2.97 to $94.12 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Crude has dropped by about $10 a barrel over the past two days due to concerns that troubles in the financial sector will dampen the economy and cause big funds to unwind their commodities bets.

Declining issues outnumbered advancers by about 5 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 324.7 million shares.

Overseas, Japan's Nikkei stock average rose 1.2 percent after AIG's rescue, but Hong Kong's Hang Seng index lost 3.6 percent.

In afternoon trading in Europe, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 3.39 percent, Germany's DAX index fell 0.31 percent, and France's CAC-40 rose 0.14 percent.