Monday, March 9, 2009

U.S. Stocks Fall on Buffett, World Bank Warning About Economy

U.S. Stocks Fall on Buffett, World Bank Warning About Economy

March 9 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks fell, extending the worst weekly slump in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since November, after Warren Buffett said the economy “has fallen off a cliff” and the World Bank predicted a global contraction.

Hewlett-Packard Co., DuPont Co. and Verizon Communications Inc. slumped 4 percent or more. Merck & Co. sank 8.8 percent, dragging down the Dow Jones Industrial Average, after agreeing to buy Schering-Plough Corp. for $41.1 billion. Aflac Inc., the largest provider of supplemental insurance, dropped 15 percent after UBS AG recommended selling the shares.

The S&P 500 fell 1.1 percent to 675.78 at 3:28 p.m. in New York after losing as much as 1.5 percent and climbing 1.7 percent. It swung between gains and losses at least 25 times. The Dow average retreated 72.96 points, or 1.1 percent, to 6,553.98.

“Uncertainty reigns,” said David Sowerby, who helps oversee about $100 billion at Loomis Sayles & Co. in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. “What’s the floor on the S&P? It’s never ending.”

The S&P 500 is likely to drop to 600 or lower this year as the global recession intensifies, said Nouriel Roubini, the New York University professor who predicted the financial crisis. Merrill Lynch & Co. economist David Rosenberg also forecast the index bottoming at that level, saying that will probably happen in October.

U.S. stocks last week posted the biggest decline in three months after American International Group Inc. reported a $61.7 billion loss and concern increased that General Electric Co. will be stripped of its top credit rating. General Motors Corp. sank 36 percent, the most since October, after its auditor said the automaker may not survive.

DuPont, Verizon

Hewlett-Packard, the personal-computer maker, slipped 5.2 percent to $25.50. Chemical maker DuPont fell 4.6 percent to $16.10, while telephone company Verizon slumped 4 percent to $26.19.

Aflac lost 15 percent to $11.42 after UBS reduced its recommendation to “sell” from “neutral,” saying the shares are expensive relative to other life insurance companies.

Merck lost 8.8 percent, the most in the Dow average, to $20.73. Buying Schering-Plough would make Merck the second- biggest U.S. drugmaker and give it full rights to cholesterol pills Zetia and Vytorin and experimental treatments for blood clots, asthma and schizophrenia. Schering-Plough surged 13 percent to $20.21.

More Takeovers?

The deal may spur other industry takeovers, said David Moskowitz, an analyst with Caris & Co. Pfizer Inc. offered to buy Wyeth in January for $68 billion and Roche Holding AG raised its Genentech Inc. bid to $45.7 billion last week.

Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. posted its worst results ever in 2008, told CNBC today that the economy “has fallen off a cliff” and that efforts to stimulate recovery may lead to inflation higher than the 1970s.

The global economy is likely to shrink for the first time since World War II and trade will decline by the most in 80 years, the World Bank said yesterday. Its assessment is more pessimistic than an International Monetary Fund report in January predicting 0.5 percent global growth this year.

“We’re going to continue to see very volatile markets,” said Ron Rimkus, a money manager for Raleigh-based BB&T Asset Management, which oversees $17 billion. “There’s nothing good going on in terms of the economy.”

17-Year Low

The S&P 500 Financials Index rose 2.8 percent, rebounding from the lowest closing level in almost 17 years. The 84 percent plunge in the measure from its February 2007 high has surpassed the crash in technology shares after March 2000.

Bank of America Corp. added 14 percent, the third-biggest gain in the Dow average, to $3.57 after a person familiar with the matter said it will sell $8.5 billion in debt backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

“It’s a good sign that a large financial institution which is really critical to lending is going ahead with plans to sell debt,” said Liam Dalton, who oversees about $1.1 billion as the New York-based chief executive officer of Axiom Capital Management. “It reminds investors that if we can get some normal functioning in the credit market, we can get some stability of the real economy and overall market.”

Bank of America will be an “earnings powerhouse” once the economy recovers, Barron’s said in an article published March 7.

GE Bond Sale

General Electric Co. climbed 4.5 percent to $7.38. Its finance arm hired five banks to manage a bond sale under the U.S. government’s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program.

Wells Fargo & Co. increased 14 percent to $9.80 for the second-biggest gain in the S&P 500. Buffett told CNBC that business at the fourth-largest U.S. bank in three years looks “better than ever.” Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. owns 6.9 percent of the bank’s stock.

Stem-cell companies surged President Barack Obama today lifted restrictions on federal funding for embryonic research and called on Congress to provide more money for such study to make the U.S. a leader in the field. Geron Corp. added 18 percent to $4.56. StemCells Inc. climbed 41 percent to $1.94.

Benjamin Graham, the father of value investing and mentor of Buffett, would find most U.S. stocks expensive even after the S&P 500 dropped 56 percent in 17 months.

Graham measured equities against a decade of profits to smooth out distortions, a method that shows the S&P 500 trading at 13.2 times earnings, according to data compiled by Yale University Professor Robert Shiller. At the bottom of the three worst recessions since 1929, the average ratio fell below 10. To reach that level, the S&P 500 would sink another 27 percent.

25% Plunge

Investors who valued companies based on earnings or forecasts covering just one year have been burned as equities kept dropping. The S&P 500 fetched 16.2 times its companies’ 12- month profits on Jan. 7, the lowest since at least 1998, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The index has since declined as much as 25 percent to a 12-year low.

The global economy is likely to shrink for the first time since World War II and trade will decline by the most in 80 years, the World Bank said yesterday. Its assessment is more pessimistic than an International Monetary Fund report in January predicting 0.5 percent global growth this year.

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