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TSX takes holiday

TSX takes holiday

articleGenesis Ai CorpMay 24, 20104/company/genesis-ai-corp/news/tsx-takes-holiday
TSX takes holiday

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[{"type":"text","content":"\nTSX takes holiday\n\n\n May 24, 2010 (Baystreet.ca) -- ON WALLSTREETIn New York, stock selling accelerated through the close, with the Dow ending at a three-month low as worries about the global economic outlook overshadowed a bigger-than-expected rise in existing home sales.The Dow Jones industrial average slid 126.82 points, or 1.2%, to 10,066.57, closing at the lowest point since Feb. 2The S&P 500 index skidded 14.04 to 1,073.65. The Nasdaq composite index fell 15.49 points to 2,213.55Stocks had fallen in the early going, turned mixed through the afternoon and then turned lower near the close. The housing market report marked a positive start to a busy week for economic news. Investors are looking for evidence that the U.S. economy is holding up despite the turmoil abroad. More housing reports were due later in the week.Readings are also due on durable goods orders, personal income and spending, and consumer sentiment.Nonetheless, the positive report was countered by continued worries about the European debt crisis. The euro slumped, erasing last week's gains, following reports that Spain's central bank took over a long-established regional savings bank. Stocks ended higher Friday at the end of another rough week, in which worries about the European debt crisis and the flailing euro sent global markets lower. For the week, the Dow and S&P 500 both lost around 4% and the Nasdaq fell around 5%.Stocks have been down more aggressively since hitting rally highs in late April. Since that time, the Dow has lost 9%, the S&P 500 has slipped 10.6% and the Nasdaq has dropped 11.9% through Friday's close. Prior to Friday's advance, all three major indexes were down more than 10% off the highs, meeting the technical definition of a correction. The selling has also raised worries about whether stocks are heading into a bear market, technically a decline of 20% to 30% off the highs.Economically speaking, April existing home sales rose 7.6% to a seasonally adjusted 5.77 million annual unit rate from a 5.36 million unit rate in March, the National Association of Realtors reported shortly after the start of trading. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com expected a smaller rise to 5.65 million units. The rise was due largely to the expiration of the homebuyer tax credit at the end of April.In corporate news, AIG will not face criminal charges, ...

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