A caveman could do it
Stocks were sharply lower at midday on news this morning that small-cap insurer American International Group Inc. (NYSE:AIG) posted the largest quarterly loss in U.S. corporate history, down $61.7 billion in Q4.
At noon the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) was down 15.25, or nearly 4%, at 373.77, while the S&P 500 was down 3.66% to 708.15, and the Dow was down 3.25% to a staggering 6,833.54 — the first time the index has dipped below 7,000 in 11 years.
Myriad data reports out today showed personal spending rose about 0.6% in January and incomes rose 0.4%, while construction spending fell 3.3%, or more than twice as much as analysts predicted. Even though manufacturing contracted in February for the thirteenth straight month, the pace was slower than expected.
Small caps bucking the downward trend this morning included business service outsourcer ICT Group, Inc. (Nasdaq:ICTG), up nearly 70% after Aegis Limited made an acquisition proposal to ICT’s board. FGX International Holdings Limited (Nasdaq:FGXI) is seeing an 18% uptick following a strong sales and earning release late last week, and Noven Pharmaceuticals is up 10% ahead of its scheduled earnings release on Thursday.
On the downside, Ship Finance International (NYSE:SFL) is down over 23% after reporting a Q4 loss last week.
A Caveman could do it
*****Warren Buffett’s annual report for Berkshire Hathaway was released over the weekend. His letter to his shareholders is one of the most widely read investment documents there is. Buffett’s down home charm, inviting sense of humor and investment savvy are always a great read...
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