(Refiles to clarify this is the close, not early afternoon)
* Economic contraction, poor earnings roil Wall Street
* Financials fall on bank rescue plan uncertainty
* Indexes down 2 percent
* For up-to-the-minute market news, click [
] (Updates to close)By Ellis Mnyandu
NEW YORK, Jan 30 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks closed out their worst January ever with another slide on Friday after data showed the economy contracted at the fastest pace in nearly 27 years in the fourth quarter.
Uncertainty about the fate of a plan by the Obama administration to relieve banks of money-losing assets added to the bearish tone, with Citigroup <C.N> plunging 9 percent and Bank of America <BAC.N> dropping 3 percent.
Procter & Gamble Co <PG.N>, the maker of Pampers diapers, Gillette razors and Tide laundry detergent, was the Dow's top drag, sliding 6.4 percent, after its quarterly profit missed expectations. P&G also added its name to a growing list of companies cutting outlooks. For more see [
]."We're in for another tough year," said Dean Barber, president of investment firm Barber Financial Group in Kansas City.
"You have consumer sentiment at an all-time low, job losses that have exceeded the total number of job losses in the '81-'82 recession, we're 13 months into the latest recession, so people feel bad."
The Dow Jones industrial average <
> fell 148.15 points, or 1.82 percent, to 8,000.86. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index <.SPX> slid 19.26 points, or 2.28 percent, to 825.88. The Nasdaq Composite Index < > tumbled 31.42 points, or 2.08 percent, to 1,476.42.Both the Dow and the benchmark S&P 500 <.SPX> suffered their worst January ever, with the Dow down 8.8 percent and the S&P down 8.6 percent. The Nasdaq dropped 6.4 percent in January.
January performance traditionally serves as a harbinger for stocks for the rest of the year.
Analysts said the sharp declines in the shares of companies traditionally considered better positioned to ride out an economic downturn underscored the severity of the pessimism.
Procter & Gamble Co <PG.N> tumbled $3.72 to $54.50 on the New York Stock Exchange.
Kraft Foods Inc <KFT.N> slid 4.2 percent to $28.05, making the food maker the third worst drag on the Dow, behind 3M Co <MMM.N> , a diversified manufacturer.
3M shares fell almost 5 percent to $53.79 after Barclays and JPMorgan analysts cut their price targets, a day after the company posted a drop in fourth-quarter profit and sales.
Among financial stocks, shares of Citigroup <C.N> slid 9 percent to $3.55, while shares of Bank of America <BAC.N> dropped 3 percent to $6.58. The S&P financial index <.GSPF> fell 2.5 percent.
U.S. policy-makers have yet to reach a consensus on how a U.S. government-run bad bank would work and the idea may not move forward, CNBC television reported, citing unnamed sources. For details, see [
]The Nasdaq's decline was led by a 3.1 percent slide in Apple <AAPL.O> shares to $90.13, and was only partly offset by a jump of 17.6 percent in Amazon.com <AMZN.O> to $58.82, following the online retailer's rosy outlook and holiday sales.
Another standout loser was Juniper Networks <JNPR.O>, down more than 16 percent at $14.16, after the network equipment provider warned its first-quarter revenue and profit would fall far short of Wall Street's expectations.
Companies in the basic materials sector also sold off, sparking a 3.7 percent slide in the S&P materials index <.GSPM>. Aluminum producer Alcoa Inc <AA.N> shed 7.7 percent to $7.79. (Editing by Jan Paschal)