Stock Markets

Hang Seng crashes 8.3 per cent to four-year low

Hong Kong - Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index slumped 8.3 per cent Friday to plunge below 13,000 points, closing at 12,618.38, its lowest level in four years.

The index shed 1,142 points and in October lost more than 30 per cent of its value so far.

Turnover was 56.14 billion Hong Kong dollars (7.2 billion dollars).

Analysts blamed concerns about corporate earnings and wider global economic woes for the drop.

Among the biggest losers were HSBC and Standard Chartered, two of the territory's largest banks, dragged down by worries about the banks' investments in emerging economies.

HSBC saw its share price crash 12.5 per cent to end the day at 88 Hong Kong dollars.

French shares plunge on earnings fears, OPEC meeting

French shares plunge on earnings fears, OPEC meetingParis - Anxiety about corporate earnings and the expected announcement that OPEC will cut oil production have driven French shares sharply lower on Thursday.

In mid-morning trading, the Paris Bourse's CAC 40 index was down 6.09 per cent, at 3,109.09, with 39 of 40 listed stocks losing ground.

France's two large car makers, Renault and Peugeot, were among the biggest losers, giving up 16.41 and 14.45 per cent, respectively, because the global car market is screeching to a halt.

Sensex Plummets 737 Pts On RBI’s Credit Policy

Sensex Plummets 737 Pts On RBI’s Credit PolicyThe 30-share index, BSE Sensex, lost more than 700 points soon after the announcement of credit policy review by the central bank.

Metals, banks and realty stocks were hammered badly.

The central bank kept the Bank Rate unchanged at 6% in its mid-term review of the annual statement on monetary policy for the year 2008-09.

Meanwhile, repo rate was also kept steady at 8%, to judge the impact of a heavy, surprise cut earlier this week to suppress the financial system from the worldwide financial crisis.

Kospi falls below 1000 points, down 10.57 per cent

Kospi falls below 1000 points, down 10.57 per centSeoul - South Korea's benchmark Kospi index on Friday lost 10.57 per cent, dropping below the 1,000-point level, the lowest since May 2005, as foreign investors continued to sell stocks.

The Kospi fell 110.96 points, or 10.57 per cent to close at 938.75.

Kospi heavyweight Samsung Electronics Co dropped 5.2 per cent after quarterly profit reports were down to the lowest in three years.

On the currency markets, the won fell to 1,422 against the dollar, down from Thursday's close of 1.408, the lowest finish since June 17,
1998.

Indian equities tank 8 per cent on global cues, monetary policy

New Delhi - Indian equities extended losses Friday as the benchmark Sensex tumbled 8 per cent to a two-year low as investors sold heavily after the central bank disappointed them by keeping key rates unchanged in its policy review.

The 30-share-sensitive index, which had shed 912 points over two sessions since Wednesday, lost another 782.62 points by mid-session Friday.

The Sensex fell sharply to 8,989.08, a loss of 8.01 per cent, by noon (06 30 GMT), after a credit and monetary review was announced by the Reserve Bank of India.

Banking, metal and realty stocks shed between 6 to 8 per cent to lead the Sensex to below 9,000, a level last seen in 2006.

Taiwan stocks shed more than 3 per cent over political uncertainty

Taiwan Stock ExchangeTaipei - Taiwan stocks shed more than 3 per cent Thursday, over possible Taipei-Beijing tension arising from upcoming anti-China demonstrations.

The TAIEX index fell 150.89 points, or 3.19 per cent, to close at 4,579.62.

Analysts attributed the fall to the plunge of major Asian stock markets - with South Korean shares dipping more than 9 per cent and Japanese shares down more than 7 per cent in mid-morning trading - and possible cross-strait tension arising from anti-China protests planned Saturday by Taiwan separatists.

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