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Asian markets slump on China and US economic fears
by Dylan Lobo on Jun 30, 2010 at 07:41
Asian markets tumbled overnight as concerns about the health of the Chinese and US economies grew.
Following dire consumer confidence data in the US, economic news from China added to the tension. The Conference Board's leading economic index for China rose by 0.3% in April, a significant downgrade from initial estimates of a 1.7% rise.
This sparked sharp falls in the Shanghai Composite, which fell by around 1% to 2,406, it lowest point in 14 months.
In Japan the Nikkei was down by some 200 points, or 2%, at 9,367. At one point during the session the index fell to 9,347, its lowest level since 1 December. The Hang Sang was around 160 points lighter at 20,080.
In South Korea the Kospi shed 1.3%, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 and Taiwan's benchmark both fell by as much as 1.7%.
The falls came after torrid sessions in London and New York where the FTSE 100 slumped 3.1% and the Dow lost 2.7%. In Europe the Eurofirst 300 retreated by 3%.
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1 comment so far. Why not have your say?
Andrew Baker
Jun 30, 2010 at 13:17
It's summer (in the western hemisphere anyway) and the markets have been jittery for awhile, so a lot of the falls are due to self-fulfilling doom mongering, which suits many in the markets who make their living from trading rather than investing. Any recovery is weak, and it will take time for real values to improve again, but trumpeting double dip doom and disaster helps only to encourage just that happening, and is not helpful.
I will hold conviction stocks and take profits where I think fit to buy back in lower further down the line. Many will just sell and vow never to trust the markets again ... until the next time we have a booming uptrend when they will, then sell out at the bottom once more.
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