Special Report: Global Financial
Crisis
NEW YORK, Nov. 18 (Xinhua) -- Wall Street moved higher
Tuesday after two-day rout, as investors focused on testimonies on Capital Hill
and digested upbeat earnings reports.
Hewlett-Packard, the world's biggest personal
computer maker, jumped after the company unexpectedly announced that
fourth-quarter and 2009 earnings will come in above Wall Street estimates.
Moreover, Home Depot, the largest home-improvement retailer, rallied more than
five percent as it reported better-than-anticipated third-quarter profit.
In other corporate news, Yahoo Inc. founder Jerry
Yang late Monday announced that he was stepping down as chief executive of the
company, which was regarded as an opening to a sale to Microsoft.
However, economic concerns still gnawed at investors.
The U.S. Labor Department reported Tuesday that wholesale prices dropped by 2.8
percent in October, the biggest one-month decline on records, as energy prices
fell sharply. Investors worried that the drop may indicate a rising threat of
deflation.
Investors were also closely watching the possible
bailout of the auto industry as executives of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
LLC and the head of the United Auto Workers union testify at a Senate Banking
Committee hearing Tuesday afternoon. The automakers are seeking 25 billion U.S.
dollars aid from the government. .
"Investors continue to show tremendous anxiety over
the current state of the economy," said Benjamin Wey, president of New York
Global Group. "We see market volatility to continue during the remaining two
months in 2008 while U.S. equities to follow through with December rally to the
upside as many quality names have been clearly oversold."
The Dow Jones average ended up 151.17, or 1.83
percent, to 8,424.75. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 8.37, or 0.98
percent, to 859.12. The Nasdaq composite index rose 1.22, or 0.08 percent, to
1,483.27. ¡¡
