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No election honeymoon as economy worries percolate

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Small-cap stocks took a dive Wednesday as the market closed the door on a long and historic political campaign and refocused back on a gloomy economic picture. The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) closed down 31.31, or 5.74%, at 514.64, snapping a string of six consecutive higher sessions in the process. The Russell is now down 33% for the 2008, while the Dow is off 31% and the S&P 500 down 35%.

Small-cap stocks were able to grind out modest gains Monday and Tuesday despite sloppy economic reports on manufacturing, car sales and factory orders, but were unable to sidestep awful data again today on the jobs front and on the sprawling services sector. The marquee economic release today was probably the ISM Non-Manufacturing Survey, but it also shared top billing with the ADP Employment release ahead of Friday’s big Labor Department report on payrolls. The ISM report tumbled to 44.4, which marked the lowest reading for the service sector in the 10 years that the report has been issued. Meanwhile, the ADP data showed a larger-than-expected decline in jobs, which sent shivers up investor spines ahead of Friday’s release. And while the focus now shifts to Friday’s big jobs report, there will still be a hurdle to cross Thursday morning when the weekly unemployment claims come out.

In a research letter this morning, analysts at Goldman Sachs cautioned that downside risks in the economy could lead an even larger slide in GDP figures. “Economic reports continue to imply that the U.S. economy is in decline, with real GDP perhaps contracting by more than the 2% annual rate that we are currently estimating for fourth-quarter real GDP. In just the last day, we’ve seen a sharp drop in auto sales, another significant decline in the ISM manufacturing index, and further evidence of tightening in bank lending standards. Although energy prices are also falling rapidly, this is mainly a reaction to the sharp weakening in economic activity, both here and abroad, and therefore apt to cushion the decline rather than reverse it.”

Commodities were a big part of the advance Tuesday in stocks, but reversed course today. Crude oil prices tumbled 7% today in a violent turnabout from Tuesday’s 10% rally. A weekly inventory report showed growing stocks of energy products and soft demand, which helped fuel today’s decline. Even though the dollar gave back overnight gains, commodity markets struggled today, which is a sign that demand worries were front and center.

Along that line of thought, forest products, coal, steel, metals and mining stocks were among the worst performing broad market sectors today, although the Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund slightly lagged the overall market decline. That’s where selling in financials powered losses, with the Financial Select Sector SPDR off about 5% on the day.

Individual small caps on the decline Wednesday included Adept Technology Inc. (Nasdaq:ADEP), which tumbled 33%, gapping lower and sinking on heavy volume as the vision-guided robotics firm took a hit on earnings news. Lakes Entertainment Inc. (Nasdaq:LACO) slumped 29%, plunging a day after earnings and also as a casino referendum in Ohio was defeated. On big down days like today, it’s always interesting to find a couple of stocks that bucked the dominant market downdraft; fitting that bill today was Radian Group Inc. (NYSE:RDN), which rallied 31% as the mortgage insurance firm managed to post a profit instead of the big loss forecast by the Street. Venoco Inc. (NYSE:VQ) is an energy firm that rallied 20% today without an earnings boost even though the overall energy sector was under pressure.

The chart structure for small caps stalled out today at a logical spot near the 546 to 551 zone, a range that corresponded with previous chart resistance. The abrupt pullback through support at 534 and 525 leaves mild support at 520, but a key test looming near 514.50. A decisive breach of 514.50 would suggest a run down toward 500. If the market can right itself Thursday, then that zone up at 546 to 551 will remain the key upside test.