US stocks fall on weak maunfaturing, housing data
Wall Street retreated today after most of the day’s economic data showed weakness, including a report that manufacturing growth in October was the slowest in more than three years.
The Institute for Supply Management, a private research group, reported softness across the US manufacturing sector. New orders, production and prices fell, while hiring was up. Treasurys rallied on the numbers and the dollar fell.
Data on the housing market also bolstered fears of an economic slowdown. Pending home sales for September, fell 1.1%, down 13.6% from a year earlier. September residential construction spending also fell 1.1 percent, the sixth month that construction spending dropped, the longest stretch of weakness in residential construction in more than a decade.
Before the manufacturing report’s release, stocks were up on strong earnings from MasterCard Inc. and an upbeat forecast for private-sector jobs created in October.
That the indexes didn’t fall harder is an indication ”this market is in denial,” said Rob Brown, chief investment officer of Genworth Financial Asset Management, an Encino, California-based money manager with 4.7 billion under management. “It wants to focus on the positives and ignore the negatives.”
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 49.71, or 0.41 percent, to 12,031.02.
Broader stock indicators were also lower. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 10.13, or 0.74%, to 1,367.81, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 32.36, or 1.37%, to 2,334.35.
The difference between equity investors’ sunny focus and bond investors’ gloomy outlook widened. Bonds rose as debt investors bid up the possibility of a sharp economic downturn.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 4.56% from 4.61% late Tuesday. Bonds also rose sharply during Tuesday’s session, with the yield on 10-year Treasuries falling from 4.67 to 4.61. The US dollar was mostly higher against other major currencies. Gold prices rose.
There is still a fair amount of contrasting economic data, said Doug Johnston, head of US trading at Canaccord Adams in Boston.
“There are a lot of warning signs, but if it were glaringly obvious, everyone would be on it,” he said.
Falling bond yields, for instance, are helping keep interest rates low, a boon to homeowners with adjustable rate mortgages.
And commodities prices remain weak. Crude oil futures dropped Wednesday; a barrel of light crude settled at 58.71, down 2 cents in trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil’s July high was more than 78 a barrel.
In company news, drugstore operator CVS Corp. announced today it is buying pharmacy benefits manager Caremark Rx Inc. for about 21.3 billion (-16.7 billion) in stock. Caremark fell 1.06, to 48.17 and CVS dropped 2.32 to 29.06.
Earnings news continued strong.
MasterCard Inc., owner of the second-largest US credit card brand after Visa, rose 10.97, or 14.80%, to 85.07 after its third-quarter profit climbed 82%. The company’s earnings of 193 million, or 1.42 per share, beat analysts’ estimates.
Marsh & McLennan Companies Inc., the nation’s largest insurance brokerage, rose 96 cents to 30.40 after its profit more than doubled in the third quarter from a year earlier, helped by cost-cutting measures.
Declining issues led advancers by 2 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume was 1.80 billion shares.
The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies was down 14.69, or 1.92%, to 752.15.






