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Stocks end flat after HP shocker and Fed warning
FALLING oil prices and a surprise announcement from Hewlett-Packard weighed on technology and energy stocks yesterday.
HP plunged 12 percent after executives said that a company HP bought for US$10 billion last year lied about its finances. CEO Meg Whitman said that there were "serious accounting improprieties" at the search-engine company, Autonomy.
To account for it, HP took an US$8.8 billion charge in its latest quarter. HP's stock lost US$1.59 to US$11.71.
A warning from the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, about the dangers of the "fiscal cliff" also weighed on the market in afternoon trading. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped as much as 94 points shortly after Bernanke spoke.
But the stock market crept higher through the late afternoon and ended the day flat. The Dow dropped 7.45 points to close at 12,788.51. The Standard & Poor's 500 index gained 0.92 point to 1,387.81.
On Monday, the Dow soared 207 points as investors focused on prospects for a deal between the White House and congressional Republicans to avoid the cliff, tax increases and government spending cuts set to take effect Jan. 1.
In a speech to the Economic Club of New York yesterday, Bernanke urged Congress to take action. Asked in a Q&A session whether the Fed could limit the economic hit posed by the budget-tightening measures, Bernanke said: "If the economy goes off the broad fiscal cliff, I don't think the Fed has the tools to offset that."
Many investors expect financial markets to turn turbulent when Congress returns from its Thanksgiving recess and begins bargaining with the White House to avoid the fiscal cliff.
John Linahan, head of T. Rowe Price's US equity group, said that if those negotiations stretch into late December, the stock market could resemble the wild trading of August 2011, when markets flipped from big gains one day to steep losses the next.
Energy stocks and the price of crude oil fell after the president of Egypt predicted that Israel's weeklong offensive in the Gaza Strip would end in hours and the Israeli prime minister said Israel would be a "willing partner" to a cease-fire.
Crude oil was down US$2.53, or 2.8 percent, to US$86.75 per barrel. It traded above US$89 earlier in the day. Energy stocks in the S&P slipped 0.4 percent as a group. Tech stocks fared the worst, losing 0.6 percent.
The Nasdaq composite index gained 0.61 of a point to 2,916.68. The yield on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury note rose to 1.66 percent.
Among stocks making headlines:
- Hormel Foods dropped US$1.25, or 4 percent, to US$30.05 after its earnings and revenue fell below Wall Street expectations. The company said sales of Spam remained strong, and it increased its annual dividend 13 percent, to 68 cents per share.
- Best Buy fell US$1.79, or 13 percent, to US$11.96, its lowest in more than a decade. The company, which has struggled for years against increased competition from online electronics retailers, turned in another dismal earnings report.
- Krispy Kreme Doughnuts climbed US$1.77, or 23 percent, to US$9.31 after it forecast earnings for 2013 above what Wall Street was expecting.
- Green Mountain Coffee rose 54 cents, or 2 percent, to US$27.87 after picking a new CEO, Brian Kelley of Coca-Cola.
- Groupon gained 27 cents, or 9 percent, to US$3.37 after a hedge fund, Tiger Global, said it had bought a 10 percent stake in the company.
HP plunged 12 percent after executives said that a company HP bought for US$10 billion last year lied about its finances. CEO Meg Whitman said that there were "serious accounting improprieties" at the search-engine company, Autonomy.
To account for it, HP took an US$8.8 billion charge in its latest quarter. HP's stock lost US$1.59 to US$11.71.
A warning from the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, about the dangers of the "fiscal cliff" also weighed on the market in afternoon trading. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped as much as 94 points shortly after Bernanke spoke.
But the stock market crept higher through the late afternoon and ended the day flat. The Dow dropped 7.45 points to close at 12,788.51. The Standard & Poor's 500 index gained 0.92 point to 1,387.81.
On Monday, the Dow soared 207 points as investors focused on prospects for a deal between the White House and congressional Republicans to avoid the cliff, tax increases and government spending cuts set to take effect Jan. 1.
In a speech to the Economic Club of New York yesterday, Bernanke urged Congress to take action. Asked in a Q&A session whether the Fed could limit the economic hit posed by the budget-tightening measures, Bernanke said: "If the economy goes off the broad fiscal cliff, I don't think the Fed has the tools to offset that."
Many investors expect financial markets to turn turbulent when Congress returns from its Thanksgiving recess and begins bargaining with the White House to avoid the fiscal cliff.
John Linahan, head of T. Rowe Price's US equity group, said that if those negotiations stretch into late December, the stock market could resemble the wild trading of August 2011, when markets flipped from big gains one day to steep losses the next.
Energy stocks and the price of crude oil fell after the president of Egypt predicted that Israel's weeklong offensive in the Gaza Strip would end in hours and the Israeli prime minister said Israel would be a "willing partner" to a cease-fire.
Crude oil was down US$2.53, or 2.8 percent, to US$86.75 per barrel. It traded above US$89 earlier in the day. Energy stocks in the S&P slipped 0.4 percent as a group. Tech stocks fared the worst, losing 0.6 percent.
The Nasdaq composite index gained 0.61 of a point to 2,916.68. The yield on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury note rose to 1.66 percent.
Among stocks making headlines:
- Hormel Foods dropped US$1.25, or 4 percent, to US$30.05 after its earnings and revenue fell below Wall Street expectations. The company said sales of Spam remained strong, and it increased its annual dividend 13 percent, to 68 cents per share.
- Best Buy fell US$1.79, or 13 percent, to US$11.96, its lowest in more than a decade. The company, which has struggled for years against increased competition from online electronics retailers, turned in another dismal earnings report.
- Krispy Kreme Doughnuts climbed US$1.77, or 23 percent, to US$9.31 after it forecast earnings for 2013 above what Wall Street was expecting.
- Green Mountain Coffee rose 54 cents, or 2 percent, to US$27.87 after picking a new CEO, Brian Kelley of Coca-Cola.
- Groupon gained 27 cents, or 9 percent, to US$3.37 after a hedge fund, Tiger Global, said it had bought a 10 percent stake in the company.
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