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Investors take profits,
HP rises after ouster

NEW YORK » Stocks sagged yesterday in a bout of profit-taking, but blue chips fared better than they might have otherwise as shares of Dow component Hewlett-Packard Co. surged following the ouster of CEO Carly Fiorina.

The robust performance of HP shares gave the Dow Jones industrial average a bit of a lift, but it was not enough to keep the index in positive territory. Oil prices were volatile as government inventory data showed lower-than-expected fuel supplies, and Treasuries rallied. Analysts were not overly alarmed by the day's trading, however, saying some pullback in stocks was to be expected following the market's advance last week.

The Dow fell 60.52, or 0.56 percent, to 10,664.11.

The broader gauges were also lower. The Standard & Poor's 500 index declined 10.31, or 0.86 percent, to 1,191.99. The Nasdaq composite index skidded 34.13, or 1.64 percent, at 2,052.55.

Oil prices rebounded briefly after the government's weekly inventory figures showed a surprising 1 million barrel drop in crude inventories; analysts had expected a build of 730,000 barrels. Stores of distillate fuels, which include heating oil, also declined more steeply than expected. By afternoon, the rally fizzled, however. Crude futures settled up 6 cents at $45.46 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after trading as low as $44.60 a barrel and as high as $46.40. Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar fell against other major currencies.

A run-up in Treasuries may also have worked against stocks, analysts said, noting that the yield on the 10-year note had slipped below 4 percent for the first time in more than three months, to 3.98 percent. Some of the buying was linked to the government's auction of $15 billion in five-year notes, but bonds had already been moving higher, perhaps due to Atlanta Federal Reserve President Jack Guynn's suggestion in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that the group might need to change its policy statement as it adjusts the pace of interest rate hikes.

Hewlett-Packard shares soared 6.9 percent, or $1.39, to $21.53, after the abrupt departure of Fiorina, who cited differences with the board over strategy as she tried to transform the company from a printer business to a broad-based technology giant. The board named chief financial officer Robert P. Wayman as interim CEO.

Cisco Systems Inc. slipped 61 cents to $17.63; quarterly profits at the networking company, announced after the bell Tuesday, matched expectations, but sales fell short and investors seemed less than impressed with a cautious outlook for the current quarter.


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by Financials.com


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