Tumbling down

Associated Press

NEW YORK — Weaker-than-expected consumer confidence and spending figures sent stocks tumbling Tuesday as investors grew concerned that the economic recovery was slowing. The Dow Jones industrials posted their second straight triple-digit decline.

Light trading, the result of many investors extending their Memorial Day vacations, also made the market susceptible to extreme losses or gains.

The Dow closed down 122.68, or 1.2 percent, at 9,981.58. It was the Dow’s first close below 10,000 since May 10, and followed a 111-point drop Friday.

Broader stock indicators also retreated. The Nasdaq composite index slid 9.32, or 0.6 percent, to 1,652.17. The Standard &Poor’s 500 index fell 9.27, or 0.9 percent, to 1,074.55.

Wall Street got off to a negative start early in the session on consumer data that showed improvement, but not as much strength as investors had anticipated.

"It wasn’t bad economic data, it just didn’t surprise us on the upside," said John Forelli, portfolio manager for Independence Investment LLC. "The market needs good news to make it go forward, and there’s just a dearth of good news right now.

The Conference Board reported Tuesday that consumer confidence rose in May to 109.8 from a revised 108.5 in April. Analysts had expected a reading of 110.0 from the survey conducted by the business group.

Critical research reports about bellwethers and Dow components Home Depot and Intel intensified the decline.

Home Depot dropped $1.88 to $41.54 after UBS Warburg downgraded the stock to "hold" from "buy" citing concerns about its business strategy.

The selling spread to other retail stocks, including Wal-Mart, which fell 73 cents to $54.79.

Among technology stocks, Intel lost 31 cents, falling to $28.35 after Merrill Lynch reduced its earnings estimates for the chipmaker, citing soft revenues.

Personal computer makers, which depend heavily on consumer spending, were especially vulnerable. Gateway fell 11 cents to $5.57, while Dell tumbled 37 cents to $26.85.

But Dynegy soared 39 cents to $9.69 after the energy marketer’s top executive resigned because of problems including a decline of as much as 88 percent in its stock value from the year’s high.

And Halliburton rose 25 cents to $19.35 following news the oil services company has settled 30 asbestos exposure lawsuits. Concern about the costs of asbestos-related litigation has weighed the stock down for months.

Overall, though, the market’s mood was pessimistic and in keeping with the negative tone that has characterized trading for most of the month. Although stocks have managed some occasional rallies, the gains have been fleeting as investors unload issues on the first sign of disappointment or difficulties ahead. Mediocre earnings and lackluster outlooks are to blame for most of the selling, but the prospect of more terror attacks has added to the downward pressure.

"We’re going to wait for the midterm report card that will come out in another four weeks or so, when we get preannouncements and then earnings, before you see any real catalyst," said Jack Francis, managing director and head of Nasdaq trading at UBS Warburg.

Copyright ©2002 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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