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Wall Street pulls off another winStocks stage another late session rally, despite subprime, credit market worries.NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Wall Street cobbled together another late session rally Thursday, with the Dow industrials finishing 100 points higher, even amid persistent subprime and credit market fears. The Dow Jones industrial index (up 89.82 to 13,452.19, Charts) gained about 100 points, finishing nearly 0.8 percent higher based on early tallies. The broader S&P 500 (up 6.35 to 1,472.16, Charts) climbed over 0.4 percent higher after dipping into negative territory earlier in the session, while the tech-laden Nasdaq Composite index (up 22.11 to 2,575.98, Charts) rose nearly 0.9 percent. Treasury prices climbed, lowering the yield on the benchmark 10-year note at 4.76 percent from 4.79 percent late Wednesday. Bond prices and yields move in opposite directions. Oil prices remained near record highs reached earlier this week as U.S. light crude for September delivery rose 39 cents to $76.92 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The dollar fell versus the euro and gained against the yen. COMEX gold for December gained 70 cents to $676.60 an ounce. Here's what was moving before the close: Subprime worries and concerns about the impact of tighter credit standards on the financial sector had kept a lid on gains, before stocks surge in the final half hour of trading. "There are still some rumors out there that funding issues are becoming growing concerns," said Richard Cripps, chief market strategist for St. Louis-based broker Stifel Nicolaus. "There's still a fair amount of uncertainty regarding the outlook of that [financial] sector and its multiplying effect through the economy." Shares of a number of financial firms including Bear Stearns (down $2.53 to $115.77, Charts, Fortune 500), Goldman Sachs (down $1.83 to $187.17, Charts, Fortune 500) and Morgan Stanley (down $0.61 to $63.77, Charts, Fortune 500) were all lower in afternoon trade. Subprime concerns resurfaced after mortgage lender Accredited Home Lenders Holding (down $2.90 to $5.31, Charts) revealed in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it was not certain it would continue to operate because of adverse conditions of the subprime mortgage market. Shares of the company tumbled nearly 38 percent on the news. Stocks got off to a modestly higher start following improved earnings from Nokia (up $2.51 to $30.92, Charts), Starbucks (down $0.28 to $26.92, Charts, Fortune 500) and Dow component Walt Disney (up $0.49 to $34.32, Charts, Fortune 500). A weaker-than-expected reading on June factory orders and a surprisingly low weekly jobless claims reading briefly jolted stocks, but ultimately had little impact as Wall Street braced for the big economic reading of the week: Friday's employment report for July. Right now, U.S. employers are expected to have added 1350,000 jobs last month, up from June, according to Briefing.com. "I think if the number comes in at or above expectations it will be a positive for the stock market in the near term and provide some stability," said Cripps. In other corporate news, financial data processor Fiserv (up $0.31 to $49.50, Charts, Fortune 500) said it will acquire the electronic payment processing company Checkfree (up $8.57 to $45.40, Charts) for $4.4 billion in cash, soothing recent concerns that dealmaking will dry up on Wall Street in the wake of recent troubles in the credit market. Checkfree shares soared about 23 percent on the news. Market breadth was positive. Winners beat losers by nearly 2 to 1 on volume of 1.97 billion on the New York Stock Exchange. Advancers topped decliners 4 to 3 on volume of 2.48 billion on the Nasdaq. |
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