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Stock market cuts its losses with late comeback

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NEW YORK — When the stock market began tumbling Thursday, many people assumed the selloff had something to do with the Supreme Court ruling to uphold President Barack Obama’s health care law. But for a lot of investors, it was the same old concerns about Europe, along with a few new worries.

The market fell sharply in early trading, before the high court’s announcement, as investors questioned whether a European Union meeting in Brussels would yield the same results as many meetings before it — vague pledges, rather than concrete plans for what to do with struggling countries like Greece and Spain.

Bank stocks also declined, in part because of a report that a trading loss at JPMorgan Chase first estimated at $2 billion could be as much as $9 billion.

U.S. stocks still closed lower for the day, but they bounced back in the last half-hour of trading. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down nearly 25 points, after falling as much as 177.

There were varying explanations for the late comeback, but most seemed to focus on Europe, including rumors that the European Central Bank would cut interest rates and that EU leaders might actually emerge from this week’s meetings with a plan. Late Thursday, a top EU official said leaders had agreed to devote $149 billion to “immediate growth measures.”

Nicholas Colas, ConvergEx Group chief market strategist, said blaming the health care ruling for the market’s losses was “a convenient excuse.”

“No doubt that the court’s decision was disappointing,” he said, “but I really think the indecisiveness of European policy makers at the nth summit on the same topic is the cause of the decline.”

Other traders had similarly low expectations.

“The first one thousand summits, I was pretty excited,” deadpanned Jeff Sica, president and chief investment officer of SICA Wealth Management in Morristown, N.J.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was down about 100 points around 10 a.m., just before the Supreme Court ruled. Then it fell more steeply but recovered most of those losses, ending down 24.75 points at 12,602.26.


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Dice Holdings buys FINS.com from Dow Jones


By MarketWatch

Dice Holdings Inc.


/quotes/zigman/461282/quotes/nls/dhx DHX
+3.99%



, a provider of specialized career-related websites, bought the assets of FINS.com, a career-resource site for financial professionals owned by Dow Jones Co.

Dice also entered into an exclusive partnership with Dow Jones to continue operating the online career center for Dow Jones sites WSJ.com and Marketwatch.com in the U.S. Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

Dow Jones is the publisher of The Wall Street Journal and this newswire, and is owned by News Corp. (NWSA, NWS).

“We are incredibly proud of the organic growth of FINS in just three years and believe the best way to continue success is to work with a leading provider of career services for professional communities,” said Alisa Bowen, head of product for Dow Jones. “Dice has a proven track record, and we look forward to working with them, as we continue to focus on providing our users even more careers and management content.”

Dice already runs specialized career websites for professionals in technology and engineering, financial services, energy and health care.

Dow Jones launched FINS in 2009, providing job openings and news, research on companies and career advice. The stand-alone site has a dedicated editorial staff that provides columns and other career-oriented content.

The sale comes only a day after News Corp. confirmed plans to separate its publishing business from its film and television units, creating two separate publicly traded companies and allowing the more-lucrative entertainment side to split from the slower-growth publishing side.

Dow Jones also recently disclosed plans to close the print edition of SmartMoney magazine.

Dice shares closed up 4% at $9.39, while New Corp.’s Class A shares closed at $22.29. Both were unchanged after hours.

Copyright (c) 2012 Dow Jones Company, Inc.

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Surprise: Stocks having a strong year after ups, downs

NEW YORK — For all the scary headlines — a bailout of Spanish banks, JPMorgan’s huge trading loss, the sputtering job market, Facebook’s failed initial public offering — it’s a wonder stocks aren’t down more this year.

Actually, stocks aren’t down. That was a trick sentence. At the halfway mark for 2012, stocks are up more than 8 percent.

“People think we’re down because memories are short,” says Rex Macey, chief investment officer at Wilmington Trust Investment Advisors. “It feels like the market’s been worse than it actually has.”

The year began with investors focusing on corporate America’s record profits and scooping up stocks. The Standard Poor’s 500 index surged 12 percent from January through March.

It looked like that gain might be wiped out in the second quarter. Investors worried about Europe’s inability to find a lasting solution to its debt crisis and about slower job growth in the United States.

