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Stocks End With Minimal Losses After Late-day Rebound

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks rebounded late Wednesday, with Merrill Lynch & Co.'s larger-than-anticipated losses and negative news on the housing front cementing thoughts of another rate cut at next week's Federal Open Market Committee gathering.

"Every time you see the market sell off, the shorts rush in to cover, because they know by next Wednesday they better get the heck out of Dodge," said Marc Pado, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald.

After shedding more than 200 points, the Dow Industrials ended 1 point lower at 13,675.3, with 15 of its 30 components lower, led by chip manufacturer Intel Corp. , which shed 3.2%.

The brunt of the selling pressure was seen on the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite , which settled 24.5 points down, almost 0.9%, at 2,774.76.

Amazon.com Inc. posted solid quarterly earnings, but the online retailer's shares slid 14% on worries about its expected profit margins for the critical holiday shopping season. .

The S&P 500 fell 3.71 points to 1,515.88.

Already down, the major stock indexes solidified their losses after the National Association of Realtors reported sales of existing homes and condos fell 8% in September to their lowest level in eight years, with median sales prices down 4.2% in the past year. .

"The stage was set for early selling after another financial company posted disappointing earnings for the most recent quarter," said Frederic Ruffy, an analyst at Optionetics.

"Then, after the latest existing-home sales came in below already pessimistic forecasts, the selling snowballed into another day of bloodletting on Wall Street," Ruffy said.

Volume on the New York Stock Exchange came to nearly 1.6 billion, with declining stocks outpacing those advancing more than 5 to 3. On the Nasdaq, almost 2.8 billion shares exchanged hands, and declining issues topped advancers nearly 2 to 1.

Merrill's streak

Losses reported by Merrill along with concerns in the pipeline for Internet retail giant Amazon.com fueled worries about the extent of the damage of the recent credit-related trouble and its impact on the economy.

Merrill's third-quarter losses of $2.24 billion, or $2.82 a share, topped expectations of 45-cent a share losses on revenue of $3.25 billion, with write-downs from bad mortgage loans and related securities well above the firm's own forecast just a few weeks ago.

Merrill's stock was off 5.8%.

"The financials are a mess; it's not a pretty sight, the contraction of credit and the losses that are going to be sustained. It's the realization that this is going to be a multi-quarter process, when we were hoping this would be a [throw in everything but the] kitchen sink" approach, Boockvar said.

Dow component Boeing Co. reported a steep hike in third-quarter profit, but trimmed its revenue forecast for next year.

"The market had been heading into this earnings season with the knowledge earnings would be brought down by credit concerns and subprime lending, that it might spread to other areas of the economy," said Robert Pavlik, chief investment officer at Oaktree Asset Management.

Rising markets

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, crude-oil futures for December rallied $1.83 to close at $87.10. .

Gold futures also headed higher, with gold for December delivery up $2.50 to finish at $765.60 an ounce on the NYME. .

Treasurys rallied, sending yields lower, after Merrill posted huge write-downs and concerns about the economy were fueled by existing homes sale data, with the 10-year note up 10/32 at 103 7/32, its yield at 4.345%. .

Overseas

Defense firm BAE Systems and engine maker Rolls-Royce climbed after U.S. competitors posted higher profits, but larger-than-envisioned losses at Merrill Lynch and disappointing data from the U.S. sent the top London index to a lower close. .

Several Asian markets reversed diretion to end lower, as financials such as Japan's Mizuho Financial Group and Australia's Macquarie Bank reacted to fresh concerns about the U.S. subprime mortgage market. .

By Kate Gibson

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