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Home Front Economy
Asian Markets Resume Slide Despite Government Efforts
2008-10-29
Fear of a global recession again punished stock markets Monday, while governments tried to stem the damage from an eroding world economy.

Kuwait stepped in to avoid a major bank failure, South Korea slashed interest rates, and the world's top industrialized nations hinted at possible action to curb the rapid rise in the value of the Japanese yen. The International Monetary Fund over the weekend said it had reached preliminary agreement on emergency loans for Hungary and Ukraine.

By day's end in Asia, Japan's Nikkei had closed at a 26-year low, while the Paris CAC 40 closed down 4 percent. Losses weren't as bad in London's FTSE, down 0.8 percent, and Germany's Dax gained 0.9 percent. U.S. market futures through much of the morning indicated a sharply lower opening on Wall Street but moderated after the U.S. Treasury said it expected to release this week $125 billion it is investing in the preferred stock of nine banks. But a sell-off in the last 10 minutes of trading sent major U.S. exchanges down between 2.4 percent and 3.2 percent by closing.

A soaring yen is making Japanese exports more expensive, even as global demand for them dwindles. The currency's swing has been so sharp that the Group of Seven industrialized nations warned of "possible adverse implications for economic and financial stability."

The yen is up 13 percent against the dollar this month and 29 percent versus the euro, while the Nikkei stock average has become one of the worst performers in the world. Japanese stocks have lost 30 percent of their value this month and fell another 6.4 percent Monday. Japan's two biggest banks fell 15 percent.

Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso ordered his government to prepare emergency measures to stabilize markets. They are expected to include government purchase of bank stocks, tighter rules on short selling and a five-fold increase in the amount of government money that can be injected into banks.

"Unless we take appropriate steps, there will be major impact on the real economy," Aso told reporters. "We must act as soon as possible, starting today."
Interesting how the American slide whacked the Asians. They can't sell us near as much stuff so now they're getting hammered. Interesting to see where this leads ...
Posted by:Fred

#2  WAFF.com > UK:WORLD CREDIT LOSS ESTIMATED AT L1.8Trilyuhn [US$2.8Trilyuhn]. London anticip to get infusion of L37.0Bilyuhn from Royal Bank of Scotland, HBOS + Lloyds TSB to offset losses from US Crisis.

CHIN POSTER > US MAY BE DELIBERATELY HURTING ITS OWN ECONOMY TO INDUCE US-CONTROLLED/DOMINATED [and UK = NATO-EU]GLOBAL FINANCIAL-BANKING ORDER [imperialism]???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-10-29 23:30  

#1  "Interesting to see where this leads"

Very bad for the status quo in China.

Also, the $ is at a two year high against the Euro. In the contest between American capitalism and europeon socialism, that's an interesting vote by the international markets. It's a stark counterpoint to the "capitalism is dead" wishful thinking emanating from the serfs in europe.
Posted by: Minister of funny walks   2008-10-29 09:05  

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