• Sign Up
  • |
  • Sign In Sign Out
  • |
  • Make us your home
  • |
  • RSS
1 2
1 15
1 4
1 9
1 13
1 14
IPO
1 25
1 5015
1 5018
  • JET AIRWAYS RAISES FUEL SURCHARGE BY RS.200 ON SECTORS MORE THAN 1000 KM
  • JET AIRWAYS RAISES FUEL SURCHARGE BY RS.200 ON SECTORS MORE THAN 1000 KM
  • DOW JONES UP 0.17%, NASDAQ UP 0.34%, S&P 500 UP 0.25%
  • E&Y ADVISORS FOR THE SUNIL HITECH BUY: NW
  • INDIABULLS OPEN OFFER LIKELY TO SUNIL HITECH SHAREHOLDERS: NW
  • IN TALKS TO BUY CONTROLLING STAKE IN SUNIL HITECH: NW
  • BHARTI HAS NOT SCALED DOWN ITS RETAIL PLANS
  • HOPES INDIA 3G AUCTION HAPPENS EARLY
  • WORRIED ABOUT DELAY IN AUCTION OF 3G SPECTRUM
  • AIM TO HAVE 2 LARGE MILLS WITH 100 MT CAPACITY; TO CLOSE SMALLER ONES
  • 10 LARGEST STEEL MILLS TO ACCOUNT FOR 75% OF STEEL OUTPUT
  • TO MERGE STEEL MAKERS TO CREATE RIVALS FOR ARCELORMITTAL
  • INDIA VICTIM OF TERRORISM FROM ACROSS BORDERS FOR THE LAST 25 YEARS
  • EDUCATION, HEALTH CARE SECTOR NEED MORE REFORMS
  • FDI INFLOWS OVER $120 BN SINCE 2001-02
  • GROWTH ESTIMATED AT 6.5% THIS FISCAL, TO WIND DOWN FISCAL STIMULUS NEXT YR
  • INDIA'S ECONOMY NOW MORE OPEN TO TRADE AND INVESTMENT
  • ECONOMY TO GROW ESTIMATED 6.5% THIS FISCAL
  • INDIA TO WIND DOWN FISCAL STIMULUS NEXT YEAR
  • TO LAUNCH A 3 SCREEN MULTIPLEX IN KANPUR
  • OCT STEEL SALES UP 38% AT 4.62 LAKH TONNES VS 3.35 LAKH TONNES (YOY)
  • OCTOBER CRUDE STEEL PRODUCTION UP 22% AT 599,000 TONS (YOY)
  • OCTOBER SAW THE BEST EVER PRODUCTION IN MOST UNITS
  • SMS BOS < space > stock query at 56388
  • COPPER DOWN TO $6490/TON ON WEAK DEMAND AND US UNEMPLOYMENT DATA
  • CRUDE FALLS 2.6% TO $77.43 BBL
  • Email us at buyorsell@ndtv.com
  • Call us at 011-26201171
  • Stock moves on WAP: Logon to mobile.ndtv.com on GPRS browser
  • SMS INDEX to 56388 for live market updates
Updated: 01/10/2008 | 12:17 AM IST
Global markets shake off some blues
Associated Press
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 (New Delhi)
Comments:
Read (0)

World stocks were volatile on Tuesday, a day after US lawmakers rejected a $700 billion bailout plan.

Asian stocks fell but some finished above their lows of the day and European stocks finished mostly higher after an early decline on hopes US President Bush would successfully push for the package to be reconsidered. The administration says the money would be used to buy up soured loans and free banks to resume lending. That is seen as a key to economic growth in the United States, a major trading partner around the world.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average rose about 3 per cent in midday trading — regaining some of the 7 per cent drop on Monday, when it plunged 778 points in its biggest single-day point drop.

Britain's benchmark stock index, the FTSE 100, closed up 1.7 per cent after falling by as much as 3 per cent earlier in the day. Germany's benchmark DAX index rose by 0.41 per cent, while the Paris CAC-40 was up 0.4 per cent.

