Posted on
Mar 31 2008 5:16 AM
by
adeal
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China's main stock index, which surged 4.94 percent on Friday because of rumours that authorities would act over the weekend to support the market, sank on Monday after no official action materialized. The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index fell as much as 3.74 percent in early trade before ending the morning 2.30 percent lower at 3,497.656 points, led by banking and property stocks. That left the index 43 percent lower than its October peak. Losing stocks in Shanghai outnumbered gainers by 771 to 122, while turnover in Shanghai A shares was very thin at 37.2 billion yuan ($5.3 billion) against Friday morning's 40.9 billion yuan.
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Posted on
Mar 31 2008 4:30 AM
by
adeal
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The dollar fell to near a record low against the euro after a report showed inflation accelerated in the euro region, giving the European Central Bank more reason to keep rates unchanged while the Federal Reserve lowers borrowing costs. The dollar headed for its biggest quarterly loss since 2004 after a preliminary report from the EU showed consumer-price growth quickened to the fastest pace in almost 16 years in March. ECB policy maker Erkki Liikanen said today he sees growing inflation threats. The pound fell to a record against the euro, poised for its largest-ever quarterly decline, after industry data showed U.K. house prices dropped for a sixth month.
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Posted on
Oct 03 2007 3:37 AM
by
adnana
Amid the chaos and confusion that has accompanied the credit crisis at British bank Northern Rock, Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has remained tight-lipped. There was barely a word from him when the Bank, as Britain's lender of last resort, made emergency cash available to Northern Rock last week. When that triggered a run on the High Street lender, with customers lining up for days to take back their savings, King still failed to utter a word. And when the government finally stepped in Monday to offer a gilt-edge guarantee for spooked depositors in the form of cash, the silence was deafening.
Until late this week. Appearing before a committee of British M.P.s Thursday to explain the Bank's handling of the crisis — the first run on a U.K. lender in living memory — King finally opened up. The Governor, the bank's former chief economist and an academic who's taught at Cambridge, Harvard and MIT, first got wind of problems at Northern Rock on Aug. 14. The Newcastle-based bank — Britain's fifth-largest mortgage provider — leaned heavily on wholesale money markets to fund its own mortgage loans. When those inter-bank markets started to freeze up in recent weeks amid a global credit squeeze triggered by the subprime mortgage crunch, so too did the source of 75% of Northern Rock's funds. "At that point," King said, still hopeful the market would step in to help out the troubled bank, "there didn't seem much point in blowing up the train before it hit the buffers." ...
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