Global Stocks Tumble, Driving S&P 500 to Worst Week on Record
By Sarah Thompson

Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Stocks tumbled around the world, driving the
Standard & Poor's 500 Index to its worst week on record, and
commodities slumped amid growing concern international attempts to
prop up financial markets will fail to avert a recession.

The S&P 500 fell 7 percent to the lowest level since the start of the
Iraq War in 2003 while stocks in Europe and Japan staged the steepest
weekly tumble in at least 21 years. Drops in Brazil and India pushed
the MSCI emerging markets index to its worst week ever. Oil fell as
much as 9.2 percent to $78.61, copper was poised for its largest
weekly decrease in two decades.

``We have reached the panic stage,'' said Espen Furnes, an Oslo-based
fund manager at Storebrand Asset Management, which has the equivalent
of $48 billion. ``Fundamentals don't count anymore.''

The MSCI World index of 23 developed countries dropped for a seventh
day as investors lost faith in government bank rescue plans,
coordinated interest rate cuts and assurances from world leaders that
the crisis will ease.

While stocks briefly pared declines early in the day, comments from
President George W. Bush and Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
did nothing to restore confidence and equities resumed their plunge.
Bush said the U.S. is using a ``wide range of tools'' to stabilize
markets and sough to reassure Americans that the $700 billion rescue
plan passed by Congress last week will work.

The S&P 500 declined 64.45 points to 845.47 as of 2:02 p.m. in New
York, bringing its weekly drop to 23 percent. The MSCI World Index
lost 7.8 percent to extend this week's slide to 22 percent, the most
since records began in 1970. Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index
slumped 7.5 percent. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average slumped 11
percent, the second-biggest drop on record. The MSCI Asia Pacific sank
6.9 percent.

Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley dropped 27 percent after Moody's Investors Service said
it may cut the bank's credit rating. Rio Tinto Group, E.ON AG and
Barclays Plc fell more than 10 percent in Europe. Exxon Mobil Corp.
slid 8.9 percent as oil dipped below $80 a barrel on concern the
economic slowdown will stifle demand.

Copper for December delivery fell 22.65 cents, or 9.4 percent, to
$2.1795 a pound in New York. The yen headed for its biggest weekly
gain in a decade against the dollar as investors sold higher-yielding
assets to pay back low-cost loans in Japan.

Stocks pared declines after Berlusconi said European Union and Group
of Eight leaders are discussing the idea of closing the world's
financial markets. Berlusconi later said no such suspension was under
consideration.

More than $25 trillion has been erased from global equities in 2008.
Central banks from London and Frankfurt to Washington and Hong Kong
this week were forced to cut interest rates after the yearlong credit-
market seizure stoked concern banks will run short of money.

`Seized Up'

The cost of borrowing in dollars for three months jumped to the
highest level since Dec. 27, the British Bankers' Association.

The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks charge each
other for such loans rose 7 basis points to 4.82 percent, the BBA said
today. The Libor-OIS spread, a gauge of cash scarcity among banks,
widened 11 basis points to 365 basis points. One basis point is 0.01
percentage point.

``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 VStoxx Index, which measures the cost of using options as
insurance against declines in the Euro Stoxx 50 Index, surged as much
as 39 percent to 81.38 today, the highest in at least nine years. The
CBOE Volatility Index gained 17 percent.

`Panic Stage'

``What the market is discounting is that the western world,
particularly the U.S and developed countries, can't live the way they
have in recent years on borrowing,'' said Stanley Nabi, vice chairman
of Silvercrest Asset Management Group in New York, which oversees $9.6
billion. ``We're going to have more sluggish, less vigorous growth
than in the past.''

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.

Russia's government will start buying stocks of domestic companies
next week to help support prices, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said.

Consob, Italy's securities-market regulator, banned all short sales on
the country's stocks.

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.

Default, Bankruptcy

``A very dangerous mix 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 cost of default protection on corporate bonds soared to records on
concern the credit crisis will trigger more failures.

Credit-default swaps on Europe's benchmark Markit iTraxx Crossover
index surged 57 basis points to 730, according to JPMorgan. Credit-
market indexes in Australia and Japan also rose after the CDX North
America Investment Grade index jumped in New York late yesterday.

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.

Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley dropped $4.76 to $7.69 after Moody's 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 8.5
percent to 710 yen. The company is in talks to buy a stake in Morgan
Stanley.

Rio Tinto, the world's third-largest mining company, lost 12 percent
to 2,424 pence. E.ON, Germany's biggest utility, sank 10 percent to
25.32 euros.

Barclays slipped 14 percent to 207.50 pence. The U.K.'s second-biggest
bank said it's ``considering a number of options, including capital
raising, relating to the industry-wide commitment.''

U.K. banks as a whole have until the end of the year to add 25 billion
pounds ($42 billion) to their reserves under the government's plan,
Barclays said in the statement.

Valuations

The MSCI World Index traded at 10.76 times the current earnings of the
companies in the index, the cheapest since October 1982, according to
data from JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London. The MSCI Europe Index traded
at 8.34 times profit, the lowest since September 1981, the data show.
The S&P 500 traded at 16.64 times earnings, the cheapest since
September 2007, based on data compiled by Bloomberg.

Nobel Biocare Holding AG tumbled 27 percent to 21.38 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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