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Dow keeps week’s hefty gains

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From the Associated Press

Wall Street closed out an impressive week with a mixed performance Friday after disappointing high-tech earnings punctured investors’ enthusiasm over better-than-expected bank earnings reports.

But the major indexes still ended the week with big gains, the result of rising optimism about the troubled financial sector.

The market was clearly pleased when Citigroup, while reporting a second-quarter loss Friday morning, beat analysts’ forecasts and joined Wells Fargo and JPMorgan Chase in delivering stronger results than the market had anticipated. But investors who sent the Dow Jones industrials soaring by more than 480 points over Wednesday and Thursday were brought back down to earth by results from Google, Microsoft and Advanced Micro Devices.

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Google’s results were lower than expected, the result of the weakening economy hurting advertising revenue, while Microsoft missed forecasts by a penny. Also, AMD’s chief executive stepped down after the chip maker posted a wider-than-expected loss.

Still, the market that has hungered for good news about financial companies after a yearlong credit crisis got it from Citigroup. The banking company reported a $2.5-billion second-quarter loss because of write-downs tied to deteriorating credit markets. The results surpassed projections and helped to mitigate some of the market’s concerns after a big loss from Merrill Lynch reported late Thursday.

It was a good sign to some analysts that the market didn’t sell off sharply after two straight days of hefty gains.

“If you look at the fundamentals, not a lot has changed in the fundamentals, but you had the financial crisis come to a head,” said Philip Dow, managing director of equity strategy at RBC Dain Rauscher. “This was a pivotal week that we just went through.”

More banks are among the companies reporting next week: Wachovia, Washington Mutual and Bank of America. And hundreds of other big corporations will also be releasing results, keeping the market on edge as investors try to determine whether an economic rebound might be in the offing.

The Dow rose 49.91 points, or 0.44%, to 11,496.57, adding on to a 483-point gain Wednesday and Thursday.

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Broader stock indicators were mixed. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 0.36 of a point, or 0.03%, to 1,260.68, and the technology-focused Nasdaq composite index dropped 29.52, or 1.28%, to 2,282.78.

For the week, the Dow rose 3.57%, the Nasdaq increased 1.95% and the S&P; rose 1.71%.

Bond yields rose as their prices fell. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to 4.08% from Thursday’s 3.99%.

The dollar was mixed against other major currencies, while gold prices fell.

Meanwhile, oil prices retreated after rising earlier in the session. Crude oil fell 41 cents to $128.88.

Oil’s huge pullback this week -- dropping about $16 over three days -- also fed Wall Street’s big rally. Stock investors have been worried that consumers forced to pay more for necessities including fuel and food will continue to curb discretionary spending, something that would further hurt a struggling economy.

Even though the week on Wall Street showed that a market long pummeled by bad economic news could quickly turn around, there have been many times over the last year when a huge gain quickly evaporated at the first sign of trouble. So while many investors felt that it was safe to lay down some bets this week, everyone on the Street is mindful that there can be further steep losses ahead.

“Considering the strength we had in the past few days, the market is handling itself quite nice and trying to hold on to the gains,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at New York-based brokerage house Avalon Partners. “Investors are also positioning ahead of a barrage of earnings and economic reports due next week.”

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Certainly, it was a week of extremes -- the Dow had its biggest two-day percentage gain since October 2002 but Tuesday it also had its first close below 11,000 in two years.

In other highlights:

* Google fell $52.12, or 9.8%, to $481.32 after it posted disappointing results late Thursday. Microsoft dropped $1.66, or 6%, to $25.86, while AMD fell 65 cents, or 12% to $4.65.

* Financial stocks were mixed. Merrill Lynch rose 18 cents to $30.91 after its wider-than-expected loss, while Citigroup added $1.38 to $19.35 after its better-than-anticipated loss.

* Mattel surged $2.38, or 13%, to $20.66 after the toy maker said its reported profit was cut in half but still beat Wall Street expectations.

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