Russia's regulator, meanwhile, was forced to halt regular trading for two hours in its two major markets on Tuesday morning after stocks plunged in the opening minute of trading. But shares recovered and closed up for the day.

In Ireland, the volatility was massively upward, as the government guaranteed all the deposits and borrowings — worth around 500 billion euros ($717 billion) — of six of the country's major lenders. Ireland's ISEF Index of financial shares surged by as much as 25 per cent on the back of the guarantee, before settling to a rise of 7.9 per cent.

Some analysts were crediting Ireland's unprecedented move with helping to keep European stocks overall from falling nearly as much as stocks in the US and Asia had.

"The Irish government's blanket insurance could form a template for a European approach to this crisis," said Rob Carnell, London-based chief international economist at ING Financial Markets.

The high volatility was bad for credit markets, which became even more paralyzed by some measures. The rate banks charge each other for overnight dollar loans, the London interbank offered rate, or LIBOR, soared to an all-time high of 6.875 per cent on Tuesday, indicating that banks are unwilling to lend to one another.

"The credit markets really need a US bailout deal to go through," said Richard Hunter, head of British equities at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers. "The alternative is unacceptable."

In Asia, most major stock markets fell Tuesday in stunned dismay over US lawmakers' rejection of the bailout plan.

Markets across Asia tumbled sharply as they opened amid fears that the setback could lead to a broader global financial crisis. But as trading progressed, many markets recovered somewhat and Hong Kong's market managed to close slightly higher as investors scooped up beaten-down shares.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei stock 225 index slumped 4.12 per cent to close at 11,259.86 — the lowest level since June 9, 2005. In Australia, the S&P/ASX-200 index fell 4.3 per cent after falling as much as 5.3 per cent.

The bailout bill's failure dealt a "severe blow to Asia markets right after the Lehman shock," said Mitsushige Akino, fund manager at Ichiyoshi Investment Management in Tokyo, referring to the collapse earlier this month of the US investment bank.

"Many investors grew even more cautious because of the latest development over the bill, and they only see passage of the bill as a minor improvement to the crisis," he said.

Some markets bounced back. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index gained 0.76 per cent to close at 18,016.21 after earlier plunging more than 5 per cent. India's Sensex was up 2.4 per cent in afternoon trading.

Investors were stunned by the US House of Representatives' rejection Monday of a $700 billion emergency bailout package that would have allowed the government to buy bad mortgages and other sour assets held by troubled banks and other financial institutions.

With elections in November, many lawmakers were unwilling to take the political risk of supporting a measure that many American voters see as an undeserved bailout for rich, reckless investment bankers.

Japan's banks have relatively little exposure to the bad mortgages at the core of the global credit crisis, but investors are worried that a slowdown in the US and global economy will hurt demand for exports.

The Bank of Japan on Tuesday morning pumped another 3 trillion yen ($28.7 billion) into money markets, as part of efforts by central banks worldwide to boost liquidity and bolster interbank lending. That brings the BOJ's total injection to 21 trillion yen ($200.6 billion) since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. earlier this month.

The chaos sapped the dollar overnight. The greenback was trading at 104.32 yen on Tuesday afternoon in Asia from above 106 yen a day earlier, adding further pressure on major exporters.

Markets in mainland China are closed this week for National Day celebrations, and Hong Kong will be closed Wednesday.

Comments:
Read (0)
Comments
 
Market Watch
         
Graphs
Stocks

                                Moremore
Stock Dashboard
Trading Calls
Ashuu Kakkarr
Ashuu Kakkarr
0.48% status
Current: Rs 848.75
Stock Recos
The stock may touch Rs 120 in 6-8 months
The investors can hold the stock for the medium term with a stoploss of Rs 45
Buy or Sell
Today's Analyst: Shruti Vora
Query : Hitesh Sarkar, an investor from Surat, has 500 Wockhardt at Rs 194/share.