Summary
NEW YORK - Weakened by worries about high share prices and the stagnating job market, Wall Street gave up all its 2004 gains in just two days as terror fears shook even the most intrepid bargain hunters.
It's still not clear who was responsible for the coordinated railway bombings Thursday that killed nearly 200 commuters in Madrid. But concerns that it might have been an attack by al-Qaida rather than the work of a local separatist group sent the Dow Jones industrial average spiraling officially into a correction, down 5.7 percent from last month's high. The Nasdaq composite index plunged nearly 10 percent from its January peak.See the full content of this document
Extract
Bombing Fears Sink Stocks
Stocks snapped back Friday as investors fished for good deals, but all the major indexes ended the week substantially lower. With little market-moving news...
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