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U.S. Stock Prices Falter After Stalled Bid Up

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks shifted lower Wednesday after an indecisive start, as investors weighed the impact of the latest hit to the credit markets, this time sparked by trouble in a third Bear Stearns Cos. hedge fund.

"Right now the fear of the unknown is winning," said Art Hogan chief market strategist at Jefferies & Co.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 25.3 points at 13,186.7.

Tthe S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 were 6.67 points lower at 1,449.16 and off 23.71 points at 2,522.56.

But above-forecast results from Time Warner Inc. and Kraft Foods could lighten the losses.

On Tuesday U.S. stocks rallied in the morning, but took heavy afternoon losses, with the Dow Jones industrials tumbling 146 points, the Nasdaq Composite losing 37 points and the S&P 500 falling 18 points.

Late in Tuesday's session the market was unnerved by news that American Home Mortgage , which does not specialize in subprime lending, is unable to pay its creditors. The stock lost more than 90% of it worth in Tuesday's session.

Market sentiment did not improve overnight. In addition to the credit worries, crude futures were only slightly below $78 a barrel.

"When the market focuses on credit and energy, it goes down," said Hogan. "That was the case late yesterday and that seems to be the case today."

"We've got a real dichotomy here," he said. "When the market focuses on fundamentals, like economic data and strong earnings, as it did Monday and early yesterday, it goes higher. But when it focuses on energy and credit, it goes down. That's why we have so much volatility here."

The latest worry for the credit market is news from Bear Stearns Cos. that is asset-backed securities fund, which does not carry many subprime loans, suspended investor redemptions and will report a loss for July.

The Bear Stearns Asset-Backed Securities Fund isn't leveraged, which means there's little pressure for the fund to sell positions. The fund also has less than 0.5% of its assets in subprime securities. The asset-backed fund isn't related to two other funds from Bear Stearns that have nearly collapsed.

In more evidence that the credit market's woes are international, Australia's Macquarie Bank said that one of its funds is nursing a monthly loss of 25%. That fund also didn't have direct exposure to the U.S. subprime market.

In some hopeful news, Deutsche Bank Ag. Chief Financial Officer Anthony Di Lorio said virtually all the bank's exposure to collateralized debt obligations -- packages of debt that include subprime mortgages -- is as a market maker in its trading books, rather than a direct holder of debt.

Those exposures are revalued on a daily basis and are reflected in the bank's trading performance, he said.

The ADP employment report showed 48,000 new private-sector jobs were created in July, suggesting that overall non-farm payroll growth last month may be below the 133,000 positions projected in a MarketWatch poll of economists.

At 10 a.m. Eastern investors will view construction spending and pending home sales reports for June.

The Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing sector survey also is due at 10 a.m. Eastern.

Stocks in action

Shares of Bear Stearns were 2.6% lower, while Deutsche Bank stock was off 0.3%, after the news stories.

Time Warner Inc. reported a 5.2% profit rise in the latest quarter. Both earnings and revenue beat Wall Street expectations.

Kraft Foods Inc. had a 3.7% gain in earnings. The result exceeded analysts' expectations.

Broker moves

Citigroup upgraded Apple Inc. to buy from hold, citing Tuesday's 7% pullback in the shares. The broker left its price target unchanged at $160. It said that iPhone and iPod production cuts rumored in Asia should not be a surprise to investors.

Morgan Stanley downgraded Lyondell Chemical Co. to equal-weght from overweight, saying it believes a higher takeout bid for the company is less likely.

Other markets

The dollar hit an almost four-month low against the yen before bouncing back Wednesday as fears of spreading subprime mortgage market woes led investors to unwind carry trades.

"Crash helmets and seat belts may be in order on Wednesday, as the return of risk aversion should result in choppy and volatile trade," said analysts at Action Economics.

The dollar last traded up 0.2% at 118.70 yen, as the euro rose 0.1% to $1.3687.

Treasurys were under some pressure as investors tried to gauge how the stock market will trade. In recent sessions Treasury have been trading inversely to stocks. The benchmark 10-year Treasury note last was down 4/32 at 98 with a yield of 4.759%.

Gold futures were pressured in early trade. Gold for December delivery shed $7, or 1%, at $672.30 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Oil futures were lower, too, as the front-month gold contract fell $4.60 to $662.30 a barrel.

By Leslie Wines

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