Stocks fall as malaise hits Japan
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U.S. stocks fell Monday as evidence piled up that the global economic slowdown is dragging on Asia.
The losses broke the longest winning streak for the Standard & Poor's 500 index since December 2010. The index had risen for six straight days.
Japan's economy grew in the second quarter at a 1.4 percent annual rate, slower than many analysts had expected. Last week, China released dismal figures on retail sales and exports in July. Traders had hoped Beijing would roll out stimulus measures over the weekend. That did not happen.
Slower growth in Asia worries investors because Asia's economic endurance has helped offset weakness in the U.S. and Europe in recent years. Exports from China and Japan are declining as Europe's economic woes hurt consumer confidence there.
"What's happened is the law of gravity is starting to hit," said Doug Cote, chief market strategist at ING Investment Management. Japan is volatile because it is still recovering from last year's massive earthquake and tsunami, he said, and China's growth is slowing sharply.
Yet stocks, bonds and most other investments are all up for the year, Cote noted. He said the markets have been "pricing in Armageddon when clearly things are much better than that." Cote expects stocks to resume their upward trend as fears about the global economy dissipate.
The Dow Jones industrial average closed down 38.52 points at 13,169.43. The S&P 500 declined 1.76 to 1,404.11. The Dow is still up 7.8 percent for the year, the S&P 11.7 percent.
The S&P 500 and Dow have risen every week for the past five weeks. The S&P 500 last wrapped up a five-week climb in mid-March. The Dow hasn't done so since last October.
Mondays, however, have brought mostly losses for the market in recent weeks. The Dow has fallen for 10 out of the past 11 Mondays, and the S&P 500 has finished down five of the last six.
The Nasdaq composite index rose 1.66 points to 3,022.52. The index was helped by solid gains for two of its biggest components, Apple and Google.
Google rose 2.8 percent after announcing that it would cut 20 percent of the staff at Motorola Mobility, the struggling mobile phone maker it acquired in May. Motorola hasn't had a hit product since it introduced the Razr in 2005. Google's stock rose $18.01 to $660.01. Apple rose $8.30 to $630.
Groupon Inc. plunged in after-market electronic trading after the daily deals website said its revenue fell short of analysts' forecasts. Groupon was down $1.41, or 18.7 percent, at $6.14 as of 5:10 p.m. EDT.
Most Asian and European markets closed lower. Stocks edged higher in Spain. Many traders believe that the European Central Bank will take a more active role in fighting the region's debt crisis by reducing borrowing costs for Spain, Italy and others.
Monetary authorities in the U.S. and China also are believed to be weighing plans to boost growth. Central banks have been hesitant so far to get involved with an economy that may be on the cusp of a rebound. They are mindful, however, of the effect that an achingly slow recovery has on businesses and consumers.
China revealed Friday that export growth in July plunged to just 1 percent from 11.3 percent as recently as the prior month. That was well below forecasts of about 5 percent.
The lack of global demand is trimming revenue for U.S. corporations. Many are cutting costs to limit declines in net income.
Investors had divergent reactions to two major asset sales by energy giant BP:
— Tesoro Corp. rose 9.5 percent, the most in the S&P 500 index, after saying it will pay $2.5 billion cash for a California refinery, pipelines, storage terminals and Arco-branded retail outlets in the Southwest. Tesoro'sstock jumped $3.37 to $38.87.
— Eagle Rock Energy Partners fell 2.7 percent after the company agreed to buy two BP gas processing plants in Texas for $227.5 million in cash. The stock fell 24 cents to $8.72.
Among the other big gainers, Sears Holdings Corp. shot up $2.94, or 5.7 percent, to $54.36. The department store chain announced plans to spin off its Hometown and Outlet stores and some hardware stores into a separate, public company.