Sunday, November 08, 2009
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Stocks Fall on News of 53,000 Citigroup Layoffs

Stocks fell during early trading today as news of Citigroup's plans to eliminate 53,000 positions was revealed. The struggling bank also said that it would cut expenses by 20% after posting four straight quarters of losses. Citigroup's stock was down 3.5% in morning trading, and has this year lost nearly two-thirds of its value.

The Dow Jones Industrial average also fell this morning nearly 2%, or 163 points. The Standard & Poor's 500 index also fell 1.8%, or 15 points, and the Nasdaq was down 1.5% or 22 points.

Retailers continued to report dismal earnings today. Target was up 2.6% after posting a 24% drop in third quarter profits that beat analyst expectations. Lowe's said third quarter profits fell 24% and lowered their fourth quarter expectations, but its stock was up 2.3% this morning.

Investors are keeping an eye on a $25 billion emergency bill being proposed by Democrats to help the ailing auto industry. President Bush and Republican congressman have opposed the legislation because it would use funds from the $700 billion financial bailout program created by Congress for the US banking system. General Motors and Ford were up 7 and 2 percent respectively this morning.

Globally, the markets were mixed today. The FTSE in London was down 1.3%, and Paris' CAC40 was down 1.8%. Japan's Nikkei closed up slight, .71%, even after the government said the country had officially fallen into a recession.

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