Market Recap: CIT Group's Looming Bankruptcy Prompts Heavy Selling

Financial stocks led the day's decliners in a red ink-soaked session

by Elizabeth Harrow (eharrow@sir-inc.com) 10/30/2009 4:29 PM


Thursday's GDP-related momentum proved to be unsustainable today, with stocks falling dramatically in the final trading session of October. The Commerce Department confessed this morning that consumer spending dwindled 0.6% in September, partially reversing the 1% gain recorded in August -- and marking the most significant monthly slide in spending since December. Elsewhere, a troubling development out of the financial sector effectively offset relatively solid reports on consumer sentiment and Chicago-area manufacturing activity. The Wall Street Journal reported this afternoon that embattled CIT Group (CIT) is expected to file for bankruptcy protection as early as Sunday or Monday, with the plan drawing support from major bondholder Carl Icahn. Against this uneasy backdrop, the CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX) skyrocketed 24%, and tapped its highest intraday level since July 8.

CLOSING SUMMARY – INDICES

CLOSING SUMMARY – NYSE AND NASDAQ

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 9,712.73) settled on a final loss of about 250 points, or 2.5% -- giving back all of yesterday's rally, and then some. None of the 30 blue chips managed to eke out a positive session, with Bank of America (BAC) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM) swallowing the day's steepest losses. Despite the dramatic decline, the Dow remains perched above support at its 10-week moving average. The index shed 2.6% this week, but managed a near-imperceptible gain of 0.01% for October.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX – 1,036.19) plummeted almost 30 points, or 2.8%, bringing its weekly decline to 4% and its monthly deficit to 2%. Potential support from the SPX's 80-day moving average rests near 1,023. Finally, the Nasdaq Composite (COMP – 2,045.11) finished on a drop of 52.4 points, or 2.5%. The COMP suffered the week's heaviest loss, shedding 5.1% from last Friday's close. For the month, the index declined 3.6%.

Turning to equities in focus, Genworth Financial (GNW) defied sector-wide selling pressure after swinging to a third-quarter profit ... Alpha Natural Resources (ANR) saw an uptick in call buying ahead of earnings ... MBIA Inc. (MBI) could be stymied by substantial out-of-the-money call open interest ... Rowan Companies (RDC) emerged as a potential bullish pick in the oil services sector ... The Diamonds Trust (DIA) was singled out for a short put spread ... and today's Quote of the Day comes from Luke Ryan, a long-time busker in New York City's Grand Central Terminal. The struggling musician is one of many street performers to be officially sponsored by Unilever (UL), the corporate parent of Axe Instinct deodorant. Ryan told The New York Times that he once echoed Neil Young's vow never to sell out, but he's since found good reason to publicly advocate the use of deodorant:

"If there was more of that stuff going on in the subway, it'd be a better place."

But these weren't the only headlines hitting the Street today. Click on the links below for our Daily Option Blog coverage of:

And, in case you missed it, Jocelynn Drake discussed the prospects for Nabors Industries (NBR) in this week's edition of Options Spotlight. Click here to watch the video.

For today's activity in crude oil, gold futures, options, and more, turn to page 2.

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