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    Banks sink on European economic worry

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Banks led stocks lower on Wednesday as the S&P 500 stalled near a 10-month-high after signs of weak European business activity rekindled concerns about a recession overseas.

    U.S. banks were the S&P 500's worst performing sector. Investors feared that weak euro zone growth would hamper countries dealing with heavy debt loads and the banks exposed to those debts.

    "We're very concerned around the markedly deteriorating credit fundamentals in Europe," said Steven Baffico, chief executive officer at Four Wood Capital Partners in New York.

    Data showing weakness in the euro zone services and manufacturing sectors overshadowed the day-old deal to bail out Greece.

    After touching a near 7-month high on Tuesday, the KBW bank index <.BKX> fell 2 percent. A key European bank index <.SX7P> declined 2.5 percent.

    The S&P 500 index failed again to hold above 1,360, the high reached last May and a key resistance point that could spark further gains if broken. The benchmark index is up about 8 percent for the year and gained more than 20 percent from its October lows.

    The Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> lost 27.02 points, or 0.21 percent, to 12,938.67. The S&P 500 Index <.SPX> dropped 4.55 points, or 0.33 percent, to 1,357.66. The Nasdaq Composite <.IXIC> fell 15.40 points, or 0.52 percent, to 2,933.17.

    Oil services companies rose, partly offsetting the decline by banks. Drilling contractor Nabors Industries rose 7 percent to $21.78 a day after its operating results topped Wall Street expectations and as the chief executive detailed a retooling of the company.

    The PHLX oil services sector index <.OSX> rose 1.7 percent.

    Home builder stocks fell, with the PHLX housing sector index <.HGX> down 1.4 percent. Data showed U.S. home resales surged to a 1-1/2 year high in January but came in below forecasts.

    Dell Inc was one of the biggest drags on the S&P, tumbling 5.8 percent to $17.10 in volume 2.5 times above its recent daily average. The world's No. 3 personal computer maker forecast revenue below expectations late Tuesday. The NYSEArca computer hardware index <.HWI> lost 1.8 percent.

    After the market's close, shares of computer maker Hewlett-Packard fell 1.4 percent after reporting quarterly revenue below expectations.

    About 6.3 billion shares changed hands on the New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and Amex, compared with last year's daily average of about 7.8 billion shares.

    Slightly more than three shares fell for every two that rose on the NYSE, while on the Nasdaq more than two fell for every advancing issue.

    According to Thomson Reuters data through Wednesday morning, of the 424 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported earnings, 64 percent have topped analysts' expectations, which is below the 70 percent beat rate for the past four quarters but above the median of 62 percent since 1994.

    (Reporting by Rodrigo Campos and Angela Moon; Editing by Kenneth Barry)

    See all articles from Reuters
     

    33 comments

    • David  •  2 months ago
      If you're not smart enough to get out while you can, please stop complaining. The next round of cleaning is around the corner. Clinton took out the regulation that was your safegaurd from the people that run the game. You are being played for your basest greed now.
    • Agressive Avenging Angel  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  2 months ago
      Like most people's retirement accounts, wall street is flat after all that undeserved hoopla
      about 13,000? Wall Street is hiding massive debts and massive derivative risks and we
      are not at the bottom, just temporary bounces based on hype, propaganda, speculation
      and massive market manipulation, to drive prices and volumes up, no matter what!
      • A Yahoo! User 2 months ago
        based on redistribution of money from the worlds taxpayer to the world banking system...every country's dollar is shrinking to cover the dept, not only of Greece . Talk now of an international tax, a VAT tax in the USA. To bad the the man on main street cannot buy and sell as the market goes up and down...
      • A Yahoo! User 2 months ago
        My retirement account is not flat! Sorry you missed the boat.
      • Pedro Obama 2 months ago
        The market has been flat for the past 12 years, that's why they refer to it as the lost decade. Values may go up and down in a given time period but overall average performance over the last 12 years is ZIP. The #$%$ kicker is your money is worth less than half of what it was in 2000. We can all agree inflation averages at least 5% a year?
    • Kyriakos  •  Santa Clara, California  •  2 months ago
      Now, if someone makes $20B for facilitating people to share their private data on a public network or another guy getting $750M bonus for exploiting Chinese labor (building a phone for $40 and selling it for over $400), or oil companies on their way to brake our budgets and neither Presidential candidate neither willing nor able to do anything about it, I would say we are doomed!
    • ergos  •  2 months ago
      My heart is sinking for them.
    • Richard  •  Tampa, Florida  •  2 months ago
      Eff the GD banks. Obama and Democrats bailed THEM, Wall Street out, screwed the rest of us.
    • enternewid  •  2 months ago
      What! Why aren't there big headlines Dow drops below 13,000 like they had when it briefly went over 13,000? Up down up down so goes the dow. No real headlines here!
    • Choose the Red Pill  •  2 months ago
      Really?

