Miami Herald

After bad economic news, big tech helps Wall Street avert big losses

- — ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK

Most of Wall Street stumbled Thursday, but yet another rise for big technology stocks helped keep the market’s losses in check.

The S&P 500 dropped 12.22 points (0.4%) to 3,246.22, with nearly three out of four stocks in the index falling. Among the hardest-hit were oil producers, banks and other companies that most need the economy to pull out of its recession. Treasury yields also sank in a sign of increased pessimism.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 225.92 points (0.9%) to 26,313.65. The Dow was down as many as 547 points, while the S&P 500 tumbled 1.7% within the first hour of trading.

Stronger-than-expected profit reports from UPS and other companies helped the market trim its losses through the day. So did steadying prices for Amazon and other big tech-oriented stocks, which reported their own results after the day’s trading ended. Anticipati­on for their reports, which proved to be even better than Wall Street expected, helped the Nasdaq composite completely erase its early loss and climb 44.87 (0.4%) to end the day at 10,587.81. The Russell 2000 index of small-company stocks fell 5.53 (0.4%) to 1,495.10.

The jumbled trading came after a report showed that layoffs are continuing at their stubborn pace, denting hopes that the economy can recover nearly as quickly as it plummeted into recession. A separate report on Thursday showed that the U.S. economy contracted at a nearly 33% annual rate in the spring, the worst quarter on record.

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