Then came Friday: European leaders announced a broad strategy to funnel money into failing banks and keep borrowing costs down for governments, and stocks soared around the world.

It all left the SP 500 up a healthy 8.3 percent for the year.

What happens next will probably depend on corporate earnings again. For April through June, they are expected to fall 0.7 percent from a year ago, according to SP Capital IQ, a research firm. That would be the first drop in nearly three years.

So far, though, stocks in the U.S. are trouncing those in many countries. European markets are nearly all down this year, and several are down more than 10 percent. And many big emerging markets are struggling. China is down 1 percent, Russia 7 percent and Brazil 14 percent.

The backdrop is a darkening economic picture. Consumer confidence in the U.S. has sunk for four straight months, and a report next Friday is expected to show a fourth straight month of weak job growth.

As if that weren’t bad enough, U.S. companies, from retailers to consumer-goods makers to technology firms, are talking down investor expectations for how much they’ll earn over the next several months, and that is sinking their stocks.

Tally them up, and for every company raising its expected earnings, nearly four are lowering them, according to Thomson Reuters, a financial-information company. Projections haven’t been that negative in more than a decade.

“We began the year thinking we’d achieved escape velocity,” says Barry Knapp, chief U.S. equity strategist at Barclays Capital. “But the second quarter data has deteriorated.”

Well, not all of it. The price of gasoline has dropped to a five-month low, which means Americans have more money to spend elsewhere and boost the economy. And the housing market may finally be recovering.

Prices of homes in most major cities rose in April, the latest month for which data are available, and the trend may continue. The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage has fallen to 3.66 percent, the lowest on record.

James Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management, says falling gas prices and mortgage rates have kick-started economic growth in the second halves of the previous two years, and he thinks they will this time, too.

He thinks the SP 500 could end 2012 at 1,500, up 19 percent for the year. It closed Friday at 1,362.

If the worst of Europe’s debt crisis is indeed over, Paulsen’s target doesn’t seem so bullish. But stocks have rallied on hopes of a permanent fix before, only to be dashed on news of rising Italian borrowing costs, scary Greek elections and teetering Spanish banks. And you can’t rule out the occasional unhappy surprise at home, either.

On May 10, for instance, JPMorgan Chase announced that it had lost at least $2 billion on a complex derivatives bet. A little more than a week later, Facebook’s debut on the markets was marred by technical glitches, a delayed open and a sinking stock price.

“You can’t build wealth without volatility,” says Doug Cote, chief market strategist for ING Investment Management, who says he’s been buying stocks. He calls dips in the prices lately “an extraordinary opportunity.”

What’s got the bulls excited is that stocks look cheap relative to their earnings, at least by some calculations.

The gauge used is called a price-earnings ratio, which you get by dividing a company’s stock price by what Wall Street analysts expect the company to earn per share over the next 12 months. Do that for all 500 companies in the SP index, and you get 12, according to FactSet, a research firm. That is lower than the 10-year average of 14.6, meaning stocks may be cheap and you should buy.

Or to paraphrase Warren Buffett, you should get greedy when investors are fearful.

The problem is, P/E ratios are just a rough measure of the stock value, and the math can be misleading. Some analysts like to compare the current SP 500 P/E ratio with the average going back further, say 35 years. Over that period, stocks have traded at 12.9 times expected earnings, according to David Kostin, a strategist at Goldman Sachs, suggesting stocks now are not so cheap after all.


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Defensive Sector in a Bear Market; Special Report by Leading Financial Site Penny Stock Detectives

In a recent Penny Stock Detectives article, editor Danny Esposito points out when investor sentiment is as negative as it is right now toward the stock market, investors turn to places where they can protect their money. Esposito believes that, within the stock market, there are sectors that traditionally perform well in an economic downturn, with one of them being the consumer staples sector.

New York, NY (PRWEB) June 29, 2012

In a recent Penny Stock Detectives article, editor Danny Esposito points out when investor sentiment is as negative as it is right now toward the stock market, investors turn to places where they can protect their money. Esposito believes that, within the stock market, there are sectors that traditionally perform well in an economic downturn, with one of them being the consumer staples sector.

