Twitter
Advertisement

Asia-Pacific markets in free fall over bailout doubts

Markets across Asia plummeted on opening on Thursday, dragged down by US retail sales data and concerns about whether bank bailouts would be able to rescue financial markets.

Latest News
article-main
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

TOKYO: Markets across Asia plummeted on opening on Thursday, dragged down by US retail sales data and concerns about whether bank bailouts would be able to rescue financial markets and avert a recession.
 
The Tokyo stock market plummeted in early trading after Wall Street's blue-chip Dow Jones industrials lost nearly eight percent overnight amid growing recession fears in the US and worldwide.
 
The benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average plunged 911.91 points, or 9.55 percent, to  8,635.56.
 
The broader Topix index of all first-section issues dropped 7.57 percent to 883.21.
 
After stocks fell, Japan's central bank injected 600 billion yen ($5.92 billion) into money markets to ease the credit crunch that has resulted from the global financial crisis.
 
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index opened more than six percent lower. The blue-chip index, which lost five percent of its value Wednesday, was down a further 6.11 percent at 15,020.75 within 20 minutes of the start of trading.
 
Taiwan's Taiex index traded 3.14 percent lower in the morning at 5,081.69, dampened by Wall Street woes and the death of Wang Yung-ching, founder of Taiwan's petrochemical giant Formosa Group, dealers said.
 
Stocks of all six listed companies of the Formosa Group fell sharply on the death of the group founder, dubbed the "god of management" and the second-wealthiest man in Taiwan.
 
Investors fled Australian stocks in response to Wall Street registering its biggest one-day percentage loss in 20 years.
 
In early trading in Sydney, the ASX 200 fell 3.6 percent to 4,067.
 
New Zealand's NZX 50 was trading at 2,771.61, down 4.58 percent.
 
In China, the key Shanghai Composite index was down 3.79 percent to 1,919.14. The smaller Shenzhen Component index was also down 3.05 percent to 508.71.
 
Singapore's Straits Times Index plunged 6.3 percent to 1,927.74.
 
In Seoul, South Korea's Kospi index plummeted 6.62 percent to 2,627.68 after the ratings agency Standard and Poor's said Wednesday that it might cut credit ratings for a number of South Korean banks.
 
The local currency, the won, slumped 12 percent, the worst loss since the country had to be bailed out by the International Monetary Fund in December 1997 during the Asian financial crisis.

 

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement