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Dow Falls 157 on Deepening Global Woes

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Deepening worries about the global economy’s prospects for growth in 1998 sent world stock markets tumbling again Wednesday, pushing some close to their lows reached in the late-October market plunge.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average sank 157.41 points, or 2.1%, to 7,401.32, as heavy selling pummeled industrial, technology and banking shares--all of which are viewed as particularly vulnerable to the spreading Asian economic “flu.”

Another steep decline Wednesday in many Asian markets, including Tokyo and Hong Kong, raised fresh concerns that the widespread devaluation of currencies, stocks and real estate values in Asia since June will drastically slow economic growth in that region soon.

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What’s more, Brazil’s stock market crumbled Wednesday, with the country’s key share index losing 10.2%, as investors bailed out of stocks in the wake of the government’s new austerity plan--which was aimed at stabilizing markets by seeking to protect Brazil’s currency from devaluation.

Although the plan may indeed protect the Brazilian real’s value, it is almost certain to slash the country’s economic growth rate in 1998. That, in turn, will dampen growth across Latin America, analysts said.

Combined with Asia’s woes, Latin America’s troubles will assure weaker order growth for many U.S. exporters next year, experts said.

The U.S. stock market’s renewed slide “is saying that earnings are going to be a problem next year, and I think that’s right,” said David Shulman, strategist at Salomon Bros.

Among companies heavily dependent on foreign business, machinery giant Caterpillar plunged $3.44 to $44.75, and semiconductor maker Texas Instruments slumped $12.50 to $93.75.

Some Wall Street pros say Wednesday’s U.S. market decline--the worst one-day loss since the Oct. 27 mini-crash, when the Dow tumbled 554 points, or 7.2%--reflects a change in thinking on the part of investors who have until now been largely unruffled by troubles overseas.

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“I think there’s been much too much complacency” about the potential effects of global market and economic turmoil on U.S. markets, said Charles Pradilla, strategist at Cowen & Co. in New York.

Falling stocks outnumbered winners 2,380 to 664 on the New York Stock Exchange in heavy trading. The Nasdaq composite index slid 2.7% to 1,541.72.

Many world markets, including the U.S. market, rebounded sharply after the Oct. 27 decline as bargain hunters swooped in. But although the Dow remains well above its low of 7,161.15 on Oct. 27, many other markets on Wednesday fell to levels that threaten to test the lows set in late October.

Mexico’s main stock index, for example, dropped 192.34 points, or 4.2%, to 4,334.79 on Wednesday, pulled down by Brazil’s sell-off. Wednesday’s close is just 1.7% above the Oct. 27 low of 4,263.89, when the market fell 13.3%.

“Testing those lows would be a classic pattern” for stock prices after a steep decline, then rebound, Pradilla said. If markets hold above the October lows, it could indicate that prices are stabilizing. A break below the October lows could herald a major new decline.

But even if U.S. stocks hold at current levels, the damage already done has been much worse than the Dow index reveals, some analysts say. Although the Dow now is off 10.4% from its record high set in August, 23 of the index’s 30 stocks have declined by more than that amount from their individual peaks. More than half the Dow stocks are down 15% or more.

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The greatest declines have occurred in industrial and tech issues. Some analysts expect the selling in those stocks to worsen as the extent of the global economy’s slowdown becomes clearer.

“You’re going to see darker days for cyclical stocks,” said Thomas McManus, strategist at NatWest Securities in New York.

Many economists, however, still insist that foreign troubles won’t have more than a modest impact on U.S. economic growth in 1998. What’s more, they note that bond yields continue to fall--which should be a plus for the economy and stock prices eventually.

The 30-year Treasury bond yield sank to 6.10% on Wednesday from 6.14% on Monday.

Among Wednesday’s highlights:

* Industrial losers included Deere, down $2.56 to $50.44; Ford, off $1.94 to $43.19; and GE, down $1.63 to $65.75.

* Banking stocks fell on worries that credit problems with overseas borrowers--and with Japanese banks--may mushroom. Chase Manhattan slumped $5.63 to $106.75, and Bankers Trust lost $4 to $110.13.

Market Roundup, D7

* MORE TROUBLE IN JAPAN: Stocks slump as Japanese banks’ money costs rise. D3

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Lower Again

Economic concerns sent stocks slumping again worldwide on Wednesday, deepening the declines from markets’ 1997 peaks. A sampling:

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Country (index) Wed. drop Drop from ’97 high Brazil (Bovespa) -10.2% -44.1% Mexico (Bolsa) -4.2 -19.7 Hong Kong (Hang Seng) -4.0 -42.8 U.S. (Nasdaq composite) -2.7 -11.7 Japan (Nikkei-225) -2.7 -26.2 U.S. (Dow 30) -2.1 -10.4 U.S. (S&P; 500) -1.9 -7.8 Germany (DAX-30) -1.9 -18.0

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Source: Times research

Bear Tracks?

Although the Dow Jones industrial average is off a relatively modest 10.4% from its record high set on Aug. 6, most of its 30 component stocks have fared much worse. The Dow, a price-weighted index, is being held up by strength in some of its highest-priced shares. Declines in the Dow 30 from their 1997 highs:

*--*

1997 Wednesday Percentage Stock high close change Eastman Kodak $94.75 $61.56 -35% Sears 65.25 45.38 -30 Caterpillar 61.63 44.75 -27 AlliedSignal 47.13 34.88 -26 Alcoa 89.63 66.06 -26 Boeing 60.50 46.44 -23 International Paper 61.00 46.81 -23 Union Carbide 56.81 43.94 -23 United Technologies 88.94 69.50 -22 Coca-Cola 72.63 56.44 -22 Merck 108.19 86.94 -20 Hewlett-Packard 72.94 58.75 -19 Philip Morris 48.13 40.38 -16 Dupont 69.75 59.00 -15 McDonald’s 54.88 46.38 -15 Goodyear 71.25 60.69 -15 General Motors 72.44 62.81 -13 General Electric 74.63 65.75 -12 Exxon 67.25 58.88 -12 Johnson & Johnson 66.50 58.38 -12 IBM 109.44 96.63 -12 American Express 86.56 77.38 -11 J.P. Morgan 122.81 109.38 -11 3M 105.50 95.44 -10 Travelers 76.44 68.94 -10 AT&T; 50.94 46.75 -8 Chevron 89.19 81.88 -8 Procter & Gamble 77.56 71.69 -8 Walt Disney 87.81 83.06 -5 Wal-Mart 39.56 37.94 -4 Dow average 8,259.31 7,401.32 -10%

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Source: Times research

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