Continued pain in financial stocks hindered but failed to sink the broader US market Friday, marking a benign end to a week in which investors' longer-term outlook darkened.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was off more than 100 points at its low but begain a steady climb in the early afternoon to end with a second straight day of gains, up 68.73 points, or 0.8%, at 8281.22, down 3.7% for the week. The average's gains were limited by declines in all its financial components
Bank of America tumbled 14% after reporting a $1.79 billion loss and receiving a $20 billion injection of government funds to help absorb losses from recent acquisition Merrill Lynch. The largest U.S. bank by assets was once seen as a strong hand in the financial crisis, and in mid-September was confident it could digest Merrill Lynch without government assistance.
Citigroup fell 8.6% after some morning gains after the government moved to back $400 billion of its assets. Citigroup also reported an $8.29 billion quarterly loss and said it would split into two business units, with one made up of brokerage and retail asset management, local consumer finance and a special asset pool.
Despite Friday's gains in the broader market, some traders are beginning to mistrust "bailout rallies" as signs of a durable trend higher. They are reluctant to buy into such moves until the stock market can rally on improving economic data rather than new government intervention.