“When economic growth falters and a recession is a real possibility, investor sentiment moves away from the offensive sectors of the market that perform well when economic growth is strong, such as technology, semiconductors, consumer discretionary and materials; just to name a few,” explains Esposito.

Even in an economic downturn, consumers need to buy food, basic clothing, toilet paper, medicine, beverages, diapers, baby food and other basic household products. This is why investor sentiment shines upon the consumer staples sector of the market when economic times are tough, in Esposito’s opinion.

Consumers pull back on their spending, but the basics—staples—must be purchased regardless. According to Esposito, corporate earnings remain stable with these stocks, further feeding into the positive investor sentiment toward them, and corporate earnings won’t fall dramatically like they would in the other, offensive sectors of the market.

Because corporate earnings are stable, says Esposito, oftentimes consumer staple companies will offer dividend payments to their shareholders, providing another reason why investor sentiment will lean toward the sector in difficult times. The steady corporate earnings provide management with confidence in offering the dividend payment.

Examples of the more common consumer staples stocks cited in the Penny Stock Detectives article are Safeway, Kellogg, CVS Caremark, and Wal-Mart Stores.

Since these are the leaders in the consumer staples space, all of these companies make dividend payments to their shareholders. However, there are smaller companies within the consumer staples space that provide a steady earnings stream and dividend payments as well, Esposito points out.

Esposito believes investor sentiment will turn positive toward the big names first, but the smaller names not only can provide steady dividend payments, but also possible capital gains. This is because investors are overlooking them, until of course, investor sentiment revisits them and sees how undervalued they are.

“These are trying economic times. Investor sentiment is not confident in very much these days. One of the few areas of the market that investors will turn to is the consumer staples sector, because it provides products we simply cannot live without,” says Esposito.

Besides being defensive and so providing protection to investors, the Penny Stock Detectives editor says that the area of consumer staples contains smaller companies that are being overlooked and so can offer big returns.

To see the full article and to learn more about Penny Stock Detectives, visit http://www.pennystockdetectives.com.

The editors of Penny Stock Detectives believe low-priced stocks, when researched properly, present investors with great opportunities to accumulate wealth and to increase the value of their investment portfolios. You can learn more about Penny Stock Detectives at http://www.pennystockdetectives.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/6/prweb9651084.htm


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Study raises concerns about stock price quotes


Fri Jun 29, 2012 7:21pm BST

* Direct feeds provide crucial time advantage for traders

* For best execution, direct feeds eliminate lags -study

* Gap widens in quote dislocations as volatility rises

By Herbert Lash

NEW YORK, June 29 (Reuters) – New research released this
week raises fresh concerns about the usefulness of a stock-price
quoting system sanctioned by U.S. regulators.

Specifically, the price differential between the “publicly”
available best offer for a stock and what traders see via direct
feeds from exchanges can be 3-1/2 cents on volatile days,
according to data by researchers in California and New York.

U.S. stock exchanges must send the best bid and offer for a
stock to an aggregator of prices known as the Securities
Information Processor, or SIP, which is then disseminated for a
nominal fee to brokerages and vendors, among others.

But exchanges also sell the same stock quote directly to
proprietary trading outfits, money managers or anyone else
willing to pay a higher fee, a service that is far faster than
the “public” feed – yet more expensive.

The latency differential – the lag in time it takes for data
to travel – results in a noticeable price gap, according to
research by Terrence Hendershott, an associate professor at the
University of California-Berkeley’s Haas School of Business.
Hendershott was aided by a student and an employee at software
developer Redline Trading Solutions Inc in New York.

The researchers plan to submit their study to academic
journals.

The gap widens on volatile days, and has a correlation with
Wall Street’s so-called fear gauge, the CBOE volatility index or
VIX, said John Hanna of Redline.

The differential is a strong argument for any firms involved
in trading to gain access to direct feeds, which may include
“depth-of-book” prices – the full gamut of bid and offers that
customers have submitted – and the “top of book” quotes that the
Berkeley-Redline research focused on, Hanna said.

“When we see large periods of market volatility and large
economic events, that’s when we see these gaps being the
largest,” he said. “That’s when we feel it’s the most important
for firms to have access to direct feeds” and use of low-latency
infrastructure, he said.

