Turmoil in US, European stock markets
Agency
August 11, 2011
Most
Asian markets opened down on Thursday morning,
following another nightmare day's trading in Europe and the
US.
Agency reports said European governments scrambled to reassure
turbulent markets after the continent's major stock exchanges
plunged Wednesday amid concerns that core eurozone economies such
as France and Italy were saddled with unsustainable public
debt.
London's FTSE-100 index fell by 3.05 percent and in Paris the
CAC-40 dropped by 5.45 percent while in Frankfurt the DAX tumbled
5.13 percent. In New York, the Dow Jones closed down 4.62
percent.
The losses came as rumors swirled that France, which currently
leads the Group of Seven (G7) industrialized nations, could lose
its AAA credit rating less then a week after the world's largest
economy - the United States - was downgraded to AA+ for the first
time in history.
France's Finance Ministry subsequently denied rumors that its
top-notch credit worthiness was on the line. The rating agencies
Standard & Poor's, Fitch and Moody's confirmed that France
still enjoy AAA status.
French austerity
French President Nicolas Sarkozy broke off his vacation at his
Riviera holiday home Wednesday and returned to Paris in order to
announce an austerity drive, giving his finance and budget
ministers a week to draft ideas that would lend credibility to
France's pledge to slash deficits.
"The head of state reiterated that the commitments to reduce the
public deficit are inviolable and will be adhered to no matter how
the economic situation evolves," Sarkozy's office said.
The shares of French banks, however, tumbled amid fears over their
exposure to the ailing economies of Italy and Greece.
In Italy, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi called parliament back
early from its summer holiday in order to vote on a balanced budget
amendment Thursday.
Rapidly rising rates on Italian and Spanish debt, coupled with the
US downgrade, helped trigger the stock market turmoil last week.
The European Central Bank (ECB) intervened to stave off a crisis
and began buying the bonds off Italy and Spain, the eurozone's
fourth and fifth largest economies respectively.
Previously, the ECB had only intervened to secure the debt of
peripheral economies under the protection of eurozone bailouts -
Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
"In sum, since the fall of Lehman Brothers, this is the worst
crisis since the Second World War," ECB President Jean-Claude
Trichet said, referring to the 2008 collapse of the US investment
bank that triggered a global financial crisis.
Trichet said the ECB had been "extremely clear" with Italy and
Spain about the need to "return to a normal budgetary
situation."
Meanwhile, the specter of another eurozone bailout hovered over the
small island nation of Cyprus, after the rating agency Fitch
downgraded the country's credit rating to BBB, dangerously close to
junk status.
Fitch predicted that Cyprus would need EU financial assistance to
make ends meet and that "such assistance is likely to be
forthcoming."