Wall Street plummeted again yesterday with Dow Jones losing 450 points, as
investors became more worried that the financial crisis would continue to
deteriorate.
US stocks yesterday's plunge was like a rerun of Monday's nose-dive as
investors flighted to commodities like crude and gold to seek safety.
American International Group Inc. lost nearly 50 percent in early trading,
The world's largest insurer acquired an US$85 billion loan from the US
government late Tuesday. In return, the government will get a 79.9 percent stake
in AIG and the right to remove senior management.
Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes showed that corporate borrowing costs soared
to a record in the United States. Financials were among the worst performers.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, the two largest US securities firms, tumbled
after Oppenheimer cut profit estimates. Merrill Lynch also reduced
fourth-quarter profit estimate for Morgan Stanley.
In addition, homebuilders suffered after the US Commerce Department said
housing starts slumped 6.2 percent last month to the fewest since January 1991.
The reading spurred concern that the housing slump will continue to weigh on the
nation's economic growth.
The Dow Jones slid 449.36 to 10,609.66. Broader indexes also end sharply
lower. The Standard & Poor's 500 index shed 57.20 to 1,156.39 and the Nasdaq
plunged 109.05 to 2,098.85.