NEW YORK — Nobody ever said reading the Federal Reserve was easy.
On Wednesday, the Fed appeared to suggest it was closer to taking additional steps to help the U.S. economy. Stocks rallied as a result and finished the day well off their lows.
But the prospect of Fed help seemed much less certain Thursday, and stocks fell. The Dow Jones industrial average lost 115.30 points to close at 13,057.46 — the biggest loss in more than a month and the Dow’s fourth-straight down day.
James Bullard, president of the Fed’s St. Louis bank, told CNBC that the minutes from the July 31-Aug. 1 meeting were “stale” because the economy had picked up since then. If it becomes “a bit stronger,” he said, the Fed will hold off.
“He poured some water on the fire of the QE3 talk,” said Ryan Detrick, senior technical strategist at Schaeffer’s Investment Research in Cincinnati, referring to a future easing.
But another Fed regional official, Chicago president Charles Evans, told reporters in Beijing that he supports further action by the Fed.
The government reported that claims for unemployment insurance rose last week, the second straight increase, which also hurt stocks. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 11.41 points to 1,402.08. The Nasdaq composite index fell 20.27 to 3,053.40. Benchmark oil fell 99 cents to $96.27 per barrel in New York as traders expected slower growth to cut demand.
“It’s just a harsh reminder that the worldwide economy continues to disappoint,” Detrick said.