On May 9, for example, when Spain took over Bankia, the
country’s fourth-largest bank, the price differential between
quotes on the direct feed and the SIP for shares in Apple Inc
in early morning trading at times was nearly 5 cents.

Similar price dislocations were noticed throughout a
spectrum of Nasdaq-listed stocks that were researched, Hanna
said.

The cost of direct feeds – upward of $1 million or more a
month – can create a perception of “haves” and “have nots” in
the marketplace, Bill O’Brien, CEO of U.S. exchange Direct Edge,
said in congressional testimony last week.

O’Brien called for broadening the availability and lowering
the price of depth-of-book feeds, data that has become more
critical for investors over the past decade as the use of
algorithms and automated trading has become the norm.

“There could be a very interesting cost-benefit analysis on
getting rid of the SIP. No one’s done that, so I can’t say if it
would be more or less expensive, but I think it’s a question,”
said Adam Sussman, research director at TABB Group.

Another question created by the drag in quotes disseminated
by the SIP is their relevancy, Sussman said. “Is that really the
price that people should be looking at?” he said.

TABB has called for a national depth-of-book feed that could
be disseminated over the SIP. Sussman said the cost of direct
feeds and the infrastructure needed to reduce the time it takes
for data to travel, a concept known as latency, has fallen in
recent years.

“The SIP is something we all pay for, but no one uses,”
Sussman said, citing a common refrain on Wall Street.

(Reporting by Herbert Lash; editing by Matthew Lewis)


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BlackBerry maker’s stock hits 9-year low as new devices delayed yet again

Sales of the once-pioneering BlackBerry phones, which now look ancient next to the latest iPhones and Android devices, fell 41 percent in the latest quarter and likely won’t pick up again until new phones come out.

By then, it might be too late. When the new BlackBerrys go on sale in the first three months of 2013 — assuming there won’t be yet-another delay — people will have even more choices:

— This fall, Apple Inc. is expected to release a new iPhone with an improved Siri virtual assistant. It promises a new mapping service that sports voice navigation.

— Samsung and other phone makers are continually selling new models that run Google’s Android operating software. The next version of Android, expected in mid-July, will have improved search and photo sharing.

— Phones running a revamped version of Microsoft’s Windows system are also coming this fall.

BlackBerrys were once a staple in corporate environments because of their reputation for security and reliability. People pulled them out to check email in restaurants, living rooms and vacation homes such that they became known as “CrackBerrys.” When he became president, Barack Obama refused to part with his BlackBerry despite worries about emails sent through it complying with public-record laws.

But BlackBerrys lost their cachet when iPhones came along and demonstrated that smartphones could be good for more than email. People could now watch movies, play games, read books and update their Facebook statuses easily. Outside software programmers started spewing out apps to extend the devices’ functionality and popularity.

RIM portrays BlackBerry 10 as its way of catching up. It promises the multimedia, Internet browsing and apps experience that customers now demand.

RIM unveiled it last October, long after BlackBerrys began to slip in stature. Analysts had hoped to see BlackBerry 10 phones by early 2012, but RIM said in December that they won’t be available until late in the year because they needed a chipset that wasn’t available yet. Now, RIM said the phones won’t be out until 2013.

With yet another delay, BlackBerry loyalists may not be willing to wait longer. Already, the BlackBerry’s U.S. market share has plummeted from 41 percent in 2007 to less than 4 percent in the first three months of 2012, according to research firm IDC.

“The possibility of a comeback is rapidly diminishing,” analyst Steven Li at Raymond James said in a research note. He added that the delay also could discourage outside software developers from writing BlackBerry 10 apps that rival the thousands available for iPhones and Android devices.

Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu said RIM’s main concern should be “more about staying alive. We believe the company needs to be careful with its cash or risk facing bankruptcy.”


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Dow’s Lonely Loser: JPMorgan Closes In The Red

Jamie Dimon, chairman of the board, president ...

