Stock indexes fall with Cyprus in mind
Commerce Department report casts housing in recovery mode
By Kate Gibson,
MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — U.S. stock indexes finished mixed on
Tuesday, with the S&P 500 extending its longest losing streak since late
December, as investors considered developments in Cyprus that placed a financial
bailout at risk.
“We would legitimately expect brushfires to emerge out of Europe on occasion
in 2013; the difference this year is we wouldn’t expect prolonged crisis,” said
Jim Russell, senior equity strategist for U.S. Bank Wealth Management.
A stream of reports on Cyprus’s controversial bank
bailout made for choppy markets Tuesday.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell as much as 69 points and climbed up to
62, and ended up 3.76 points at 14,455.82, with Caterpillar Inc.
(NYSE:CAT) pacing losses that included 14 of its 30 components.
Down for a third session, its longest losing run this year, the S&P 500 (SNC:SPX) shed 3.76 points, or 0.2%, to 1,548.34, with energy the worst performing and consumer staples the best of the 10 major sectors.
The Nasdaq Composite index (NASDAQ:COMP) fell 8.5 points, or 0.3%, to 3,229.09.
For every two stocks rising, three fell on the New York Stock Exchange, where 731 million shares traded.
Composite volume surpassed 3.7 billion
Reports about a controversial rescue plan in Cyprus, where banks are closed until Thursday, dominated much of the choppy trading session. Follow streaming coverage of Cyprus bank bailout.
The plan, required by international lenders under the terms of a roughly $13 billion bailout, would place a one-time tax on depositors. The parliament in Cyprus Tuesday rejected an updated proposal, which avoided taxing the smallest depositors but still slapped a 6.75% tax on those with over 20,000 euros ($26,000) on deposit. Large depositors, or those with over 100,000 euros, faced a 9.9% tax rate.
Cyprus parliament rejects tax
Cyprus's parliament Tuesday rejected a controversial bank deposit levy—a precondition for receiving a €10 billion bailout—effectively tearing up the four-day old loan deal the country had negotiated with European and international creditors that it needed to stave off default and a looming meltdown in its financial sector. Matina Stevis reports.While the situation in Cyprus was considered fairly unique -- its tax policy has encouraged a large volume of deposits from wealthy Russians -- the prospect that future European bank bailouts could entail some tax on depositors shook markets Monday and concerns about the situation spilled into Tuesday trading.
Stocks recovered much of their losses near the close after Bloomberg News reported the European Central Bank would provide liquidity to Cyprus, as needed, within the existing rules.
Simple profit-taking was also likely at play as indexes sold off for much of the session.
“The market was poised for a breather. We’ve been awfully strong on a year-to-date basis,” he added, referring to the 8.6% rise by the S&P 500 index.
That gain, which had the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI:DJIA) rising to a record close last week, is attributed by many, including Russell, to the ongoing bond purchases by the Federal Reserve, which on Wednesday concludes a two-day policy-setting session.
“At some point the Fed is going to take its foot off the accelerator, and we may get a preview tomorrow. But we think it will be at the next meeting that comes into sharper focus,” Russell said.

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