I only can say Mr.President you need to do something or else we could face another recession or another World War. OMG !!
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NEW YORK: Wall Street ended  a fourth week of losses on a down note  on Friday, Aug 20  as most buyers left  the market before the weekend on  growing fears of another U.S. recession  and destabilization in  Europe's financial system.
Investors already reeling from big losses in growth stocks  were thumped by a dismal outlook from Hewlett-Packard, which dropped   nearly 20 percent, its worst day since the stock-market crash of 1987.
It  was the latest discouraging event in a month full of bad  surprises  ranging from the U.S. credit rating downgrade to a sharp  slowdown in  world growth. The S&P has lost 13.1 percent so far this  month -- on  track for its worst month since October 2008.
"What  I'm seeing right now is a basically a crisis of confidence,  more so  than an economic crisis or financial crisis necessarily at this  stage,"  said Natalie Trunow, chief investment officer of equities at  Calvert  Investment Management in Bethesda, Maryland, which manages  about $14.8  billion.
Hewlett-Packard's shares tumbled 19.9 percent to a six-year closing low at $23.60 and were the biggest drag on the Dow, a day after the company said it may spin off its PC business, the biggest in the world, and lowered its outlook.
The  losses follow a day of sharp declines. At the session lows on  Thursday,  the Dow was down more than 500 points, while the S&P 500  and the Nasdaq each shed more than 5 percent at the day's worst.
Worries that the United States and the global economy  may be headed for another recession have unnerved investors in recent   weeks. Thursday marked the sixth time in the past two weeks that the   S&P 500 has moved 4 percent or more.
TECHNOLOGY []   stocks bore the brunt of the losses among the Dow components, with H-P,   International Business Machines Corp, Intel Corp, and Microsoft Corp   among the biggest drags on the blue-chip average. IBM shares fell 3.8   percent to $157.54, while Intel dropped 2.9 percent to $19.19, and   Microsoft lost 2.5 percent to $24.05.
"I  think it's more of a drift than any real selling here," said  Frank  Gretz, market analyst and technician for Shields & Co in New  York.  "It's more common to see a drift down with people more fearful  about the  weekend ... Who's going to buy before a weekend with all the  bad news  around?"
The Dow Jones industrial  average fell 172.93 points, or 1.57  percent, to end at 10,817.65. The  Standard & Poor's 500 Index  dropped 17.12 points, or 1.50 percent,  to 1,123.53. The Nasdaq  Composite Index slid 38.59 points, or 1.62  percent, to close at  2,341.84.
S&P OFF NEAR 11 PCT FOR 2011
For the week, the Dow ended down 4 percent, the S&P 500 dropped 4.7 percent and the Nasdaq lost 6.6 percent.
The  S&P 500 fell below 1,130, a key resistance level during last  summer  that is becoming strong support. Analysts see the next support  at  1,100.
"It's been a difficult week  and confidence that this is just a soft  patch or slowdown is declining  every day, so I just think more  investors are just concluding it's not a  good idea to own stocks over  the weekend," said Hugh Johnson, chief  investment officer of Hugh  Johnson Advisors LLC in Albany, New York.
Google Inc lost 2.8 percent to $490.92 and helped drag on the Nasdaq.
The  S&P 500 is down 17.6 percent from its April 29 closing high,  edging  close to bear market territory. For the year, the S&P is  down 10.7  percent.
Wall Street typically  defines a correction as a drop of 10 percent  from a recent peak, while a  slide of 20 percent from a recent high is a  bear market.
Roughly  three stocks declined for every one that advanced on both  the New York  Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq, with a volume of 9.87  billion shares  traded on the two exchanges and the American Stock  Exchange.
Source: Reuters 
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