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Crash or Catastrophe

Marshal

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stock exchanges all over the world on a free fall
Japan down -9.38% largest ever in last 20 years
Hongkong -8.17%
Australia -5.39%
Bombay -3.3%
Jakarta -10.02% trading halted
UK -5.0%
France -4.86%
Germany -5.94%
DOW Jones -5.11%
Shanghai -4.11%
Taipei -6.50%
singapore -7.10%
Russia -11.25% trading halted.....one of the worst hit market in this week. on monday it lost 20% of the market capitalisation.....
 
Russia, Indonesia Suspend Trading in Emerging Market Stock Rout
Bloomberg.com: Europe

By Denis Maternovsky

Oct. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Russia suspended trading on its Micex Stock Exchange for two days and Indonesia halted trading indefinitely as stocks plummeted in the worst emerging-market rout in two decades.

Russia's Micex Index dropped 14.4 percent before the suspension as President Dmitry Medvedev's package of $186 billion in support for banks and companies failed to lift investor confidence that the government can arrest its worst financial crisis since the 1998 default. The Jakarta Composite index fell 21 percent in its biggest weekly slump in at least 25 years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Investors are fleeing on concern the worsening global credit crisis will cause more banks to collapse and push the global economy into recession, lowering the price of the commodities that drive developing nation economies. The benchmark MSCI Emerging Markets index is headed for its worst weekly decline since it was established in 1987 after falling 21.4 percent.

``Rising credit risk has escalated the pressure for investors to cash in and cut their assets,'' said Renault Kam, a senior portfolio manager at Atlantis Investment Management in Hong Kong, which oversees $5 billion.

Russia's Micex Index lost 66 percent of its value this year, compared with a 62 percent drop for China's CSI 300 Index and a 44 percent decline on India's Sensex.

Trading stopped at 11:05 a.m. in Moscow and won't resume until Oct. 10 unless the Federal Financial Markets Service says otherwise, Micex spokesman Alexei Gerasyuk said by phone. The dollar-denominated RTS bourse shut for one hour, until 12:05 p.m.

Russian regulators have halted stock trading 10 times since Sept. 16.

Ten Percent Drop

Indonesia's suspension, the first in eight years, followed a 10 percent slide in the Jakarta Composite Index, the biggest decline since the 1998 Asian financial crisis.

The cost to protect Indonesian government debt from default rose to the highest level in at least four years, based on credit-default swap prices.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell for a sixth day, dropping 7.5 percent to 609.44, the lowest level since October 2005.

India's Sensex index slid 6.2 percent and China's CSI 300 Index fell 3.8 percent, its third day of declines. South Korea's Kospi Index lost 5.8 percent, the biggest drop since Sept. 16.

The extra yield investors demand to own developing nations' bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries has doubled since June and rose 11 basis points to 5.08 percentage points today, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s EMBI+ index. That's the highest spread since June 2004.
 
Crisis bailout for UK banks as stocks diveLONDON, England (CNN) -- Britain unveiled a $87.4 billion rescue package for its battered banking system Wednesday as global stocks prices continued to crumble under the weight of the unrelenting financial crisis.

Despite the announcement to inject cash and free up lending, European indices opened down sharply, following brutal losses in Asia that saw Japan's Nikkei plummet more then 9 percent in its largest single-day decline ever.

New crisis measures by the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve on Tuesday failed to stem hemorrhaging on Wall Street, with the Dow Jones index experiencing a 500-point drop that knocked it to a five-year low.

There were widespread declines in Asia: Sydney's All Ordinaries index fell 4.96; Japan's Nikkei was down to another five-year low at 9.38 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 8.17 percent -- even as the territory announced it would lower interest rates a full percentage point.
In Jakarta, a 10.38 percent plunge on the Composite index resulted in markets being slowed to halt the decline. Other falls included South Korea's KOSPI at 5.81 percent, the Taipei Weighted at 5.76 percent.

"Investors are now afraid that the world is going to enter a depression," said Jesper Koll with Tantallon Capital Research in Tokyo.

Europe appeared to be following suit, with Russia's major markets off more than 10 percent before trading was suspended -- now a regular occurrence -- and other indices dropping substantially.

London's FTSE index recorded early losses, with banking shares rallying on news that the British Treasury was making £25 billion available to major financial institutions with another £25 billion available if needed.
UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown called the move a "bold and far reaching solution" for "extraordinary times," insisting that the measure, which will see taxpayers take a stake in the banks, will "put the British banking system in a sounder footing
Finance Minister Alistair Darling said the move would "send a clear message" that it can step in and help the financial industry amid the global economic crisis that exploded following the collapse of the U.S. sub-prime mortgage sector
The scheme, involving Abbey National, Barclays, HBOS, HSBC Bank, Lloyds TSB Bank, Nationwide Building Society, Royal Bank of Scotland and Standard Chartered Bank, comes a day after British banks' stock prices nosedived on investor fears they would not be able to weather the financial storm without help.

On Tuesday European Union finance ministers agreed to raise the minimum guarantee for bank deposits across member states. The move came as Iceland seized control of its second largest bank.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said EU finance ministers had agreed to raise the minimum guarantee of bank deposits to €50,000 ($68,600) across all EU member states.

