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BusinessDesk: While you were sleeping; Markets slump on recession fears

BusinessDesk: While you were sleeping; Markets slump on recession fears

Equities and commodities tumbled after a report quashed hopes China’s economic prowess would pick up the slack from sluggishness in the U.S. and Europe.

Data showing that China’s manufacturing might contract for a third month in September after a preliminary index of purchasing managers showed measures of export orders and output fell exacerbated concern after yesterday’s warning by the Federal Reserve of “significant downside risks” to the U.S. economy.

In late trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 3.60%, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index tanked 3.43% and the Nasdaq Composite Index sank 3.34%. In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index had crashed 4.6% by the end of the day.

“I don’t know how much further the market can go down,” David Kelly, chief market strategist for JPMorgan Funds in New York, told Bloomberg News. “The real problem is that policy makers keep on proposing solutions which either won’t be implemented or simply do not work. The Fed needs to express confidence on the economy itself.”

Seven world leaders today implored Europe to act more decisively to stem its fiscal crisis.

Euro zone governments and institutions must act swiftly to resolve the euro crisis and all European economies must confront the debt overhang to prevent contagion to the wider global economy," leaders of Australia, Canada, Indonesia, Britain, Mexico, South Africa and South Korea wrote in an open letter to France, currently chair of the Group of 20 leading economies.

The demand came as a European Central Bank study warned the entire euro currency project was at risk. The study was co-authored by ECB chief economist Juergen Stark, who resigned this month.

"Greatly increased fiscal imbalances in the euro area as a whole and the dire situation in individual member countries risk undermining stability, growth and employment, as well as the sustainability of [Europe's Economic and Monetary Union] itself," according to the research paper, published, though not endorsed, by the ECB, Reuters reported.

There were other dire predictions. Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the biggest bond fund, warned the world is on the eve of the next financial crisis, with sovereign debt its epicentre.

The European Central Bank hasn’t put in place a “circuit breaker” to contain the region’s debt crisis, El-Erian, who is also Pimco’s co-chief investment officer, said at an event in Washington today, Bloomberg reported.

Benefitting from the turmoil was the greenback, still perceived as a safe-haven. The U.S. dollar strengthened 1% against a basket of major currencies.

Also drawing investors in droves were U.S. Treasuries. Thirty-year bonds soared, pushing yields 18 basis points lower to 2.81% in early afternoon trading in New York, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader prices.

“People are really scared,” Justin Lederer, an interest-rate strategist in New York at Cantor Fitzgerald LP, told Bloomberg. “The market expected a curve twist, but not to this extent, and so we are seeing a strong long-end rally in bonds. And we are in the midst of a situation where every day the likelihood of a global recession creeps up stronger.”

Raw materials were also hard hit amid concern about a global recession, with oil, gold, silver and copper all plunging today.

(BusinessDesk)

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1 Comments

 We are all thinking, talking - and nothing has been done.

Roubini : The risks ahead are not just of a mild double-dip recession, but of a severe contraction that could turn into Great Depression II, especially if the eurozone crisis becomes disorderly and leads to a global financial meltdown. Wrong-headed policies during the first Great Depression led to trade and currency wars, disorderly debt defaults, deflation, rising income and wealth inequality, poverty, desperation, and social and political instability that eventually led to the rise of authoritarian regimes and World War II. The best way to avoid the risk of repeating such a sequence is bold and aggressive global policy action now.

 http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2011/09/19/how-to-prevent-a-depression/

 What makes me wonder is, why are these financial/ economic experts, policy- makers incl. politicians in charge not taken the massive impacts of climate change, increase natural disasters, men made catastrophes, political worldwide wrangling have, costing societies trillions into consideration. Because experts are so one sided in their views, hardly anyone draws attention to complex correlated problems in their analyses/ assessments.

Therefore I think the depression scenario and the fall of societies is taking place far sooner, then most experts even think of.

 With other words:

What most experts suggest is the world driving a brand new car, needing usual expenses only, but unfortunately it isn’t a new car - 200’000km are already on the odometer. Maintenance, repairs and especially unexpected costs are growing massive.

Time to act - change the driver(s) first  and then the car !

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