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Stocks find footing after fall

A drop in oil prices helps the Dow rise 215 points and nearly recover from the previous day's decline.

Markets

November 28, 2007|Walter Hamilton, Times Staff Writer

Stocks rebounded Tuesday from a sharp decline the day before as investors took comfort from a drop in oil prices and a big cash infusion into ailing Citigroup.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 215 points, or 1.7%, nearly recouping all of the 237 points it shed in Monday's downdraft. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and the Nasdaq composite index also notched advances of at least 1.5% during the volatile session.


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With Tuesday's bounce, the percentage drops in the Dow and the S&P 500 from their record highs last month reverted to single-digit slides, though many analysts were skeptical that the recovery would last.

Investors were cheered by the drop in oil prices, which slid after Saudi Arabia's oil minister pledged a boost in production.

Financial stocks rallied after banking giant Citigroup, whose earnings and capital levels have been thrashed by losses tied to the sub-prime mortgage crisis, got a $7.5-billion investment from the government of Abu Dhabi.

The day was marked by bargain hunting, as investors picked over stocks that had been beaten down this month amid almost daily doses of bad news tied to the mortgage mess.

"The market is continuing to grope through the whole sub-prime credit crisis," said Charles Blood, director of strategy research at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.

Some analysts said Tuesday's rally was nothing more than a respite within a deep downward trend that has further to go.

"We're in a full-fledged bear market," said Paul Desmond, president of Lowry Research Corp., a stock-research firm in North Palm Beach, Fla., calling Tuesday's gain "just a mini-rebound, an inflection point toward lower prices."

Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist of Wells Capital Management, was encouraged that the S&P held above the nadir it reached in August.

"This could be the low for this crisis," he said.

With the banking sector battered in recent months by the sub-prime crisis and resulting credit crunch, Citigroup's ability to secure a capital injection raised hope that others might be able to do the same if they needed to.

"The Citi deal is certainly a relief after a series of negative news on Monday with respect to the financials," said Todd Salamone, director of trading at Schaeffer's Investment Research.

Funds such as Abu Dhabi's "that have plenty of cash may be viewed as a potential rescuer given the balance sheet troubles the banks are having. A weak dollar makes it that much more possible."

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