Showing posts with label market turmoil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label market turmoil. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 November 2010

€90bn Irish Bailout Ends in Turmoil – Now Europe Fears Crisis Will Spread

THE GUARDIAN: Brian Cowen defies calls for resignation / Fears that Portugal and Spain may need aid / International rescue plan does little to calm markets / Datablog: how will the bailout be funded and how exposed is each economy?

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Markets thrown into ­turmoil amid fears of a collapse in Ireland’s ­government. Photograph: The Guardian

Financial markets were thrown into turmoil today amid fears that an imminent collapse of Ireland's beleaguered government would have a knock-on effect across the eurozone.

The announcement of the potential €90bn international bailout for debt-laden Ireland – of which the UK could contribute up to £10bn – offered only a temporary respite to nervous markets.

By tonight, concerns that Portugal and even Spain might also need their own rescue packages were rising and sent the euro and shares falling while the risk of holding the debt of potentially vulnerable countries rose alarmingly.

After a tumultuous day in Dublin, where protesters tried to storm the parliament building, the prime minister, Brian Cowen, defied calls for his resignation but conceded he would call an election in the new year. The move was forced upon him after the Green party pulled out of his fragile coalition government, unnerving markets on a day which was supposed to restore confidence in Europe's decade-old single currency.

Instead there was a sense of growing unease in the markets amid evidence that investors felt Portugal would not survive without aid., Dealers said sentiment in the markets was reminiscent of the days after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. Read on and comment >>> Jill Treanor, Nicholas Watt and Henry McDonald in Dublin | Monday, November 22, 2010

Wednesday, 23 January 2008

London Stocks Hit by Rate Fears

THE GUARDIAN: The FTSE 100 share index suffered heavy losses again this today after hopes of hefty UK interest rate cuts were punctured by the latest news from the Bank of England.


With financial markets braced for more mayhem in the weeks ahead, London traders were still in selling mood after yesterday's turbulent session and hectic trading in Asia overnight. Although an emergency interest rate cut from the US Federal Reserve yesterday provided some early support, traders described it as little more than a stop-gap.


In a day of choppy trading, the mood darkened after it emerged at 9.30am that the Bank was not as divided over holding interest rates this month as the market had thought - with just one policymaker voting for a cut. At 1.30pm the FTSE 100 was down 3.5% at 5539.7 points, a 200.4 point loss, as it shed all of yesterday's gains.


There was disappointment that the latest minutes from the Bank of England's January rate-setting meeting showed it is unlikely to follow America's lead by making big reductions to borrowing costs in the UK. London stocks hit by rate fears >>> By Graeme Wearden and Katie Allen

THE GUARDIAN:
Market Turmoil

THE TELEGRAPH:
Ben Bernanke plays his ace - now what?

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