(Image credit: AFP/Getty Images via @daylife)

Friday was a tremendous day for U.S. stocks, with the SP 500 soaring 2.5% and the Dow Jones industrial average up 2.2%. The 30-stock Dow’s 278-point gain was not a total whitewash though, with one component putting up a loss in the broadly-positive session.

JPMorgan Chase lost 0.4%, or 15 cents, to close at $35.73, capping a week in which it became clear the bank’s losses from its so-called “London Whale” trades are likely to be worse than the $2 billion figure it had a handle on when Jamie Dimon disclosed the blunder May 10.

While the reported $9 billion figure may be a worst-case scenario, other sources say the figure is in the $4-$6 billion range, more than double the May 10 estimate. More details are likely forthcoming July 13, when the bank is set to release second-quarter earnings. Shares of JPMorgan have come off their early June lows, but have not come within hailing distance of the $40 threshold since disclosing the losses.

Friday’s dip came on a banner day for the Dow, its second-best one-day outing of the month and year.While JPMorgan was the only loser,  rival Bank of America paced the advance with a 5.7% surge that was easily the index’s best. The rally, sealing the market’s best June in more than a decade, came after European leaders cleared a plan to allow the region’s bailout mechanism to directly recapitalize banks in Spain, and potentially Italy, and put the possibly of bond purchases from the facilities in play. (See “The Blessing Of Low Expectations.”)

 


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Saudi Shares Advance on European Debt Optimism, Oil-Price Surge

Shares in Saudi Arabia, the Arab
world’s biggest stock market, rose the most in 10 weeks after
U.S. equities rallied on optimism that an accord among European
leaders on banks will help contain the region’s debt crisis.

Saudi Basic Industries Corp., the world’s largest
petrochemicals maker, and Al-Rajhi Bank (RJHI), the kingdom’s biggest
bank by market value, advanced the most since April 17. National
Industrialization Co. gained the most since June 6. The Tadawul
All Share Index (SASEIDX)
rose 2 percent to 6,715.70 at 11:24 a.m. in the
capital Riyadh.

“The Saudi market was supported by positive news from the
European summit,” Turki Fadaak, the head of research at Albilad
Investment Co. in Riyadh, said today. “This led to a strong
rise in oil and commodity prices.”

Global stocks rallied on the last day of the week, with the
SP 500 surging 2.5 percent for its biggest advance of the year,
as euro-area leaders agreed to relax conditions on emergency
loans for Spanish banks and possible help for Italy. In the
U.S., economic reports during the week showed that home sales
and orders for durable goods rebounded while consumer spending
stalled and confidence among Americans declined to the lowest
level this year.

Oil rose the most in more than three years on speculation
that Europe’s debt crisis may be contained. Oil for August
delivery gained $7.27 to settle at $84.96 a barrel on the New
York Mercantile Exchange
yesterday.

Saudi Basic Industries, known as Sabic, gained 2.5 percent
to 91.5 riyals, while Rajhi Bank jumped 3.1 percent to 74
riyals. National Industrialization advanced 2.3 percent to 31
riyals.

Saudi Arabia’s stock exchange is the only Gulf Arab bourse
open on Saturdays.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Glen Carey in Riyadh at
gcarey8@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Andrew J. Barden at
barden@bloomberg.net


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Health care, bank stocks lead stock market lower

NEW YORK (AP) — When the stock market began tumbling Thursday, many people assumed the selloff had something to do with the Supreme Court ruling to uphold President Barack Obama’s health care law. But for a lot of investors, it was the same old concerns about Europe, along with a few new worries.

The market fell sharply in early trading, before the high court’s announcement, as investors questioned whether a European Union meeting in Brussels would yield the same results as many meetings before it — vague pledges, rather than concrete plans for what to do with struggling countries like Greece and Spain.

Bank stocks also declined, in part because of a report that a trading loss at JPMorgan Chase first estimated at $2 billion could be as much as $9 billion.

U.S. stocks still closed lower for the day, but they bounced back in the last half-hour of trading. The Dow Jones industrial average closed down nearly 25 points, after falling as much as 177.

There were varying explanations for the late comeback, but most seemed to focus on Europe, including rumors that the European Central Bank would cut interest rates and that EU leaders might actually emerge from this week’s meetings with a plan. Late Thursday, a top EU official said leaders had agreed to devote $149 billion to “immediate growth measures.”

