Stock Markets

Australian stocks rise 4.3 per cent

Australian stocks rise 4.3 per centSydney - Australian stocks start

Tokyo markets open well, buoyed by earnings reports

Tokyo markets open well, buoyed by earnings reports Tokyo - Japan markets opened up Monday, largely over reports that company earnings may not be as bad as expected.

The Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 72.64 points, or 0.8 per cent, to 8,766.46 at 9:36 am local time. The broader Topix index climbed 8.62, or 1 per cent, to 902.91.

Sony Corp advanced 2.3 per cent, while Panasonic Corp climed 6.6 per cent. Japan's biggest steelmakers - Nippon Steel Corp and JFE Holdings - were expected to boost annual earnings targets.

Japanese Stock markets open well, buoyed by earnings reports

US stocks close lower to end roller-coaster week

US stocks close lower to end roller-coaster week Washington - US stocks dropped on Friday, closing out a wild week that saw most major indices make strong gains amid uncertainty and recessionary fears among US investors.

US stocks had been up as much as 4 per cent earlier in the trading day but were struck with a late sell-off - a common trend during the ongoing financial crisis.

The Commerce Department reported that construction of single homes fell to a 26-year low in September, signalling the housing downturn at the heart of the financial turmoil has yet to reach bottom.

Wall Street tumbles with major losses

New York - Wall Street took another tumble on Wednesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average spiralling down by more than 700 points amid renewed worries the United States is already in the grip of a recession.

US Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke warned that the emergency action taken by the Bush administration in response to the financial crisis is unlikely to produce a swift economic recovery.

"Stabilization of the financial markets is a critical first step, but even if they stabilize as we hope they will, broader economic recovery will not happen right away," Bernanke said to the Economic Club of New York.

London markets end erratic week on high note

London markets end erratic week on high note London - The London stock market rallied at the end of a volatile week Friday, as the Financial Times Share Index (FTSE) gained ground to close 5 per cent, putting it above the crucial 4,000-point mark.

The FTSE held firm in afternoon trading, despite early falls on Wall Street following more dire news from the US housing market.

The London index was up 201.6 points at 4,063 points at the close, ending what one stockbroker described as a "neurotic week."

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