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Strong Bank Profits Lift Stock Prices

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

Better-than-expected profits from Citigroup and Bank of America lifted Wall Street on Monday as investors grew more optimistic about a strong economic rebound. A late-day sell-off, however, limited the gains.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose as much as 158 points before losing momentum in the final hour of trading. Analysts said it was unclear if reports of a trading error at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were behind the drop or if, instead, investors opted to turn cautious after the large runup.

“The rally began March 11, and we’re now entering the fifth month. On top of that, we had a 160-point move -- so it was up, up and away,” said Larry Wachtel, analyst at Wachovia Securities. “There might have been an aspect of too much, too soon.”

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The Dow closed up 57.56 points, or 0.6%, at 9,177.15. The technology-laden Nasdaq composite index gained 20.89 points, or 1.2%, to 1,754.82. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 5.72 points, or 0.6%, to 1,003.86.

Winners led losers by 3 to 2 on the New York Stock Exchange and by almost 2 to 1 on Nasdaq. Trading was active.

Dow component Citigroup advanced 97 cents to $47.12 after the nation’s largest financial institution reported second-quarter earnings that beat estimates by 3 cents a share. The bank also raised its quarterly dividend to 35 cents from 20 cents.

Bank of America rose 58 cents to $83.46 after it also posted quarterly profit that topped expectations.

Intel, another Dow member, gained 68 cents to $24.02 after Merrill Lynch raised the technology company’s stock rating to “buy” from “neutral.” The company releases its quarterly earnings report today.

But shares lost some of their early gains after an apparent error in electronic trading in stock index futures. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange was forced to unwind certain trades, and rumors about the error also affected the market, analysts said.

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While stocks have surged in recent months, investors have been watching the second-quarter earnings season for evidence that the economic recovery is firmly underway. Analysts say companies will largely meet, if not beat, expectations, creating more opportunities for stock gains.

“We’re getting some indications that the rally was actually based on something fundamental” rather than investors’ expectations, said Ed Peters, chief investment officer at PanAgora Asset Management Inc. in Boston. “With all this news coming together, it’s mostly good.”

Merger news also gave the market a boost.

Pasadena-based Overture Services climbed $2.54 to $24.05 after Yahoo agreed to buy the Web-search advertising company in a deal worth about $1.6 billion. Yahoo inched up 1 cent to $32.20.

OfficeMax surged $1.42, or 20%, to $8.60 after Boise Cascade agreed to buy the office-supplies retailer for nearly $1.2 billion in cash and stock; the deal would double the size of its office products distribution business. Boise Cascade declined $1.56 to $21.87.

Treasury yields rose on expectations of economic growth. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note climbed to 3.72% from Friday’s close of 3.63%. Bond traders will be closely monitoring Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan’s testimony to Congress today and Wednesday on the health of the U.S. economy.

In other highlights:

* Decliners included Cigna, which fell $3.45 to $41.04 after the health insurer lowered its 2003 earnings estimates, citing a $100-million restructuring that had not gone as well as planned. Cigna HealthCare president Patrick Welch is also leaving the company.

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* McDonald’s dropped 66 cents to $21.92 even though the fast-food chain said it expected to meet Wall Street’s estimates for second-quarter profit; the earnings, however, are still 2 cents a share lower than results at the same time last year.

* Japan’s Nikkei stock average gained 1.3% on Monday. Key indexes rose 1.7% in France and Britain and 2.1% in Germany.

Market Roundup, C10-11

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