Couldn't be better, credit has frozen and panic is ubiquitous. Our
Markets took a hammering yesterday and they are getting another
hammering today.

Global Stocks Pounded, Led by Banks, as Credit Crisis Widens
By Adria Cimino and Chua Kong Ho

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Stocks tumbled around the world, the euro fell
the most against the yen since its debut and oil dropped below $90 a
barrel as the yearlong credit market seizure threatened to deepen the
global slowdown. Government bonds rose.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Index retreated 3.9 percent, extending the
worst weekly slump since 2001. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost
370 points, led by plunges in Alcoa Inc., Boeing Co. and Walt Disney
Co. Both gauges pared declines of more than 7.7 percent in the final
hour as traders increased bets on a Federal Reserve interest rate cut.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index headed for the biggest loss in its 21-
year history and exchanges in Russia and Brazil halted trading.
Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index had its steepest decline since
1987.

Today's sell-off erased about $2.2 trillion from global equities after
the German government was forced to bail out Hypo Real Estate Holding
AG, overshadowing the $700 billion U.S. Treasury plan to revive credit
markets. The euro weakened 6.4 percent against the yen, the most since
1999.

``It's like a fire,'' said Emmanuel Soupre, a fund manager at Neuflize
OBC Asset Management in Paris, which oversees the equivalent of $33
billion. ``It's easier to extinguish five minutes after the start. Now
we're about an hour into it. We have to act quickly to assure the
continuity of the financial system to avoid an irreversible
contamination of the entire economy.''

Two-year Treasury yields plunged 0.14 percentage point to 1.45 percent
as investors sought the relative safety of government bonds. The MSCI
World Index slid 5.7 percent as every industry fell at least 4
percent. Rio Tinto Plc, the world's second-biggest aluminum producer,
fell 15 percent and UBS AG, the largest Swiss bank, lost 13 percent.

Seeking Safety

The Dow closed below 10,000 for the first time since October 2004,
falling as much as 800 points at its lowest level. The measure
recouped 430 points after Bill Gross, manager of the world's biggest
bond fund, said the Fed should cut its target rate for overnight loans
to 1 percent.

Financial futures show traders are certain policy makers will lower
borrowing costs by their next meeting on Oct. 29.

National benchmark indexes fell in all 18 western European markets.
London's FTSE 100 dropped 7.9 percent, the most in two decades.
Russia's Micex plunged 19 percent, led by OAO Gazprom's 21 percent
decrease. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 4 percent, as Mitsubishi
UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Macquarie Group Ltd. retreated more than
9 percent.

Brazil, Indonesia

A 5.4 percent tumble in Brazil's Bovespa Index and a 10 percent
retreat in Indonesia's Jakarta Composite Index pushed the MSCI
Emerging Market Index down 9.5 percent, the steepest since it began.

``We're seeing panic all over the markets right now,'' said Javier
Barrio, head of equity sales for Spanish clients at Banco BPI SA in
Madrid. ``Governments are taking steps to try to reduce investors'
fears but confidence is weak.''

The plunge in stock markets accelerated along with bailouts of
financial institutions and subprime-related credit losses that have
approached $600 billion. The MSCI World is valued at 12.8 times the
earnings of its companies, the lowest since at least 1995, according
to data compiled by Bloomberg. Europe's Stoxx 600 trades at 10 times
earnings, near the lowest level since at least 2002, while the S&P 500
is valued at 20 times earnings.

UBS, the European bank worst hit by credit crisis, lost 3.08 to 20.90
francs. The bank's earnings will be ``challenged for some time,'' and
UBS may write down $3.1 billion in the third quarter, Oppenheimer &
Co. analyst Meredith Whitney wrote in a note to clients. The Swiss
bank has posted $44 billion in losses, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg.

Japan Banks

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Japan's largest bank, fell 9.2 percent
to 806 yen. Mizuho Financial Group Inc. dropped 7.8 percent to 402,000
yen.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., the biggest U.S. bank by deposits, slid 4.4
percent to $44.

