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U.S. Stocks Closemixed; Dow Lower After Matching Record

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks closed little changed Tuesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average falling after matching an 80-year winning streak in the previous session as investors took profits ahead of the Federal Reserve's meeting on interest rates.

"What we're seeing here is a market that has a certain amount of exuberance attached to it, the longest winning streak in 80 years," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Avalon Partners. "I'm not sure this is the long awaited pullback," he said. But "there's a lot of caution ahead of the [Fed] meeting" and "we are definitely overbought."

The Dow industrials closed down were down 3.57 points at 13,309.40, with General Motors Corp. , Coca Cola Co. , and United Technologies Corp. among the losers.

On Monday the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 13,300 for the first time and matched a record of 24 gains in 27 sessions, set in 1927.

Bucking the trend among Dow components, Alcoa Inc. led the gains, rising 2.3% after hedge fund Jana Partners LLC, which calls itself a "large shareholder" of the aluminum giant, urged the company to drop its bid to acquire Alcan Inc. .

Hewlett-Packard Co. rose 2.7% after the computer maker raised its earnings and revenue outlook for the second quarter.

Also, Walt Disney & Co. rose 1.4% ahead of its quarterly results after the close.

The S&P 500 lost 1.77 point to 1,507.71, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose just 0.80 point to 2,571.75. Among tech leaders, Cisco Systems Inc. rose ahead of its results after the bell.

Trading volumes showed 1.502 billion shares exchanging hands on the New York Stock Exchange and 1.939 billion on the Nasdaq stock market. Declining issues outpaced gainers 19 to 13 on the New York Stock Exchange and by 17 to 12 on the Nasdaq.

Meanwhile, telecom shares saw some pressure. Motorola shares fell 2.1% after the company said its shareholders didn't elect billionaire dissident shareholder Carl Icahn to its board, according to an estimate.

Icahn said he thought he had won the support of many small shareholders, but lacked the backing of key, large investment funds he needed to overpower the Schaumburg, Ill., company's management.

The Fed and markets

With little on the economic docket Tuesday, investors focused on the latest bleak forecasts on housing from the National Association of Realtors.

Investors are now awaiting the Fed's decision on interest rates, and more importantly, its policy statement, on Wednesday.

"Not that there will be a lot of surprise," said Avalon's Cardillo.

Fed watchers fully expect the central bank to leave interest rates unchanged. But the words of policymakers will be closely examined to determine whether they've maintained their focus on inflation and/or they will begin to acknowledge evidence of a slowing economy.

"The tug of war between a slow economy and stubborn inflation readings will keep the Fed sidelined," said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank, in a note.

Treasury bonds fell slightly ahead of the Fed meeting. The benchmark 10-year Treasury bond finished down 1/32 to 99 30/32, yielding 4.634%.

The dollar declined against the Japanese yen but rose against the euro. Merrill Lynch strategists said its clients would prefer to be long the euro than any other currency and expect the end of the carry trade by 2008. The carry trade involves investors borrowing in low-yielding currencies like the yen and reinvesting elsewhere.

Crude-oil futures gained 79 cents to close at $62.26 a barrel, helping higher some oil shares, including Dow component Exxon Mobil Corp. . But Occidental Petroleum Corp. and ConocoPhillips remained lower.

Gold futures dropped $3.0 to close at $687.40 an ounce, pressuring the likes of Eldorado Gold Corp. , Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold and Gold Fields

Merger Tuesday

Deal news, which has provided sustained momentum for the broad market, continued unabated.

Reuters dropped 1.4% after it and Thomson set out details of a possible merger. According to the firms, Thomson is willing to make a cash-and-shares offer valued, at Monday's close, at $83.16 per U.S.-listed Reuters share, or $17.4 billion. Tom Glocer, the chief executive of Reuters, would run the combined firm.

AK Steel jumped 9.2% after the Financial Times' Alphaville Web site reported that Arcelor Mittal is in talks to buy the U.S. steel producer in a $4.5 billion, or $40 a share, deal.

By Nick Godt

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