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Specialist Frank Masiello watches a television monitor on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange showing a Washington news conference by House Speaker John Boehner AP Photo/Richard Drew
Debt Ceiling

Markets wobble as US debt talks falter

Fitch has placed the US credit rating on a Negative Watch, as the stock market fell today.

THE US STOCK market was whipsawed today as the on-again, off-again talk of a debt deal in Washington made investors wonder just how pessimistic they should be.

Stocks were flat or down all day, but the size of the losses waxed and waned depending on which politician was giving a press conference. The market closed with its first loss in a week, with the Dow Jones industrials down 133 points. Yields on short-term government debt rose sharply as investors worried about the possibility of a default.

Indexes were down only slightly early today, when Republican and Democratic leaders in the Senate reported that a deal over increasing the nation’s borrowing limit appeared to be getting closer.

But after House Republicans came up with their own competing plan later in the day, and it was rejected by Democrats, stocks fell further.

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The stakes are high and the deadline is getting nearer.

Unless the borrowing limit is raised, the U.S. will bump up against a Thursday deadline after which it can no longer borrow money to pay its bills, which could lead to a default on government debt. That possibility has rattled markets all month.

It was clear that traders were hanging on every word out of Washington. The losses on the Dow shrank by about 40 points during a short press conference by House Speaker John Boehner shortly before noon Eastern.

Another reason for Wall Street’s pessimism is that any deal reached this week might simply set up another showdown a few months down the road.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 133.25 points, or 0.9 per cent, to 15,168.01. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 12.08 points, or 0.7 per cent, to 1,698.06. The Nasdaq composite fell 21.26 points, or 0.6 per cent, to 3,794.01.

Read: Senate leaders optimistic on US debt ceiling deal

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Author
Associated Foreign Press
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