por admin » Mar May 04, 2010 3:18 pm
Lo interesante de estas cinco caidas mas grandes del anio es que en todos los casos los motivos fueron originados por los gobiernos.
1. Credito soberano (gobiernos)
2. Los democratas (algunos) estaban contra la nominacion de Bernanke
3. Obama anuncia que recortara a los bancos
4. Contagio de la deuda soberana en Europa (gobiernos)
5. El gobierno acusa a Goldman de fraude.
Moraleja, moraleja, hay que seguir la politica.
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Los cinco peores dias del 2010
MarketBeat Rewind: The Five Worst Days of 2010
By Matt Phillips
Associated Press
Though equipped with the Excel skills of a high-functioning Neanderthal, we still figured our loyal readers would appreciate a bit of context for Tuesday’s ugly stock market falloff. So here they are, the worst five days of 2010 for the Dow Industrials. If the Dow finishes the day down by 2.1% or more, that’d make it the second worst of 2010. Anything above 2.6% would take the cake.
1.Feb. 4 — The Dow fell 268.37 points, its worst one-day point slide since April 20, 2009, and briefly dipped below the psychologically important 10000 level for the first time since November. All in all it fell 2.6% for the day to end at 10002.18, a three-month low, thanks to fears about the global economy and sovereign credit.
2.Jan. 22 — The Dow fell 2.1% to 10172.98 on news out of Washington, where more Democratic senators came out against the nomination of Ben Bernanke to a second term as Federal Reserve chairman.
3.Jan. 21 — The Dow fell 213.27 points, or 2%, to 10389.88, amid President Obama’s announcement of plans to limit banks’ size and to move back toward the long-standing division between commercial banks, which cater to the broad public, and investment firms, which take bigger risks and trade for their own accounts.
4.April 27 –The Dow fell 213.04, or 1.9%, to 10991.99, on renewed concern about debt contagion in Europe. Standard & Poor’s sparked the selloff by cutting Greece’s debt rating to below investment grade, or “junk,” and cutting Portugal’s rating two notches. The move on Portugal inflamed investors’ fears that Greece’s woes are starting to spread.
5.April 30 — The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 158.71 points, or 1.4%, to 11008.61, driven by declines in all 30 of its components. News that Goldman Sachs Group was the subject of a criminal probe prompted investors to sell financial shares.