Asia stocks slide as Wall Street hits 12-year
low<http://latestequityresearchreports.blogspot.com/2009/03/asia-stocks-slide-as-wall-street-hits.html>
http://latestequityresearchreports.blogspot.com/2009/03/asia-stocks-slide-as-wall-street-hits.html
 REUTERS
HONG KONG: Asia stocks slid on Friday after a warning from General Motors'
that it may need to file for bankruptcy drove Wall Street shares to 12-year
lows and highlighted the severe troubles of major US companies and banks.
World stocks struck a six-year low as Japan's Nikkei average fell about 3
percent in early
trade<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>,
with shares in the country's big exporters and banks taking the biggest hit.
But most Asian equity markets held up better than their counterparts in the
United States and Europe, thanks partly to lingering hopes that China will
boost its planned $585 billion in stimulus spending to help offset the
damage from collapsing exports. The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks
outside Japan was down 0.9 percent compared with the 4.3 percent slump in
the US S&P 500 the previous day. Australia'sshare
market<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>fell
1.8 percent, while South Korea dropped 1.2 percent. The deepening
sell-off in major stock markets came before the US payrolls report later in
the day, which is expected to show companies slashed 648,000 jobs in
February and the unemployment rate jumped to a 25-year high of 7.9 percent.
"Tonight's unemployment data is not going to be beautiful. Things are not
going to improve quickly," said Lucinda Chan, division director at Macquarie
Private Wealth in Sydney. The dollar dipped slightly against major
currencies<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>,
giving back some of its gains scored as the equity drop spurred buying of
the safe-haven US currency. The dollar index, a gauge of its performance
against six major currencies, dipped 0.1 percent to 89.019 but held near a
three-year peak reached this week. Against the
yen<http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=7950274338194775518#>,
the dollar edged up 0.3 percent to 98.35 yen. Oil prices also pushed higher
after tumbling 4 percent on Thursday on worries about demand as the deep
global recession drags on. US crude oil futures edged up 26 cents to $43.87
a barrel. Safe-haven buying helped nudge the benchmark 10-year Japanese
government bond yield down 1.5 basis points to 1.295 percent. But US
Treasuries surrendered gains. The 10-year Treasury note fell 7/32 in price
to yield 2.839 percent, up about 2 basis points from late US trade. Gold
eased slightly to $930.65 an ounce after rising more than 2 percent in the
previous session, fuelled by flight-to-quality buying as stock markets fell
and investors saw a bargain in the yellow metal.

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