Nicholas Colas, ConvergEx Group chief market strategist, said blaming the health care ruling for the market’s losses was “a convenient excuse.”

“No doubt that the court’s decision was disappointing,” he said, “but I really think the indecisiveness of European policy makers at the nth summit on the same topic is the cause of the decline.”

Other traders had similarly low expectations.

“The first one thousand summits, I was pretty excited,” deadpanned Jeff Sica, president and chief investment officer of SICA Wealth Management in Morristown, N.J.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was down about 100 points around 10 a.m., just before the Supreme Court ruled. Then it fell more steeply but recovered most of those losses, ending down 24.75 points at 12,602.26.

The Standard Poor’s 500 index dropped 2.81 points to end at 1,329.04 and the Nasdaq composite fell 25.83 points to 2,849.49. Both indexes bounced back from bigger losses.

There was disappointment to be found in almost all corners of the market. The Commerce Department said the American economy expanded at a 1.9 percent annual rate in the first quarter, a weak pace that isn’t expected to pick up. Family Dollar fell after reporting that it missed analysts’ profit estimates.

David Lefkowitz, senior equity strategist at UBS wealth management research in New York, was immune to the media frenzy around the Supreme Court ruling. He watched for news out of Europe because, he said, “There’s not much else going on.” Health insurance companies make up only about 1 percent of the Standard Poor’s 500, he said.

Some critics of the new health care law say it will hurt small businesses by requiring more of them to provide insurance for employees.

Piling that extra cost on businesses is “not a way to get people off the fence to hire people,” said Rick Fier, vice president of stock trading at Conifer Securities in New York.

Lefkowitz disagreed. The Supreme Court was never considering whether to strike down the provision affecting employers, but only the mandate requiring individuals to buy insurance. So businesses should have already been expecting to take on the extra costs, he said. (However, if the Supreme Court had rejected the individual mandate, that could have eventually led to getting rid of the employer mandate as well.)

Paul Zemsky, head of asset allocation at ING Investment Management in New York, thought the Supreme Court ruling was affecting the market, but indirectly. The ruling, he said, crystallizes the federal government’s polarization ahead of the election.

Republicans, who will feel ripped off, and Democrats, who will feel vindicated, are now less likely to agree on how to solve looming complications like tax increases and spending cuts that are supposed to take effect in January. “This doesn’t make me feel like the spirit of compromise will be in the air,” Zemsky said.

Though health care stocks fell overall, the companies had disparate reactions to the ruling. Insurers WellPoint and Aetna fell. Hospitals such as HCA Holdings and Community Health Systems rose.

When all of the new health care requirements kick in, insurers will have more customers, but they’ll also be subject to more taxes and regulations. They’ll also have to take on less-profitable customers, such as patients who are already sick.

But hospital emergency rooms, which have to treat patients regardless of whether they’re insured, are more likely to get paid if almost everyone they treat has insurance. Having insurance will also spur more people who might have otherwise put it off to seek medical treatment.

“Insured people have more purchasing power, and they’ll buy whatever you make, whether you’re a supplier of drugs or devices,” said Gerard Wedig, a health care economist at the University of Rochester.

U.S.-listed shares of Barclays, the British bank, plunged 12 percent. A day earlier, the bank had agreed to settle charges with U.S. and U.K. regulators who accused it of manipulating key international interest rates.

New York-based bank JPMorgan Chase fell 2.5 percent, more than any other company in the Dow index, after the New York Times reported that a trading loss there first estimated at $2 billion could eventually reach $9 billion.


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Crude Sinks Below $78

NEW YORK—U.S. oil futures tumbled sharply on renewed fears that this week’s euro-zone summit would again fall short of resolving the region’s debt crisis.

Light, sweet crude for August delivery settled $2.52, or 3.1%, lower at $77.69 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The decline was a new settlement low for 2012.

Brent crude for August delivery on the ICE futures exchange shed 2.3%, or $2.14, to $91.36 a barrel.

The fall came as European leaders converged on Brussels for another summit to try to resolve that region’s sovereign-debt crisis. Germany’s finance …


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