NEW YORK (AP) — It was a stomach-churning summer that most investors would like to forget.
The United States lost its top-of-the-line credit rating for the first time. The financial system of Europe seemed ready to collapse. Money managers sifted through data for signs that the economy was about to slide into a new recession.
In the financial markets, the result was the most volatile three months since the depths of the credit crisis in 2008 and 2009. Stocks had a hair trigger: On four straight days in early August, the Dow Jones industrial average swung more than 400 points.
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