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Saturday, March 20, 2010

Markets finally slip after 8 days of gains

After 8 days of gains in U.S. stocks, they closed lower on Friday, with worries about the state of the Greek bail out returning and a retreat in the energy and commodity sectors. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, closed down 37 at 10,742, but was up 1.1% on the week and registered its 3rd weekly gain. The FTSE 100 initially move up to 5,685, levels not seen since 2008 in afternoon dealings, but the index closed at 5,650, up only 8 as the U.S. market moved into reverse.

After an an upbeat trading update from Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY) that the company will be profitable on a combined businesses basis in 2010, its shares moved up 8% to just over 60p. The company is 41% owned by the U.K. tax payer and the price is fast approaching the 74p the government paid to bail out the bank. Royal Bank of Scotland gained nearly 6% to 44.45p (close to the 50p government investment price), and Barclays rose almost 2% to 359.6p.There are rumours that Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, will announce that the Treasury will start selling these bank assets perhaps as soon as the Budget next week.

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