The amount was less than had been expected but Lagarde said the figure was agreed on to enable smaller EU countries and economies to meet the minimum.

Meanwhile, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Tuesday that the global financial crisis is likely to restrain the U.S. economy well into 2009.
But he added that the unprecedented steps taken by the U.S. Treasury Department and the Fed were done in time to prevent more expensive and permanent damage to leading financial institutions.

As Bernanke spoke to a meeting of U.S. business leaders, the Federal Reserve announced a new program to help short-term business loans -- taking its closest step yet to lending directly to businesses.

The intervention came as the Treasury Department scrambled to put in place a $700 billion bailout of the financial system enacted on Friday.

Under that program, the Treasury is expected to purchase troubled assets from banks and financial institutions in an effort to spur more lending.

Under the program announced Tuesday morning, the Fed will purchase three-month unsecured and asset-backed commercial paper directly from eligible issuers. The program is slated to expire in April 2009.
Crisis bailout for UK banks as stocks dive - CNN.com
 
World crisis deepens
U.K. bailing out banks. Global markets tumble - Nikkei sinks 9%
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The global financial crisis escalated on Wednesday as stock markets plummeted worldwide and officials raced to put out the fires.

Investors in Japan suffered one of their worst days ever. A Russian exchange was shut down after a huge decline at the open. And a trio of European central banks announced that it was pumping more money into the system to keep banks going.

The most dramatic move was in the U.K., where the Treasury announced a plan to inject hundreds of billions of dollars into the banking system.

British Finance Minister Alistair Darling announced the program shortly before markets opened in Britain. London's FTSE 100 was down 3.9%.

"This is a major step," Darling told CNN affiliate ITN. "Never before have we been in a position where the government is actually saying to banks, 'You've agreed with us that you're going to raise more capital. If you can't do it in the normal way on the markets, we'll actually provide the funds to enable you to do that.'"

The goal of the effort, carried out in consultation with the nation's central bank and regulators, was to provide immediate relief and free up lending.

"In these extraordinary market conditions, the Bank of England will take all actions necessary to ensure that the banking system has access to sufficient liquidity," according to a U.K. government statement. "In its provision of short term liquidity the [central] bank will extend and widen its facilities in whatever way is necessary to ensure the stability of the system."

Under the U.K. plan, the largest banks have agreed to increase their capital by $43.7 billion and the government "stands ready" to provide $25 billion if necessary.

Among the banks participating in the program are global financial leaders Barclays, HBOS and Royal Bank of Scotland.

The government also said it is increasing the amount of long-term funding it is providing to banks under a special liquidity plan announced in April. Since then, the British government has made more than $176 billion available to banks. Darling said that amount will now be increased to at least $350 billion.

"This is not a time for conventional thinking or outdated dogma, but for the fresh and innovative intervention that gets to the heart of the problem," British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said.

Brown and Darling said the plan would ensure the flow of money between banks and their customers. They said it would "unjam" any potential freeze by lenders jittery about global markets and liquidity.

Separately, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank offered $90 billion in overnight money to the financial sector, the Associated Press reported. The ECB offered up $70 billion, while the BoE and the Swiss bank each offered $10 billion.

Stock markets pummeled
Meanwhile, markets around the world took a beating. In Europe, Germany's Dax was down 5.4% and the Paris Cac fell 4.9%.

The Nikkei in Japan declined 9.4% - the third largest single-day decline ever - to a new five-year low, the Kyodo news agency reported.

"Investors are now afraid that the world is going to enter a depression," said Jesper Koll with Tantallon Capital Research in Tokyo.

"Japan is a leading indicator for the world economy and prospects for the world economy are not for a soft landing," Koll said. "They are for a recession, if not a depression."

And Hong Kong's Hang Seng index plunged 8.2%, even as the Hong Kong Monetary Authority announced it would lower interest rates a full percentage point starting Thursday.

Moscow's Micex stock exchange, where most of Russia's trading takes place, announced it was shutting down until Friday after falling more than 14% in the first half-hour of trading, the Associated Press reported. The RTS exchange, the benchmark of Russia's markets, fell more than 11% in the first 30 minutes and suspended trading for one hour.

One economist said the selloffs are necessary to clear the "dead wood" from the world markets.
"This is like a forest fire that ... is raging," said Tom Hougaard of City Index in London. "I think that this fire ... will rage for some time, but I also think we are much much nearer the end of it than we are near the beginning of it."

U.S. government scrambles
The global meltdown followed another unsettling day in the U.S. financial world. Stock investors took another drubbing on Tuesday, and a 500-point loss on the Dow Jones industrial average bringing two-day losses to nearly 900 points.

Earlier on Tuesday, the Federal Reserve announced an extraordinary plan aimed at unfreezing credit markets by backing short-term business lending.

The new program comes as the Treasury Department scrambles to put in place a $700 billion bailout of the financial system enacted on Friday. Under that program, the Treasury is expected to purchase troubled assets from banks and financial institutions in an effort to spur more lending.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, in a dour economic outlook on Tuesday, hinted that the central bank may cut its short-term target interest rate.

