Global Stocks, U.S. Futures Slump; Barclays, Rio, E.ON Tumble

By Sarah Thompson

 Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Stocks tumbled, driving the MSCI World Index
to its worst week in more than three decades, on concern the deepening
credit crisis will spur the failure of more financial companies and
send the global economy into recession. The yen rallied as investors
shunned higher-yielding assets.

Barclays Plc, Rio Tinto Group and E.ON AG fell more than 9 percent.
Nobel Biocare Holding AG plummeted 30 percent after it said third-
quarter revenue declined on slowing demand in North America and Europe
and warned it may not meet full-year guidance for operating margins.
Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average slumped 11 percent, the second-
biggest drop on record.

The MSCI World Index lost 3.4 percent to 925.18 at 8:38 a.m. in
London, extending this week's drop to 19 percent, the most on record
dating back to 1970. Standard & Poor's 500 Index futures slid 1.9
percent. Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slumped 6.5 percent, and
the MSCI Asia Pacific sank 6.4 percent.

``Fundamentals don't count anymore,'' said Espen Furnes, an Oslo-based
fund manager at Storebrand Asset Management, which has the equivalent
of $48 billion. ``We have reached the panic stage, which is always the
last phase. The question is how long it'll last.''

More than $4 trillion has been erased from global equities this week
even as central banks from London and Frankfurt to Washington and Hong
Kong were forced to cut interest rates after the yearlong credit-
market seizure stoked concern banks will run short of money.

Next Victims

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell below 9,000 for the first time
since 2003 yesterday as higher borrowing costs and slower consumer
spending spurred concern carmakers, insurers and energy companies will
be the next victims of the credit crisis.

``A very dangerous mixed has taken place in the money and credit
markets and hedge funds are clearly withdrawing flows from equities,''
said Francisco Salvador, director at Venture Finanzas SA in Madrid.
``We are waiting for some rational order to be restored, and very
abrupt sell-offs are always followed by abrupt rebounds, but meanwhile
we'll see panic.''

The MSCI World is valued at 11.12 times the reported earnings of
companies in the index, the cheapest since at least 1995. Europe's
Stoxx 600 was valued at 9.30 times profit today, the lowest since
Bloomberg began compiling the data in January 2002. The S&P 500 traded
at 17.39 times earnings, the cheapest since September 2007.

Russian stock exchanges delayed the opening of trading today and
Indonesia extended a two-day halt. Iceland yesterday suspended equity
trading today until Oct. 13 after the government seized Kaupthing hf,
the country's biggest bank.

`Seized Up'

Asian money-market rates climbed as injections of more than $32
billion by Japan and Australia and a round of global interest-rate
cuts failed to unlock credit. The three-month interbank offered rate
in Tokyo, known as Tibor, was fixed at 0.878 percent, the highest
since March 1998.

``The wheels of commerce have effectively seized up,'' said Kate
Schapiro, who oversees $250 million in equities at Sentinel Asset
Management in San Francisco. ``Trapped by the fear of losing
everything, we're seeing one-sided selling.''

The yen rose to 99.39 per dollar, bringing the weekly gain to 6
percent, the most in a decade. Gold jumped to the highest in nearly 11
weeks as investors sought bullion as a haven.

Singapore fell into the first recession since 2002 as manufacturing
slumped, prompting the central bank to end a policy favoring gains in
its currency in an effort to support the economy.

Bankruptcy Protection

New City Residence Investment Corp. filed for bankruptcy protection,
becoming Japan's first real-estate investment trust failure. Yamato
Life Insurance Co. also filed for court protection from creditors in
the nation's first bankruptcy in the industry in seven years.

Barclays, the U.K. bank, slipped 13 percent to 209.5 pence. Rio Tinto,
the world's third-biggest mining company, lost 11 percent to 2,440
pence. E.ON, the German utility company, sank 9.3 percent to 25.62
euros.

Morgan Stanley dropped 6.6 percent to $11.72 in Germany after Moody's
Investors Service said it may cut the bank's credit rating on concern
the financial crisis threatens earnings and investor confidence.

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Japan's biggest bank, lost 6.7
percent to 724 yen. The company is in talks to buy a stake in Morgan
Stanley.

Nobel Biocare fell 30 percent to 2.26 francs. Before today, the
company expected sales to rise in the ``low single-digits'' while
profitability on earnings before interest and taxation was supposed to
remain at 2007 levels at a constant exchange rate.

Chief Executive Officer Domenico Scala, the former Syngenta AG
executive brought in to replace Heliane Canepa in July 2007, said Aug.
11 there were ``encouraging initial signs'' of recovery and that the
worst might be over in the U.S. market.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah Thompson in London at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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