Wall Street Calms Its Nerves

Wednesday's start to stocks trading is not at all like the wildness of Tuesday. Nasdaq is slightly up at midday, while the Dow is slightly down.

NEW YORK -- U.S. stocks continued to experience minor shock waves from a wrenching week on roiled Wall Street.

Analysts said stocks' brief testing of positive ground and then their slide lower was a mini-version of Tuesday's volatility that saw the Dow Jones industrial average and the Nasdaq composite claw back from 500-point drops.

The blue-chip Dow was down 60 points, at 11,108, after falling as much as 162 points to an intraday low of 11,002.58.

The technology-laden Nasdaq Composite Index was up 20 points at 4,150. It is almost 17 percent off its closing high on March 10 of 5,048.62.

The Standard & Poor's 500 stock index was off 2 points.

Declines headed advances by 1,457 to 1,307 on the New York Stock Exchange, and volume was 525 million shares.

"It's very similar to yesterday's behavior, without the excessive volatility," said Barry Hyman, market strategist for Ehrenkrantz, King Nussbaum Inc.

He said worries about the valuation of high-profile computer, Internet, and telecommunications shares were keeping the Nasdaq from rallying.

Margin selling also was causing markets to sputter, traders said. Margin selling involves investors who had borrowed money from brokerages having to sell shares to cover losses from this week's volatile trade.

George Rodriguez, senior vice president for equities at Guzman & Co. in Jersey City, N.J., called the market "opportunistic" as institutional buyers probed for bargains.

"We believe there are definitely values out there."

MetLife Inc., the No. 2 U.S. life insurer, was up 11/16 at 14-15/16 in its first day of trading after its initial public offering. The stock, priced Tuesday at $14.25 per share in its IPO, was the most active issue on Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

Investors were waiting for first-quarter results from Internet media network Yahoo (YHOO), which will kick off the earnings season after markets close. Yahoo was off 5-1/4 at 162-1/8.

The Philadelphia Stock Exchange's semiconductor index was up 1.44 percent and the Chicago Board Options Exchange's computer software gauge rose 0.91 percent.

Coca-Cola Co., the world's biggest beverage company and one of the 30 stocks that make up the Dow average, fell 2-1/2 to 49. Coca-Cola trimmed its earning growth target on Tuesday and said it would take a $400 million write-down.

The American Stock Exchange's oil index slipped 0.90 percent.

The Dow Jones transportation average was up 2.42 percent.

The 30-year U.S. Treasury bond was up 11/32, with its yield at 5.75 percent, below its Tuesday close of 5.77 percent.