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April 17, 2009 4:01 PM

U.S. Fears Keep World Markets Plunging

(CBS/AP)  Global stock markets extended their shakeout into a second day Tuesday, plunging amid fears that a possible U.S. recession will cause a worldwide economic slowdown.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index nose-dived 5.7 percent - its biggest percentage drop in nearly 10 years - to 12,573.05, a day after falling 3.9 percent.

"Everywhere you looked in Asia today, it was a field of debris from stock markets that have crashed and burned," reported CBS News correspondent Barry Petersen in Tokyo.

The other common factor in the Asian investment world, said Petersen was the consensus that America is to blame.

"Falling markets in China, South Korea, India, and Australia are a stunning vote of 'no-confidence' that the plan (President Bush's proposed economic stimulus) will fix what ails America," said Petersen.

President Bush was to meet Tuesday with Congressional leaders for further talks on his proposed economic stimulus plan. The gloomy state of the economy was expected to draw a quick agreement between the White House and the Democrat-led legislature.

Australia's benchmark index sank 7.1 percent, its steepest slide in nearly 20 years. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index, which slumped 5.5 percent Monday, was down 8.2 percent in afternoon trading.

In China, the Shanghai Composite index lost 7.2 percent to close at its lowest level since August.

Indian Finance Minister P. Chidambaram urged investors to remain calm after trading in Mumbai was halted for an hour when the stock market there fell 10 percent within minutes of opening. In volatile afternoon trading, the Sensex was down 6.2 percent.

"There is no reason at all to allow the worries of the Western world to overwhelm us," Chidambaram said.

Investors across the region dumped shares in frenetic trading on worries that the U.S. economy, battered by a credit crisis and housing slump, will shrink in coming months, weakening demand for Asian exports.

The dramatic declines in Asia and Europe were expected to spread to Wall Street, where stock index futures were already down sharply hours before the trading day began.

CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips reported from London that the word on the tongues of European analysts and traders Tuesday, was "volatile."

"It's a roller coaster, and nobody's enjoying the ride. Everybody's waiting for Wall Street to open up, and the expectation is that will open down," said Phillips, who reported London's market alone lost $150 billion in trading value on Monday.

Markets have been plunging amid pessimism about the ability of American authorities to prevent a recession. The Federal Reserve has indicated it will lower interest rates further, and President Bush has proposed an economic stimulus package that includes $145 billion in tax cuts, but investors around the world are doubtful that the measures will lift the economy quickly.

"Unless we get some positive 'shock effects,' such as drastic measures from the U.S. government, there is almost no hope for a recovery in stocks," said Koji Takeuchi, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute in Tokyo.

Appearing on CBS' Early Show Tuesday, Financial Times' managing U.S. editor Chrystia Freeland said the present global market turmoil was dashing hopes that powerful, rapidly developing nations - China and India in particular - could tow the world economy with them.

Last year there was hope that "there could be a slowdown in the
United States but the rest of the world would pick up the slack," said Freeland.

"What seems to be happening is people have decided that theory is not going to work for now. And the U.S. slowdown is pulling everybody else down," Freeland told The Early Show.

U.S. markets were closed Monday for a holiday commemorating civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. But Wall Street future prices were down sharply, portending a plunge when trading begins at 9:30 a.m. Eastern time.

Dow Jones industrial average futures were down 621 points, or 5.1 percent, to 11,485, while Standard & Poor's 500 futures were down 70 points, or 5.3 percent, at 1,255.

Noritsugu Hirakawa, who monitors stock trading at Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo, said investors were spooked by the drastic falls on Chinese and Indian markets - the two emerging economies that are viewed as sustaining global growth even as the U.S. economy sputters.

"The end to the slides in Asian stocks is nowhere in sight," he said. "There is even speculation that China may be exposed to the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis."

In Europe on Monday, investors also dumped stocks, sending the Britain's benchmark FTSE-100 down 5.5 percent and France's CAC-40 Index sliding 6.8 percent. Germany's blue-chip DAX 30 plunged 7.2 percent to 6,790.19.

That sell-off continued Tuesday throughout Asia, with benchmark indices in South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and the Philippines all falling more than 4 percent. Indonesia's market sank 8.5 percent.

Asian markets have been in a downward spiral for most of January. Since the start of the year, Japan's Nikkei index has tumbled nearly 18 percent, while the Hang Seng is down a stunning 21 percent.

Even the usually upbeat Japanese Economy Minister Hiroko Ota acknowledged that threats were growing.

"We must take the approach of working together with other nations on this," she said on nationally televised news.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 106 Comments
by bm6005 January 22, 2008 10:40 PM EST
Anyone who blames this crisis on Bush alone is a stupid AZZ. No one man creates a mess like this alone....
Posted by krenz4


Bush is that man!!!
Reply to this comment
by bm6005 January 22, 2008 10:25 PM EST
A statement like that is a prime example of letting panic control the argument! They shouldn''''t let idiots like you vote, except that too would be unAmerican!
Posted by nolalou

This has nothing to do with panic you MORON. CONgress is made up of lawyers (88%). Our MBA programs tell their students to outsource to third world countries. How do I know this? 43+ years of corporate c rap. I''ve experienced first hand what has happened to our high tech industry, I''ve had to listen to the MBA MORON''s who knew nothing about the products tell you that an x-box is the same as a very large computer library frame, NOT!!!! I vote and you''re the frickin'' idiot here!!
Reply to this comment
by the74blaster January 22, 2008 9:06 PM EST
FDR, with his sweeping changes took almost 7 years for an economic recovery.
Posted by omega39 at 02:54 PM

That is true and even FDR increased spending to start the recovery from the great depression. However, the government spending was directed at projects that rebuilt our nations infrastructure. It has been argued that the new deal put the infrastructure in place that allowed us to shift to war production and ultimately win WWII.

