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Friday,
September 28, 2001
Dow
closes up 114; other indexes also rise
By Amy Baldwin
Associated Press
NEW
YORK Investors seeking safer havens bought up blue
chips Thursday but sold off riskier, technology shares amid
worries about how long and how much the slumping economy will
suffer from the terrorist attacks.
But
Wall Streets gains didnt spell confidence in the
stock market or the economy, analysts said. Rather, institutional
investors, such as mutual fund managers, were simply rearranging
portfolios to have a heavier focus on safer, so-called defensive
sectors, before the quarter closes Friday.
Dont
hold your breath. I wouldnt read too much into this
today ... The stock market is sorting out stuff. People are
shifting around in their portfolios, getting more defensive,
said Jon Brorson, director of equities at Northern Trust in
Chicago.
The
Dow Jones industrial average finished up 114.03 at 8,681.42,
according to preliminary calculations, after trading in negative
territory most of the session.
The
broader market was mixed as the Nasdaq composite index slipped
3.32 to 1,460.72, and the Standard & Poors 500 index
rose 11.57 to 1,018.61.
Trading
carried a cautious tone as many on Wall Street remain reluctant
to make big commitments until it becomes clearer how and when
the United States will retaliate for the Sept. 11 assaults
on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. It also took most
of session for defensive sectors, such as drug and consumer
product companies, to pull the Dow higher.
Among
the advancers were drug maker Merck, up $2.86 at $66.21, tobacco
company Philip Morris, which climbed $2.14 to $49 and consumer
products giant Procter & Gamble, up $1.27 at $72.40. All
three are Dow stocks.
Other
winners came out of the defense industry, which is expected
to land more business from the U.S. government as it retaliates
for the attacks. Northrop Grumman gained $4.37 to $102.97,
and Lockheed Martin rose $1.30 to $43.30.
But
analysts werent boasting about the markets upward
moves, because it centered on safer bets. They also noted
that volume was light for much of the day as some traders
were off for the Jewish holiday Yom Kippur.
And,
analysts and investors remain quite concerned about the toll
the economy will take from the attacks. A litany of companies
have already slashed thousands of jobs and warned of lower
sales and profits, saying skittish consumers have further
cut their spending.
Not
very many people want to take aggressive positions on either
side of the market, said Dan Ascani, president and research
director at Global Market Strategists in Gainesville, Ga.
The market is still worried.
The
market was able to bounce higher despite two reports showing
that the economy remains quite weak. Analysts said Wall Street
was expecting both the rise in unemployment and the decline
in sales of manufactured goods.
The
Labor Department said jobless claims last week shot up to
a nine-year high, in part reflecting the impact of the terrorist
attacks. The increase was in part attributed to layoffs and
job dislocations stemming from the Sept. 11 attacks on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon.
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