Dow Jones off 679 points, closes below 9,000; world markets tumble

Thursday, October 9, 2008
By NewsWax

Stock markets across the world have fallen dramatically as worries that recent government moves might not prevent a global recession. The largest drop was with the the Dow Jones (DJIA), which fell 678.91 points, or more then 7.3%, to below 9,000 to close at 8,579.19. The index has fallen over 2,000 points in the past nine days to reach its lowest level since 2003. The S&P 500 was down more than 7%.

The U.S. markets opened on the positive side, but with bad news coming from several different areas such as whether or not the 700 billion USD bank bailout bill passed by the United States House of Representatives and the Senate is working or will work. Concerns over the lack of trading within the credit market is one of the main reasons for the drop.

This is the seventh straight day of markets closing in severely negative numbers.

One of the biggest stocks that dropped was General Motors, which lost more then 33% of its value.

In the UK, the FTSE 100 dropped from a day high of 145 points to 52.9 points lower, which is a 4 year low. The biggest drop was Barclays, which dropped 13.1%.

The only major world indexes that gained any value were the Hang Seng in Hong Kong, which closed up 511.51 points or up 3.31%, and the Russian RTS, which ended up more than 10.91%, recovering partly yesterday’s fall.

“Markets are still skeptical with regards to the international coordination to face the problems of the financial system,” explained Barclays Capital economists. Thus, they predicted, stocks will continue to be volatile for longer.

Investors are waiting for the outcome of several meetings that will be held this weekend. Finance ministers from the G7 will be gathering in Washington, and in the meantime the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank will be holding there autumn meetings.

Emergency rescues

In response to the financial tsunami, the European Central Bank (ECB) opened this Thursday an unlimited emergency credit line to stimulate liquidity in the institutions that are facing bankruptcy. Through six-day credits, the ECB plans aiding financially the 15 countries which are part of the Eurozone. Furthermore, it injected $100 billion dollars to the market, duplicating the figure it had originally offered.

Iceland had to nationalize Kaupthing Bank, the most important one in the country. The Nordic state – whose economy is highly dependent on the banking system – is handling great financial problems after the government was forced to nationalize the three most important banks, and could have to face bankruptcy.

Central banks in Argentina, Brazil and Mexico also decided to intervene in the market to stop the rapid devaluation of their currencies, fearing a capital flight out.

Also, Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel did not rule out nationalizing banks.

20:45, 09 October, 2008 (UTC)
8.579,19 Loss 678,91 Loss 7,33%
1.645,12 Loss 95,21 Loss 5.47%
909,92 Loss 75,02 Loss 7,62%
9.600,18 Loss 456,13 Loss 4.54%
20.310,20 Loss 368,77 Loss 1,78%
1.287,330 Loss 67.650 Loss 4,99%
37.089,29 Loss 1,504.25 Loss 3,90%
4.313,80 Loss 52,89 Loss 1,21%
4.887,00 Loss 126,62 Loss 2,53%
3.442,70 Loss 54,19 Loss 1,55%
5.798,84 Loss 274,61 Loss 4,52%
281,97 Loss 3,69 Loss 1,29%
2.240,88 Loss 83,07 Loss 3,57%
16.519,00 Loss 274,00 Loss 1,63%
9.902,90 Loss 394,70 Loss 3,83%
4.291,30 Loss 78,50 Loss 1,80%
9.157,49 Loss 45,83 Loss 0,50%
15.943,20 Profit 511,51 Profit 3,31%
2.074,58 Loss 17,64 Loss 0,84%

attribution 1,2

Creative Commons Attribution 2.5

| More from NewsWax

Stumble It!

Share/Save/Bookmark

How to survive the coming food shortage.

Leave a Reply

International Mens Day and Fathers Day in Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden

Search MND

Introducing MRm: A New Men's Rights Magazine in PDF format

Download PDF Here

Support Our Sponsors!

Please support MND

Subscribe today:

SUSTAINER: $5/mo.


CONTRIBUTOR: $20/mo.


SUPPORTER: $50/mo.


Or Donate Any Amount

Archives

privacy policy | terms of service


Site Meter

MND: Your Daily Dose of Counter-Theory is Digg proof thanks to caching by WP Super Cache!