Richard Drew
In this Dec. 9, 2011 photo, trader Anthony Satriale, center, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Enthusiasm for riskier assets such as stocks and the euro faded Monday, Dec. 12, 2011, as investors worried that Europe's new pact aimed at fixing the continent's debt crisis would be insufficient. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
In this Dec. 9, 2011 photo, trader Anthony Satriale, center, works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Enthusiasm for riskier assets such as stocks and the euro faded Monday, Dec. 12, 2011, as investors worried that Europe's new pact aimed at fixing the continent's debt crisis would be insufficient. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
Stocks closed sharply lower Monday after doubt emerged that last
week's historic agreement to bind the budgets of European countries
more closely together will solve the region's financial crisis.
Fitch Ratings said the region will face "a significant economic
downturn" as it wrestles with its sovereign debt crisis for another
year or more. Moody's Investors Service said the summit produced
"few new measures."
Guy LeBas, chief fixed income strategist at Janney Montgomery
Scott, said the agreement "kicks off a process that has a chance of
solving the next crisis, not this one."
The euro hit a 10-week low against the dollar, plunging nearly 2
cents. Yields on Italian bonds rose as investors fretted about that
nation's debt burden. European stocks fell. Treasury yields fell as
investors shifted money into U.S. government debt.
All 10 industry groups in the Standard & Poor's 500 index
fell, led by banks and energy stocks. Falling stocks outnumbered
rising ones four-to-one on the New York Stock Exchange.
Intel Corp. dragged the Dow Jones industrial average lower,
falling 4 percent after the chipmaker said its fourth-quarter
revenue will be lower than expected because of supply chain
problems caused by massive flooding in Thailand. Intel is
considered a bellwether for the computer industry because its chips
are used in a wide range of products.
The Dow closed down 162.87 points, or 1.3 percent, at 12,021.39.
It was down as much as 243 points before rising in the final hour
of trading. Monday's loss erased nearly all of the Dow's gains from
last week.
The S&P 500 lost 18.72 points, or 1.5 percent, to close at
1,236.47. The Nasdaq composite index dropped 34.59, or 1.3 percent,
to close at 2,612.26.
Moody's said earlier in the day that it will review the credit
ratings of all European Union nations in the first quarter of next
year. The statement doused optimism among investors that had lifted
stocks and other risky investments. Prior to Monday, the S&P
500 had risen 8.3 percent over the past two weeks.
Moody's said Europe remains in a "critical and volatile stage."
The pact, Moody's noted, does not address Europe's immediate
problem: the crushing debt loads of some nations and their rising
borrowing costs. Last week's agreement calls for tougher fiscal
discipline among European countries and a central authority with
the ability to punish those that spend too much.
Financial stocks declined steeply. Investors fear that big banks
might be damaged by the turmoil in Europe. Morgan Stanley fell 6.1
percent, Citigroup Inc. 5.4 percent. Bank of America Corp. and
JPMorgan Chase & Co. posted the biggest and third-biggest
losses in the Dow 30, falling 4.7 percent and 3.4 percent,
respectively.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.02 percent from
2.07 percent late Friday, indicating stronger demand for low-risk
investments. Bond yields fall as demand for them increases.
Fears that Italy or Spain will default reduced demand for their
government bonds, driving their yields higher and pushing their
borrowing costs near the dangerous levels that forced Greece,
Portugal and Ireland to take bailouts. The yield on the 10-year
Italian bond rose to 6.53 percent. Greece and Portugal were forced
to seek bailouts from their creditors when their bond yields
approached 7 percent.
Stocks in Italy led European markets to a much lower close.
Italy's main index closed down 3.8 percent. Spain's fell 3.1
percent, while Germany's DAX lost 3.4 percent.
Among the top corporate movers:
_ Endo Pharmaceuticals Holdings Inc. jumped 6 percent after
federal regulators approved a new form of one of its pain
medications, extending its patent rights over the drug.
_ Diamond Foods Inc. plunged 23 percent after reports of an
investigation of its payments to walnut farmers.
_ Vulcan Materials Co. shot up 15 percent, the most in the
S&P 500, after Martin Marietta Materials Inc. made an
unsolicited bid to buy the company for $4.74 billion in stock.
Martin Marietta rose 1.2 percent.
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AP Business Writer Matthew Craft in New York contributed to this
report.
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