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Stocks jump on hopes for progress on Greece's debt

A promise by European leaders to help Greece avoid default sent US stocks sharply higher yesterday for the third straight day.

The leaders of Greece, France and Germany agreed in a teleconference that Greece was an "integral" part of the 17-country bloc that uses the euro. Greece also said it would stick to agreements to trim its debts, a condition for getting more financial help. The statements were intended to calm fears that Greece was headed for default or might be forced to drop the euro.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 140.88 points, or 1.3 percent, to close at 11,246.73. The Dow sank as many as 112 points within the first hour of trading, then rose steadily through the rest of the day.

"The news out of Europe is beginning to sound a bit more friendly," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital, a brokerage in New York. Investors remain far from convinced that Europe's debt crisis will be solved. "Once they are, some of this fear will dissipate."

The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 15.81 points, or 1.3 percent, to 1,188.68. The Nasdaq composite rose 40.40, or 1.6 percent, to 2,572.55.

European stock indexes rose sharply in the hours leading up to the meeting as investors hoped the talks would be productive. Germany's DAX gained 3.4 percent and France's CAC-40 1.9 percent.

The threat of a Greek default and the damage it could wreak on financial markets has had investors on edge in the past two weeks, lifting Treasurys and weighing on stocks. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note hit a record low on Monday of 1.87 percent and the S&P 500 has only risen three days this month.

Uri Landesman, president of the New York hedge fund Platinum Partners, said investors have overreacted. "They're just not going to let them go under," he said. "That's just not happening. I think people have learned the lesson from letting Lehman Brothers fail."

Among US stocks in focus, ConAgra Foods Inc. said it would withdraw its US$5.17 billion bid for Ralcorp Holdings Inc. if the company doesn't consider its bid by Monday evening. Ralcorp has already rejected several bids from ConAgra since March. Ralcorp's stock dropped 7 percent to US$79.11. ConAgra fell 2 percent to US$23.45.

Computer maker Dell Inc. rose 3 percent to US$14.86. Dell said Tuesday it will add US$5 billion to its existing US$2.1 billion stock-buyback plan. Dell bought US$1.1 billion of its stock in the second quarter.

Staples Inc. rose 3 percent to US$14.60 after the company said it will buy up to US$1.5 billion of its own stock. The office-supply company's stock has dropped 36 percent this year.

The gains came despite a report that retail sales were flat in August. People spent less on autos, clothing and furniture as fears mounted that the country was slipping into a recession and as the stock market took a steep fall. Economists had expected a slight gain.

That report helped push oil prices down US$1.30 to US$88.91 a barrel. Weak retail spending suggests Americans will consume less fuel.

All three stock indexes are still down for the month. The Dow has lost 3.2 percent and the S&P 500 index 2.5 percent. The Nasdaq has fared better, losing just 0.3 percent.




 

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