本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Oct 10th 2008 | NEW YORK, TOKYO
From Economist.com
Shutterstock
MARKETS in Asia and Europe plummeted on Friday October 10th. Japan’s stockmarket ended the week in disarray: the Nikkei 225-share index fell by 24% on the week, twice the weekly fall of the 1987 crash. It is now at five-and-a-half-year lows. Europe followed suit. London’s FTSE 100 slumped by more than 10% within minutes of opening; by mid-morning European stocks were also down, with Germany's DAX index down by more than 8%. Amid widespread anxiety the oil price also tumbled, to around $81 a barrel, its lowest level in a year.
The falls underline that stockmarkets, traumatised by the near-paralysis in credit markets, the collapse of once-mighty banks and the prospect of global recession, are suffering what has been dubbed a “cascading crash”: a series of blows which, added together, are stomach-churning.
Wall Street is unimpressed by the TARP, America’s much-vaunted $700-billion bail-out. The Dow Jones Industrial Average had plunged by 679 points, or 7.3% on Thursday. Nor are markets reassured by a bevy of bank rescues, a co-ordinated rate cut by the world’s leading central banks, the Federal Reserve’s radical decision to buy commercial paper, Britain’s £500 billion ($861 billion) bail-out package, nor the raft of piecemeal rescues by other European governments. On Thursday the International Monetary Fund activated a procedure to offer emergency loans to threatened countries, such as Iceland, which took over its largest bank on Thursday.
In Asia, which had been relatively insulated from recent woes, panic selling set in, as markets slumped in Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan, among others. Indonesia's fell by 10.4% on Wednesday before regulators suspended trading. (Equity trading was also suspended in several European exchanges, including those of Russia, Austria and Iceland.)
At the start of this latest phase of the credit crisis, Japan's financial markets had seemed to float over the top of the global turmoil. Lehman Brothers' collapse, admittedly, had shut off the samurai market used by overseas companies to issue yen-dominated bonds, while overseas banks had trouble getting overnight funds until the Bank of Japan stepped in with assurances. Otherwise Japan's financial markets had functioned pretty smoothly, with well-capitalised banks lending freely to each other and, in the case of Mitsubishi UFJ, one of the big three, snapping up the apparent bargain of a 21% stake in Morgan Stanley for $9 billion. (Morgan Stanley's shares tumbled by 25% on Thursday as investors once again bet that its days as an independent firm are numbered.)
Now all hope that Japan might remain aloof is gone. Overseas hedge funds have been panic sellers of shares. Even cast-iron Japanese government bonds are being shunned in favour of cash—leaving questions about how the government is to refinance a lot of debt coming due over the next month or more. On Friday Yamato Life, a medium-sized insurer, filed for bankruptcy, the first Japanese life insurer to go under in seven years.
In America the scale of the fall is dramatic. A year ago the Dow, resilient in the face of what then seemed only a subprime-mortgage crisis, hit an all-time high of a whisker over 14,000. It is now some 40% lower, having fallen double the distance that signals a bear market. In the past seven trading days alone it has lost 21% of its value.
There is a good deal of bewilderment, as well as fear. Many had assumed that the strenuous, if belated, actions by governments to restore confidence in debt markets would bring a semblance of calm. But these efforts have so far done little to convince markets that the worst is over.
Private-sector predictions of the pain to come are getting darker by the day: Weiss Research reckons that more than 1,600 American banks and thrifts, with $3.2 trillion of assets, are at risk. AIG, an American insurer that had already needed an $85 billion loan, has tapped the Federal Reserve for a further $38 billion to keep itself liquid. And cracks have appeared in the industry’s last remaining pillars of strength as it becomes clear that big losses are coming in consumer and corporate credit as well as mortgages. There were signs on Thursday that confidence was ebbing in another relatively unscathed American titan, Wells Fargo, whose shares finished down by some 15%.
Not only are buyers of stocks conspicuously absent, but much of the selling is forced. All agree that there will be no meaningful recovery until the credit markets are unclogged. The rates at which banks lend to each other are still at or near records. The rate at which companies can borrow over short periods is starting to fall, but only slightly. Longer-term borrowing markets are still mostly shut.
Fixing credit markets could prevent a depression, but a nasty recession looks all but guaranteed. Among those expected to be most affected are retailers, who have been slashing profit forecasts, and the already beleaguered carmakers. The latter have used customer-finance to prop up sales in recent years. General Motors’ shares went into free-fall on Thursday, dropping 31% after a rating agency threatened to downgrade its debt. The once mighty firm now has a market capitalisation of just $2.7 billion.