BNP Paribas SA dropped 5.4 percent to 67.50 euros. France's biggest
bank agreed to take control of Fortis in Belgium and Luxembourg for
14.5 billion euros ($19.8 billion) after an earlier government rescue
failed to ensure the company's stability.

Hypo Real Estate plunged 37 percent to 4.70 euros. The German
government and the country's banks and insurers agreed on a 50 billion-
euro rescue package for the commercial property lender after an
earlier bailout faltered.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the government will guarantee
savings of private account holders to prevent a rush of withdrawals
from the nation's banking system.

U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said Britain is
``ready to do whatever it takes'' to help its banks, while Denmark
said commercial lenders will provide as much as 35 billion kroner
($6.4 billion) over the next two years to a fund to insure depositors
against losses. The Fed said today it ``stands ready'' to foster
``liquid money market conditions.''

Bailout Package

U.S. President George W. Bush last week signed a $700 billion rescue
package into law to stem a banking crisis that has claimed Bear
Stearns Cos. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

The euro tumbled as bank failures in the region increased, dipping 5.4
percent to 137.22 yen, the weakest since September 2005. All the
world's most-traded currencies declined against the yen, which
strengthened 15 percent against the Australian dollar.

``The euro zone is the second domino of the globe to be falling over
after the U.S.,'' said Alex Sinton, a senior currency dealer at ANZ
National Bank Ltd. in Auckland.

Money market rates climbed as investors lost confidence in financial
markets. The interest rate that banks charge each other for overnight
loans in dollars jumped to 2.37 percent from 2 percent, the British
Bankers' Association said.

Commercial Paper

Yields on overnight U.S. commercial paper jumped 0.94 percentage point
to 3.68 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That's the
highest since Sept. 30, the day after the U.S. House of
Representatives first rejected the bank bailout.

Investors are growing increasingly concerned that higher borrowing
costs will worsen a slowdown in world economies, reducing demand for
metals and fuel. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 commodities
slipped 5.2 percent.

Rio Tinto Group slipped 15 percent to 2,888 pence. Freeport- McMoRan,
the world's largest publicly traded copper producer, lost $1.15 to
$43.71. Marathon Oil, the largest refiner in the U.S. Midwest, sank
$2.12 to $33.46.

Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe's biggest oil company, dropped 5.4
percent to 1,540 pence. PT Bumi Resources, Indonesia's biggest power-
station coal producer, tumbled 32 percent to 2,175 rupiah, extending a
six-day, 19 percent slide.

Crude oil fell for a fourth day in New York, dropping 6.5 percent to
settle at $87.81 a barrel. Power station coal prices at Australia's
Newcastle port dropped 6.1 percent last week, a seventh decline.
Copper slipped 7.3 percent to $2.493 a pound on the Comex division of
the New York Mercantile Exchange.

UBS's Hong Kong-based economist Duncan Wooldridge reduced his growth
forecast in Asia excluding Japan next year to 6.1 percent from 6.9
percent, saying the region will face ``recession-like conditions.''

To contact the reporter for this story: Adria Cimino in Paris at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Chua Kong Ho in Shanghai at [EMAIL PROTECTED];

On Oct 7, 10:28 am, Gaar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So how did that work out for you?
>
> Looks like my Accounts are still there...
>
> On Oct 6, 4:08 am, "\"Lone Wolf\"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > When the New York stock exchange opens in a few hours the world
> > capitalist economy will be bought to it's knees, markets will freeze
> > as all lending ceases precipitating a collapse of not only the World's
> > banking institutions but tens of thousands of businesses reliant on
> > short term money.
>
> > What happens after that is anyones guess. One thing is for sure is
> > that the world will be spared the inane stupidity of whether Obama can
> > remember how many years he has been married and Palin lying in her own
> > filth accusing Obama of being a terrorist. These people and the media
> > that promote them, are the scum of the earth. How anyone could
> > consider voting for such amoral, despicable reprobates defies belief,
> > they belong behind bars, everyone of them. And guess what, it's about
> > to happen.
>
> > "Capitalism will be it's own gravedigger" Karl Marx. And what a whole
> > it has dug itself!
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