Archive for March 18th, 2008

Monday saw heavy losses to European stocks triggered by continued global gloom, but in early trading today showed signs of recovery after a positive session for Asian stocks. The FTSE 100 index was up 2%, the Dax up 1.8%, and the Cac 40 in Paris up 1.9% in early trading this Tuesday morning.

FTSE 100 Graph
Asian markets also closed predominantly higher with the Nikkei closing 1.5% up, the Hang Seng up 1.4% and the Sensex in Mumbai up 2.0%. Shanghai’s main index did however fall 4% amid fears that Beijing will take action to slow her economy.

Mondays trading marked a wild session which many believe is a culmination of the several events that have rocked investor’s confidence in the past week. The collapse of respected US investment firm Bear Stearns, with its subsequent sale to another Wall Street player JPMorgan Chase at the rock bottom price of $2 a share, followed by emergency liquidity actions undertaken by the Federal Reserve on a Sunday night, and a continued confidence crisis in worldwide credit markets, together led to major European markets recording huge losses in Mondays trading.

The US stock market however didn’t record such losses thanks to bargain hunters taking advantage of the price tumbles, particularly in blue chip and technology sectors.

Shares in Bear Shares had fallen 84% on Monday to $4.31 whilst those of JPMorgan increased by 10% to $40.31.

“The Fed is treating Bear as if it were a large failed bank,” - S&P Economics.

As a result of the collapse many are predicted a prolonged global financial crisis, branching wider and deeper than previously predicted, marking a stark shift in opinion that could magnify any potential effects on world wide economies.

The action made by the FED on Sunday marked its first weekend move in nearly 30 years, making a quarter point cut and announcing it will lend to the twenty primary dealers that buy Treasury securities directly from it, a move not used since the Great Depression.

Largely responsible for the cut price sale of Bear Stearns, the FED will also finance the deal by providing up to $30 billion to JPMorgan.

Many are also awaiting further news today from the Fed, as they are widely expected to cut its benchmark interest rate by a full percentage point to 2.0% as it battles to restore confidence and boost the economy. With continued point cuts like this it could very much be the case that we will see the dollar as a free currency, the first currency to do so since the yen.



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