      So someone is starting to figure out that bailing out banks with borowed money doesn't solve anything?
    • Saint Preferred  •  2 months ago
      US banks exposed to the EU crisis won't worry, they can always get bailed out.
    • Gerald  •  Sacramento, California  •  2 months ago
      Been buying a lot of high quality fertilizer lately that I normally wouldn't buy 'cause of the price. I grow a fair amount of our food. Dollars just don't seem as valuable as the krap in the long run...
    • lilou  •  Montreal, Canada  •  2 months ago
      Rodrigo Campos, you are obviously making this up as you go along. Now try to do some real reporting, if that is at all possible for you. Ohhh, but wait, you must have real talent before you attempt to do that. Did you get your journalism degree from "ICS" correspondence school?
    • terminator  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  2 months ago
      america is like a little wussy------blaming others for market turbulence instead of blaming itself!!!!! how childish!
    • WilliamC  •  Little Rock, Arkansas  •  2 months ago
      I've been slowly moving my 401k back to the safe funds all through February. If you left all your money hanging out there thinking of more huge gains yo may be in for some trouble. I have my mix set at about 65 low risk 35 high risk. Something always seems to happen during the first 6 months of the year. This year I think it will be gas prices and inflation. Have you looked at the prices of stuff at your grocery store?
      • justacomment 2 months ago
        smart thinking...
      • A Yahoo! User 2 months ago
        I'm not quite ready to back off on my stock percentage yet. I never go much above 40% equities, so we're probably pretty close on our mix. If we hit 1400 on the S&P 500 or we reach the end of March I'll back off to 25%.

        Sometimes the biggest risk is taking no risk at all.
    • justacomment  •  2 months ago
      Wait,, where did the party go? Come on people whoo whoo whoo.. party time.
      Come on, my 401k needs it people 14,000 here we come, whoo whoo whoo. Oh wait, maybe the market should only go up on fundamentals?
      Na,, come on party time.. whoo whoo whoo.
    • Armondo  •  Montgomery, Alabama  •  2 months ago
      S&P 500 closed above the critical 1360 level the past 2 days, where have you been ?
    • Suzanne  •  2 months ago
      S and P are Illuminati Fronts! They are theives and these countries should quit listening to any of them. The big banks are too! Everyone should quit paying these jokers and all tell what we know.
    • Dave  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  2 months ago
      Dell is one of many marketers of PC's etc.
      The CPI is totally bogus tool the US goverment uses as another tool with which to shed falsehood.
      Good luck America.
    • buy American  •  Newhall, California  •  2 months ago
      Republicans are blaming President Obama for the raise in gas prices.
      The raise in gas prices are really the fault of the American people.
      We buy goods made in China, the Chinese people make money and buy more cars and require more fuel to run these cars.
      Thus the price of gas goes up.
      • Steve 2 months ago
        You're right that its not Obama's fault, but its not American's or Chinese fault either. The price of gas goes up because it's a declining resource. It will never go down in price again. There is not enough drill baby drill to effect the price of oil more than a penny or two. Get used to it.
      • Michaelm 2 months ago
        Four years ago it would have been "Bush"s fault"?
    • Dave  •  Brownsburg, Indiana  •  2 months ago
      I believe the market closed lower due to WS being depressed at Barrys corporate tax increase plan. Actually it was more like a plan to confiscate their money.
    • Donald  •  2 months ago
      White House Gas Price Strategy: "Nothing is off the Table". Where is this Freaking Table? What a Freak show.
    • A still small voice  •  Deforest, Wisconsin  •  2 months ago
      Apparently the scrotums of the drones on Wall Street are getting sweaty again.
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