A wild ride on Wall Street pushed stocks lower during
morning trading and finished trading with 100 point gain. Fears
about economy were clearly seen as investors were in despair stage
today.
Investors are ignoring good news and only focus on bad
news. With concerns that economy is in recession or headed for one
let investors hunt for bargains and quickly sell them off. Markets
are currently oversold and should recover quickly and significantly,
but until that happens markets will remain volatile as investors try
to test whether the market has formed a bottom.
Many of
the market short rallies have been buried right away by investors
who are scarred that stocks may decline even further. The
opportunity to cash out is prompting investors to sell.
Most companies who posted strong
earnings had their shares enjoy mild rallies. A company like
McDonald's which beat
analysts estimate had to watch its stock decline as their forecast
predicts lower sales.
Fear buying is persisting on Wall Street, as bad
earnings hammered stock performance and good news had little or no
impact.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is preparing to cut 10
percent of its workforce, while Amazon.com Inc. lowered its revenue
guidance for the year amid a weakening economy. Eli Lilly and Co.
said it recorded a loss for the third quarter.
Investors are not willing to buy up stocks until they
see improvement in the market. The mild volatility seen on Wall
Street is result of liquidation at the end of the day or next day.
Hedge Funds need to recover their profits before they fall even
further and huge sell off sets in.
Taking out financial stocks, there are companies
meeting or exceeding expectations but fear set in and investors
sell.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that new
applications for unemployment benefits rose 15,000 last week to a
seasonally adjusted 478,000. Jobless claims above 400,000 are
considered a sign of recession.
Good news also came form FDIC as U.S banking
regulators are working to create a loan guarantee program that would
help modify home loans.
Sheila Bair said in remarks to be delivered before the
Senate Banking Committee that "Specifically, the government could
establish standards for loan modifications and provide guarantees
for loans meeting those standards," She further explains "By doing
so, unaffordable loans could be converted into loans that are
sustainable over the long term."
The $700 billion financial plan passed earlier this
month gives U.S. Treasury the power to use loan guarantees to
facilitate loan modifications.
The effects that started to collapse 15 months are now
seen in businesses as job cuts are necessary to keep businesses in
profits. Chrysler said it was closing one plant and eliminating
shift in another plant resulting in 1,825 job cuts. Chrysler also
said it was planning to make involuntary cuts in its salaried and
contract workforce. While GM reported that will no longer contribute
to 401K plans.
Is good news coming? Amid FDIC and their new plan may
prevent more foreclosure and most savvy housing bargain hunters are
slowly coming to hunt for those lowered priced jewels, market may be
turning
back.