Finance ministers of the group of seven rich countries are set to meet in Washington, DC, on Friday. The rest of the world’s finance ministers and central bankers join them this weekend for the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank. As the damage to the real economy is becoming apparent, the challenge is to come up with a comprehensive, co-ordinated intervention that might just begin to restore confidence.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
From Economist.com
Shutterstock
MARKETS in Asia and Europe plummeted on Friday October 10th. Japan’s stockmarket ended the week in disarray: the Nikkei 225-share index fell by 24% on the week, twice the weekly fall of the 1987 crash. It is now at five-and-a-half-year lows. Europe followed suit. London’s FTSE 100 slumped by more than 10% within minutes of opening; by mid-morning European stocks were also down, with Germany's DAX index down by more than 8%. Amid widespread anxiety the oil price also tumbled, to around $81 a barrel, its lowest level in a year.
The falls underline that stockmarkets, traumatised by the near-paralysis in credit markets, the collapse of once-mighty banks and the prospect of global recession, are suffering what has been dubbed a “cascading crash”: a series of blows which, added together, are stomach-churning.
Wall Street is unimpressed by the TARP, America’s much-vaunted $700-billion bail-out. The Dow Jones Industrial Average had plunged by 679 points, or 7.3% on Thursday. Nor are markets reassured by a bevy of bank rescues, a co-ordinated rate cut by the world’s leading central banks, the Federal Reserve’s radical decision to buy commercial paper, Britain’s £500 billion ($861 billion) bail-out package, nor the raft of piecemeal rescues by other European governments. On Thursday the International Monetary Fund activated a procedure to offer emergency loans to threatened countries, such as Iceland, which took over its largest bank on Thursday.
In Asia, which had been relatively insulated from recent woes, panic selling set in, as markets slumped in Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan, among others. Indonesia's fell by 10.4% on Wednesday before regulators suspended trading. (Equity trading was also suspended in several European exchanges, including those of Russia, Austria and Iceland.)
At the start of this latest phase of the credit crisis, Japan's financial markets had seemed to float over the top of the global turmoil. Lehman Brothers' collapse, admittedly, had shut off the samurai market used by overseas companies to issue yen-dominated bonds, while overseas banks had trouble getting overnight funds until the Bank of Japan stepped in with assurances. Otherwise Japan's financial markets had functioned pretty smoothly, with well-capitalised banks lending freely to each other and, in the case of Mitsubishi UFJ, one of the big three, snapping up the apparent bargain of a 21% stake in Morgan Stanley for $9 billion. (Morgan Stanley's shares tumbled by 25% on Thursday as investors once again bet that its days as an independent firm are numbered.)
Now all hope that Japan might remain aloof is gone. Overseas hedge funds have been panic sellers of shares. Even cast-iron Japanese government bonds are being shunned in favour of cash—leaving questions about how the government is to refinance a lot of debt coming due over the next month or more. On Friday Yamato Life, a medium-sized insurer, filed for bankruptcy, the first Japanese life insurer to go under in seven years.
In America the scale of the fall is dramatic. A year ago the Dow, resilient in the face of what then seemed only a subprime-mortgage crisis, hit an all-time high of a whisker over 14,000. It is now some 40% lower, having fallen double the distance that signals a bear market. In the past seven trading days alone it has lost 21% of its value.
There is a good deal of bewilderment, as well as fear. Many had assumed that the strenuous, if belated, actions by governments to restore confidence in debt markets would bring a semblance of calm. But these efforts have so far done little to convince markets that the worst is over.
Private-sector predictions of the pain to come are getting darker by the day: Weiss Research reckons that more than 1,600 American banks and thrifts, with $3.2 trillion of assets, are at risk. AIG, an American insurer that had already needed an $85 billion loan, has tapped the Federal Reserve for a further $38 billion to keep itself liquid. And cracks have appeared in the industry’s last remaining pillars of strength as it becomes clear that big losses are coming in consumer and corporate credit as well as mortgages. There were signs on Thursday that confidence was ebbing in another relatively unscathed American titan, Wells Fargo, whose shares finished down by some 15%.
Not only are buyers of stocks conspicuously absent, but much of the selling is forced. All agree that there will be no meaningful recovery until the credit markets are unclogged. The rates at which banks lend to each other are still at or near records. The rate at which companies can borrow over short periods is starting to fall, but only slightly. Longer-term borrowing markets are still mostly shut.
Fixing credit markets could prevent a depression, but a nasty recession looks all but guaranteed. Among those expected to be most affected are retailers, who have been slashing profit forecasts, and the already beleaguered carmakers. The latter have used customer-finance to prop up sales in recent years. General Motors’ shares went into free-fall on Thursday, dropping 31% after a rating agency threatened to downgrade its debt. The once mighty firm now has a market capitalisation of just $2.7 billion.
Finance ministers of the group of seven rich countries are set to meet in Washington, DC, on Friday. The rest of the world’s finance ministers and central bankers join them this weekend for the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank. As the damage to the real economy is becoming apparent, the challenge is to come up with a comprehensive, co-ordinated intervention that might just begin to restore confidence.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net