NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Normally a big decline would set up Wall Street for a technical
rebound. But that may not be the case this week, even after the market
posted its worst weekly loss for the year and the S&P fell for six
straight sessions.
With the corporate earnings
season drawing to an end and recent U.S. economic data raising doubts
about the pace of growth, the S&P 500, which is down 7.3 percent so
far in May, could decline further this week as concerns about the
financial health of Europe persist.
"What has changed
in the world since April? We went from hearing a constant refrain that
the world is awash in money and markets must go higher to hearing nobody
wants to take any risk ... All in a week," said Peter Cecchini, global
head of institutional equity derivatives at Cantor Fitzgerald & Co
in New York.
The S&P 500
fell 4.3 percent for the week, its steepest weekly decline this year,
and closed below 1,300 for the first time in four months.
The hotly awaited market debut of Facebook
on Friday was marred by technology glitches on the Nasdaq in sending
messages back to the brokerages that handled orders of Facebook Inc for individual, or "retail," investors.
Those problems rekindled fears about the market's electronic trading
system and caused some investors to stay away from equities.
Solid corporate earnings and upbeat U.S. economic indicators
had fueled the rally in U.S. stocks, offsetting jitters over Europe.
But with earnings almost out of the way and data starting to disappoint,
investors have shifted their focus back to headlines out of Europe.
Leaders of the
Group of 8 major industrial economies were meeting this weekend to try
to tackle the financial crisis in Europe. U.S. President Barack Obama,
the G8 host, has urged European leaders repeatedly to do more to
stimulate growth, fearing contagion from the euro crisis that could hurt
the U.S. economy and his chances of re-election in November.
"The market is
extremely oversold. Nonetheless, all major indicators remain on sell
signals," Larry McMillan, president of options research firm McMillan
Analysis Corp, said in a report on Friday.
THE FACEBOOK EFFECT
The disappointing debut curbed investors' appetite for other social media stocks. Hardest hit was Zynga Inc , which closed down 13.4 percent to $7.16 after falling as low as $6.40. The stock was temporarily halted twice due to sudden declines.
LinkedIn shares fell 5.7 percent to $99.02, and Groupon fell 6.7 percent to $11.58. Zynga and Groupon, both of which went public late last year, are also trading below their IPO prices.
Despite the disappointing market debut and the weak performance of social media stocks, market participants are still optimistic about Facebook going forward.
"In any brand new area, social media in this case, most are going to be losers and only some are going to be winners. Yes, the IPO was disappointing, but Facebook is clearly the winner here and others aren't," said Randy Warren, chief investment strategist at Warren Financial Service.
The coming week's economic data includes April's existing home sales on Tuesday at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT). Existing home sales are forecast at a 4.60 million-unit annual, up from 4.48 million in March.
New homes sales
figures are due on Wednesday at 10 a.m. EDT. April's new home sales are
also expected to post an increase, gaining about 7,000 units over a
328,000-unit annual rate in March.
Initial jobless
claims and durable goods orders will be published on Thursday at 8:30
a.m. Consumer sentiment is due at 9:55 a.m. on Friday.
For the week, the Dow was off 3.5 percent and the Nasdaq was down 5.3 percent.
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