Stock futures in U.S. markets were trading sharply lower Wednesday - pointing to another brutal day on Wall Street. A massive selloff gained momentum Tuesday following Bernanke's comments, bringing the Dow industrial's two-day slump to nearly 900 points.Global financial crisis worsens - Oct. 8, 2008
 
Unprcedented Global coordinated rate cut by central banks around the world to save global economy
Central banks around the world Wednesday cut interest rates amid mounting losses in financial markets, as the credit crunch continued to seize up lending.

The Federeal Reserve lowered its federal funds rate a half a point to 1.50 percent. It also lowered its discount rate as well. The Fed, whose decision was unanimous, last cut rates a quarter point in April.

Central banks in the UK, European Union, Switzerland, sweden and Canada participated in the move.
The action comes after days of growing pressure on central banks to act together to stem mounting panic in the financial markets.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke hinted at a rate cut Tuesday in a speech in Washington.

Australia cut rates a full percentage point Tuesday. Hong Kong authorities cut rates Wednesday.
Pressure for an emergency rate cut has been building in recent weeks as credit markets tightened.

The move comes after Congress approved a $700 billion bank bailout last week. The legislation was quickly signed into law by President Bush.

The flow of credit in the U.S. economy has slowed, in some cases drying up, threatening the ability of businesses to conduct routine operations or expand, and adversely affecting consumers seeking financing for mortgages, cars and student loans. Some state governments have also experienced difficulty borrowing money.
 
27 Global economies make emergency rate cuts
LONDON, England (CNN) -- The world's leading economies, led by the United States and the UK, slashed interest rates Wednesday in an emergency move to tackle the global financial crisis, sending stocks soaring after days of heavy losses.

The U.S. Federal Reserve cut its main rate by a half percentage point, with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, Sveriges Riksbank, and the Swiss National Bank all following suit.

The coordinated measure followed UK's unveiling of an $87.4 billion rescue package for its battered banking system Wednesday and massive losses during Asian trading that saw Japan's Nikkei plummet more then 9 percent in its largest single-day decline ever.

There were widespread declines in Asia: Sydney's All Ordinaries index fell 4.96; Japan's Nikkei was down to another five-year low at 9.38 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 8.17 percent -- even as the territory announced it would lower interest rates a full percentage point.
In Jakarta, a 10.38 percent plunge on the Composite index resulted in markets being slowed to halt the decline. Other falls included South Korea's KOSPI at 5.81 percent, the Taipei Weighted at 5.76 percent.

"Investors are now afraid that the world is going to enter a depression," said Jesper Koll with Tantallon Capital Research in Tokyo.

Europe appeared to be following suit, with Russia's major markets off more than 10 percent before trading was suspended -- now a regular occurrence -- and other indices dropping substantially.

London's FTSE index recorded early losses, with banking shares rallying on news that the British Treasury was making £25 billion available to major financial institutions with another £25 billion available if needed.
UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown called the move a "bold and far reaching solution" for "extraordinary times," insisting that the measure, which will see taxpayers take a stake in the banks, will "put the British banking system in a sounder footing."
"This is not a time for conventional thinking or outdated dogma but for the fresh and innovative intervention that gets to the heart of the problem," he said. Read how the rescue plan will work

Finance Minister Alistair Darling said the move would "send a clear message" that it can step in and help the financial industry amid the global economic crisis that exploded following the collapse of the U.S. sub-prime mortgage sector.

Darling insisted the government, which has already nationalized key mortgage lenders Northern Rock and Bradford & Bingley to ward off collapse, was not seeking to take over the running of the banks.

The scheme, involving Abbey National, Barclays, HBOS, HSBC Bank, Lloyds TSB Bank, Nationwide Building Society, Royal Bank of Scotland and Standard Chartered Bank, comes a day after British banks' stock prices nosedived on investor fears they would not be able to weather the financial storm without help.

On Tuesday European Union finance ministers agreed to raise the minimum guarantee for bank deposits across member states. The move came as Iceland seized control of its second largest bank.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said EU finance ministers had agreed to raise the minimum guarantee of bank deposits to €50,000 ($68,600) across all EU member states.

The amount was less than had been expected but Lagarde said the figure was agreed on to enable smaller EU countries and economies to meet the minimum.

Meanwhile, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Tuesday that the global financial crisis is likely to restrain the U.S. economy well into 2009.

But he added that the unprecedented steps taken by the U.S. Treasury Department and the Fed were done in time to prevent more expensive and permanent damage to leading financial institutions.

As Bernanke spoke to a meeting of U.S. business leaders, the Federal Reserve announced a new program to help short-term business loans -- taking its closest step yet to lending directly to businesses.

The intervention came as the Treasury Department scrambled to put in place a $700 billion bailout of the financial system enacted on Friday
Under that program, the Treasury is expected to purchase troubled assets from banks and financial institutions in an effort to spur more lending.

Under the program announced Tuesday morning, the Fed will purchase three-month unsecured and asset-backed commercial paper directly from eligible issuers. The program is slated to expire in April 2009
Global rate cuts trigger market frenzy - CNN.com
 

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