Irish, European markets mirror Asian slide

The Irish stock market took another hammering today with financials being the main culprits in dragging the Iseq down

The Irish stock market took another hammering today with financials being the main culprits in dragging the Iseq down. The index was down just under three per cent with Irish Life and Permanent and Anglo Irish Bank being the biggest casualties. IL&P was down just over 32 per cent to €1.45 while Anglo fell 24 per cent to €1.40.

Elasewhere, the FTSE 100 index dropped to its lowest level in five years after Asian markets crumbled.

The London stock index suffered a drop of 4.6 per cent after tumbling to 3,665 points shortly after opening.

Increasing anxiety about the state of the global economy hit embattled banks and demand worries sent energy and mining stocks tumbling.

But Britain's top index recovered slowly to settle around 50 points down.

Other European markets also fell, with the Paris falling 5.5 per cent and Frankfurt down 3.5 per cent.

It follows another night of turmoil on Asian stock markets suffered as Hong Kong's Hang Seng index plunged by 12.5 per cent.

Japan's Nikkei index also fell by more than 6 per cent to its lowest close in more than quarter of a century after fears that emergency steps by world governments will be too late to prevent a global recession.

The yen continued to gain even after Group of Seven finance ministers today singled out the excessive volatility of the currency, which sent Japanese equities to their lowest in nearly three decades.

Little that officials said could convince panicky investors that governments around the world can stem the fast-spreading crisis that has ravaged financial markets and now threatens to erode both economic growth and company earnings.

The euro fell to a two-year low against the dollar and in another sign of profound risk aversion, European credit spreads hovered just shy of Friday's record highs.

READ MORE

The MSCI world index of shares, which on Monday was down by more than 3 per cent, has lost nearly 50 percent so far this year to reach its lowest since 2003 as investors around the globe have dumped stocks.