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Global shares continue to slide
European markets have opened sharply lower following hefty falls in Asia that saw Japan's Nikkei index falling 6.36% to its lowest close since 1982. The FTSE 100 in London was trading down 4.8%, the Cac 40 in Paris fell 5.5% and the Dax in Frankfurt was down 3.5%. It follows hefty falls on Friday with investors continuing to fret about the depth of the global slowdown. The Japanese yen stayed near its 13-year high against the US dollar, despite threats of G7 intervention. In the Philippines, the main index fell 12.3%, as the country's second biggest bank announced hefty losses. There is more pain left. The global turmoil does not appear to be resolving soon Atul Mehra, J M Financial Shares of Banco de Oro Unibank lost almost a quarter of their value after it reported a loss of 1.3bn pesos ($26.8m; £16.8m) because of its exposure to the US investment bank Lehman Brothers. One of the few exchanges rising was the Seoul market, which reversed early losses to close up 0.8% after South Korea's central bank cut its key interest rate from 5% to 4.25% at a rare, unscheduled meeting. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng was down 12.2% in afternoon trading. India's Sensex index dropped 6.1% to its lowest level since November 2005. "There is more pain left. The global turmoil does not appear to be resolving soon," said Atul Mehra at the brokerage J M Financial in Mumbai. Chinese shares were also lower, with the Shanghai Composite Index closing down 6.3% at its |
MARKET DATA - 08:28 UK
FTSE 100 3679.12down -204.24 -5.26% Dax 4088.80down -206.87 -4.82% Cac 40 3012.90down -180.89 -5.66% Dow Jones 8378.95down -312.30 -3.59% Nasdaq 1552.03down -51.88 -3.23% BBC Global 30 4718.54down -17.27 -0.36% |
الساعة الآن 02:31 PM. حسب توقيت مدينه الرياض |
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