financial crisis - Wall Street
G7 announces action plan to fight money meltdown
Saturday 11 October 2008
The Group of Seven finance chiefs announced Friday a plan of action to fight the global crisis, including the use of "all available tools" to support key institutions and prevent their failure.
Special Report Global capitalism on the brink?Saturday 11 October 2008
By Reuters (text)G7 finance ministers and central bankers are meeting in Washington DC over the weekend. Do you believe they will come up with a solution to the current financial crisis? What would you like to see by the end of the talks? Click on the “React” button below and share your views.
Watch our interview with the president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick.
WASHINGTON/NEW YORK - Finance chiefs of the world's major economies pledged on Friday to take decisive action and work together to stem the escalating financial crisis after another day of gut-wrenching drops on world markets.
Reeling from the loss of trillions of dollars of wealth, investors worldwide had pinned their hopes on decisive action from the Group of Seven major industrialized nations. U.S. stocks pared massive losses in a late recovery.
After markets closed, the Group of Seven major industrialized nations said the situation called for "urgent and exceptional action," and pledged to take all necessary steps to unfreeze credit and money markets.
They said that would include using all tools to prevent systemically important institutions from failure and ensuring that banks can raise capital from public and private sources.
Concerted interest-rate cuts by major central banks around the world, individual liquidity injections, a $700 billion U.S. bailout plan, and government plans in Europe to take equity stakes in banks have so far failed to restore investor confidence.
"It all depends on whether the governments can get a grip on this," said Axel Merk, portfolio manager at Merk Hard Currency Fund in Palo Alto, California.
Investors, leading nations and the International Monetary Fund had all clamored for a united front as nose-diving share prices suspended trade on bourses from Indonesia to Austria and emerging market currencies crumbled.
U.S. stocks crawled back in the final hour of trade with the Dow trimming losses to 1.5 percent on a day in which it traded in a 1,000-point range. The eighth straight day of losses left the Dow down 18 percent for the week.
U.S. stocks have lost $2.4 trillion this week and $8.4 trillion in the past year, according to the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000.
The rally only partially resurrected the shares of Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, pummeled when credit rating agency Moody's Investors Service said it might cut their ratings, reviving concerns about the viability of their banking models.
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ANALYSIS
"There's not a lot of confidence that this president, whatever he says, is going to make a difference." Business editor Douglas Herbert.
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PRESS CONFERENCE EXTRACT
"We are working with other partners in the world to make sure that our actions are coordinated."
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12/10/2008 02:04:09 Alert a moderator
on financial meltdown
By Anonyme - usa
USA the biggest of the DEBTOR Country, its currency being just fake printed paper, continues to do so and all of us naive fly to it as if were a safe haven. Once again calm is restablished and people go back to fundamentals the well handled currencies e.g. Canada, Euro, Swiss Frank will shine again. Who on what valid grounds say USA Dollar is the safeway to be and why ? NO REASON !