NY Times September 21, 2011
Wall Street Joins Global Stock Plunge After Fed Move
By MATTHEW SALTMARSH

Global stock markets tumbled Thursday as investor pessimism about 
the outlook for the United States and European economies was 
deepened by weak data for the euro zone and a grim assessment from 
the Federal Reserve.

“Today, we really seem to be stuck in a negative spiral,” said 
Matthias Jasper, head of equities at WGZ Bank in Düsseldorf. 
“Investors just want to keep their exposure low and watch from the 
sidelines.”

In the opening minutes of Wall Street trading, the Dow Jones 
industrial average was down 301.06, or 2.7 percent, 10.823.78. The 
Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index lost 2.6 percent, and the Nasdaq 
composite was down 2.7 percent.

In afternoon trading Thursday in Europe, the benchmark Euro Stoxx 
50 index, the FTSE 100 in London and the CAC-40 in Paris were all 
down between 4 and 5 percent.

As well as fears about the economic outlook on both sides of the 
Atlantic, investors have been unnerved by the failure of policy 
makers in the 17-nation euro zone to resolve the region’s debt crisis.

On Wednesday, the Fed said a complete economic recovery was still 
years away, adding that the United States economy has “significant 
downside risks to the economic outlook, including strains in 
global financial markets.”

It also said it would buy long-term Treasury bonds and sell 
short-term bonds to help stimulate lending and growth.

Meanwhile, a closely watched economic report from the euro zone — 
the composite purchasing managers’ index — fell to 49.2 in 
September from 50.7 in August, according to Markit, a financial 
data provider. The reading, released Thursday, was below the 
consensus forecast of 49.8. Both the manufacturing and services 
indexes declined.

“The initial and follow-up reaction from the equity market is 
likely the realization that the Fed has little left to offer, that 
Washington is a mess, and their only hope is to “ride it out” over 
a long period of time,” said Kevin H. Giddis, the executive 
managing director and president for fixed-income capital markets 
at Morgan Keegan & Company.

“This is about to get ugly and there is very little anyone can do 
about it,” he added in a research note.

Stocks had fallen in the United States 2 percent or more on 
Wednesday after the Federal Reserve announcement.

On Thursday, the yield on 10-year United States Treasury 
securities hit a new low of 1.76 percent in London. After the 
markets opened in the United States, the benchmark bond yield was 
1.77 percent.

Commodities fell. Comex gold futures were down nearly 4 percent at 
about $1,737 just before Wall Street opened, while crude oil 
futures traded in New York were down more than 6 percent at $80.57 
a barrel.

The Fed pointed to a number of long-term problems in the American 
economy, including high unemployment and a depressed housing 
market. In addition Moody’s Investors Service downgraded ratings 
on three big American banks — Bank of America, Wells Fargo and 
Citigroup — saying government support had become less likely in 
the event of financial trouble.

The Fed’s statement “continued to suggest that the Fed funds rate 
will remain on hold until at least mid-2013,” said Rob Carnell, an 
analyst at ING in London. He added that quantitative easing could 
be introduced as early as November.

Analysts said the fall in the euro-area index reflected a 
combination of slowing global growth, significant belt-tightening 
in the euro area and growing concern about the escalating 
sovereign debt crisis.

“Whether or not the economy dips into another recession largely 
depends on whether governments move to contain the crisis,” said 
Nick Kounis, head of research at ABN AMRO in Amsterdam. “These 
surveys suggest that the window of opportunity is closing fast.”

“Clearly the risks of recession are elevated,” he added.

The weak economic backdrop appeared to give added importance to a 
series of meetings in Washington in coming days at the 
International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

Mr. Jasper of WGZ Bank said the gloomy economic backdrop belied 
the fact that many companies in Europe are in fact in a positive 
position in terms of their order books, profit margins and cash 
positions.

“We’re in a politics-driven market, and it’s hard to see light at 
the end of the tunnel until we have a workable solution for Greece 
and stabilization of the situation in Italy and Spain,” he said

In Europe there was still uncertainty about the fiscal outlook for 
Greece and Italy.

Greece announced a new set of austerity measures Wednesday, aiming 
to convince international creditors to release a tranche of €8 
billion in loans needed by mid-October to avoid bankruptcy.

The measures included cuts in civil servants’ wages, lower 
pensions and a broader tax base. But before releasing the 
payments, the creditors will probably want to see the measures 
approved by Parliament and to know more about a new set of 
privatizations, the details of which are still to be spelled out 
by the government. According to local media, a parliamentary vote 
will be held in the next few days.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, the Finance Minister Evangelos 
Venizelos said the government’s priority was to keep its 
commitments to foreign creditors to avoid a similar experience to 
that of Argentina, which defaulted on its debt in 2001-2.

“The crisis is not what we are living today, namely cuts to wages, 
pensions and income,” he said. “That is our effort to avert the 
crisis. The real crisis will be like that of Argentina’s in 2000 – 
a total collapse of the economy, of institutions, of the social 
fabric and productive forces of the country.”

Noting that situation “is critical,” he stressed the importance of 
“being absolutely consistent in fulfilling our obligations so that 
no arguments or excuses can be used against us.”

In Italy, the government lowered its forecasts for economic growth 
Thursday but stuck to its goal of balancing the budget in 2013, 
amid local media reports that the government is moving toward 
announcing yet another batch of austerity measures.

Economists at Barclays Capital said the government would have to 
find additional savings of 9 billion to 10 billion euros “to 
increase the chances of reaching a budget that is close to 
balanced by 2013.”

Analysts said the declines in Asia on Thursday showed that 
investors were unsure that the Fed’s action would fully address 
the economic slowdown in the United States.

The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong led declines in Asia, diving 4.8 
percent. The Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo closed 2.1 percent lower, 
the Kospi in South Korea fell 2.9 percent and the S.&P./ASX 200 in 
Australia dropped 2.6 percent.

The export-driven economies in Asia, such as South Korea, are most 
vulnerable to the European and American economic challenges, said 
Tim Condon, head of Asia research at ING Group in Hong Kong. 
Durable goods like automobiles and ships will be hurt most, he said.

Additionally, investors were beginning to worry that China’s rate 
of growth may slow, said Dariusz Kowalczyk, senior economist and 
strategist at Crédit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong.

The aversion to riskier assets helped prop up the dollar in 
foreign exchange markets on Thursday. The euro was trading at 
$1.3477, down from $1.3573 late New York trading.

“It really comes down to political immaturity in both the U.S. and 
Europe,” said Stephen Davies, chief executive of Javelin Wealth 
Management in Singapore. “The increasing chance of a U.S. 
recession and European implosion has shortened the odds of an 
overall second recession.”

Christine Hauser, Niki Kitsantonis, Elisabetta Povoledo, Kevin 
Drew, Robert Pear and Jennifer Steinhauer contributed reporting.
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