http://english.aljazeera.net/business/2009/02/20092204215859594.html

*Asian markets follow Wall St slide*



Stock markets across the Asia-Pacific region have tumbled after a raft of
gloomy US economic data sent Wall Street plunging to a six-year low.

With few investors in a buying mood, Japan's benchmark Nikkei index fell
1.35 per cent by midday on Friday, Hong Kong was down 2.2 per cent, Sydney
slipped 1.5 per cent and Seoul lost 1.4 per cent.

The falls came after the Dow Jones industrial average fell 1.19 per cent on
Thursday, hitting its lowest point close since October 9, 2002.

Underscoring jitters about the state of the world's number one economy, a US
government report showed the number of Americans claiming unemployment
benefits had hit a record high of almost five million.

With about half a million US jobs being lost every month, analysts are
warning of another substantial contraction in the US economy in the first
quarter of the year.

Analysts said the continuing rise in claims spelled bad news for consumer
spending, which drives nearly two-thirds of US economic activity.

US investors remain unconvinced that the $787bn economic stimulus bill
signed into law this week will have a significant impact.

That, in turn, is bad news for Asia, whose export-dependent economies rely
heavily on the US market.

Earlier this week Japan, already in its worst recession in decades, reported
its steepest economic contraction since 1974.

So far this year Japan's Nikkei has lost 15.8 per cent, Hong Kong's Hang
Seng 11.6 per cent and the Dow Jones industrial average is down 14.9 per
cent.


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