Reply to this comment
by erasmus6 January 22, 2008 7:48 PM EST
"...if the world is smart, after a while, they will not let us--they will circle the wagons and like vultures--wait for our slow, economic death then move in for the feast." posted by b-easy63

Wow, that would probably make a great movie. As soon as the writers strike is over you should get Hollywood working on that. Do you know how much the world would PAY to see that? You could use the money to start paying off your debt!

I''m sorry, that was uncalled for but I just couldn''t resist!
Reply to this comment
by erasmus6 January 22, 2008 7:39 PM EST
Posted by donyang2000 at 03:50 PM : Jan 22, 2008


Go stick your head in a frickin'' toilet and flush it a few times.
Reply to this comment
by krenz4 January 22, 2008 7:20 PM EST
Anyone who blames this crisis on Bush alone is a stupid AZZ. No one man creates a mess like this alone. I will be glad when he is out of office so you idiots the find the weatherto be his fault, can make up a new vocabulary and find some othe dumb azz quest!
Reply to this comment
by b-easy63 January 22, 2008 6:54 PM EST
FDR, with his sweeping changes took almost 7 years for an economic recovery.
Posted by omega39 at 02:54 PM : Jan 22, 2008


They probably couldn''t even if they wanted to. After WWII, we had the means in infrastructure (factories, natural resources, networks and trading partners and land) we sold and dismantled most of our factories for production, we sold the textile mills and farmed out the intellectual base, from steel to agriculture--we are like Bush said " a consumer nation" A "consumer nation" does not make anything--their chief strength lies in being users. Sort of like parasites. People forgot that even users have to have a means to get what they want--we gave our means away long ago--we were just big enough and brazen enough to parlay our using into "theoretical money". Now--we have reached a saturation point--one thing a user cannot withstand--that is when they no longer dictate the cost of things and their "theoretical value" is lowered. WE have placed ourselves in the unenviable position of being huge borrowers and users--when we have no collateral and the most we have to offer is our desire to use things.

WE have no spring board to bounce back from a depression, if the world is smart, after a while, they will not let us--they will circle the wagons and like vultures--wait for our slow, economic death then move in for the feast. We have alienated a lot of countries in the past 75 years...payback is a mf.
Reply to this comment
by b-easy63 January 22, 2008 6:46 PM EST
In each of the tax decreases during the Bush years, the economy continued to sink because of unsound policy-- proving lower taxes are not intrinsically beneficial to economic growth.

See--
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/0
1/07/opinion/07krugman.html?oref=slogin
n

Posted by alphaa10 at 02:37 PM : Jan 22, 2008


Ill advised tax cuts coupled with unmitigated spending. It is like a couple where one uses charge cards to pay for stuff and the other writes out checks. When the credit card bills come due--there is no money to pay them--because you can''t do both--either you live and die on credit and paying that bill or you just pay cash for everything and do without the things you can''t buy outright--but if you try to do both--the cash that could have paid on the credit cards--has been spent by the other parties.
Name one spending bill that Bush has put before Congress that they have not ultimately approved.

Then take a closer look--the Democrats not only approved Bush''s bill, invariably they added Billions more on. And why not? It was never their money--and it seemed limitless--so they spent it like *****, drunk sailors on shoreleave.
Reply to this comment
by b-easy63 January 22, 2008 6:41 PM EST
Not so fast... you sound like Tony Snow trying desperately to cover another Bush faux pas. Snow used the phrase, "blame game" to devalue criticism, but this is no game. This is the awful cost of Bush irresponsibility. The guilt lies with Bush/Cheney policy-- and that policy comes from GOP politicians and their party.
Posted by alphaa10 at 02:37 PM : Jan 22, 2008

We could say Bush and his greed and crazy blood for oil policies was the "kiss of death" but the "lovemaking " to nefarious forces that brought us here happened long before. We can go back to Reagan and voodoo economics and amnesty that encouraged insourcing, we could add Clinton and NAFTA, which gave a temporary bubble to a few but destroyed the economic infrastructure for the middle class--we could add the loss of factories to people overseas and the failure of gov. to regulate, tax and control such moves--then Bush and his stupidity become the cherry on the top--he "gilded the lily" but it was sculpted in other administrations from Reagan to present. Let''s be honest here.
Reply to this comment
by b-easy63 January 22, 2008 6:36 PM EST
AND NOW THAT THE MONEY IS GONE AND THE PRICE IS TOO HIGH, WE POINT FINGERS AND PLAY THE BLAME GAME. MAY GOD HAVE MERCY ON US ONCE MORE.

Posted by sadburton at 01:42 PM : Jan 22, 2008


Perhaps this is the problem...perhaps in the past, God shed a bit too much grace on people--so that most either do not believe in HIM or use Him and are the biggest hypocrites on the planet. Why ask for His mercy, when Americans are not repentent, have not really suffered and are a victim of their own follies?

How about this--may God punish us until we see the light, and may God have as much empathy, forebearance and patience on us--as we did on the people whose country we invaded based on lies. God meant it when he said "That which a man soweth, so shall he reaps" Or if you don''t speak KJ English: What comes around goes around. We have this coming and more--the fruits of our greed and disregard for anyone except ourselves and our own interests. Cheers.
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