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Asian stock markets tumble after Wall Street falls

TOMOKO A. HOSAKA | September 15, 2008 10:46 PM EST | AP

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A pedestrian walks near an electric market board in Tokyo, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008. Japan's benchmark Nikkei stock index plunged more than 4 percent in early Tokyo trade Tuesday amid fears of a global financial crisis after Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy. (AP Photo/Katsumi Kasahara)

TOKYO — The steep decline in U.S. stocks sent Asian stock markets tumbling sharply Tuesday as investors were rattled by concerns over an expanding global financial crisis.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index fell 4.8 percent to 11,632.99, falling under than 12,000-point level for the first time since mid-March.

South Korea's Kospi shed 6.2 percent, and Taiwan's benchmark was off 4.6 percent. The battering in Australia and New Zealand wasn't quite as severe, with key indices down 2.4 percent and 2.7 percent respectively.

The early bloodletting in Asia followed a bleak Monday for world stock markets, which were hard hit after a double-fisted blow from Wall Street _ news that Lehman Brothers had filed for bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch would be sold to Bank of America.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 500 points in its largest point drop since after the September 11, 2001, terror attacks.

In Europe, the FTSE-100 share index closed down 3.9 percent in London, the Paris CAC-40 slipped 3.7 percent and Germany's DAX 30 index of blue chips sagged 2.7 percent.

Asia's biggest stock exchanges in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea were closed Monday for national holidays.

In Tokyo, Kyodo news agency reported that the Japanese unit of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. has requested bankruptcy protection at a Tokyo court after the 158-year-old firm filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in New York on Monday.

The company, crippled by $60 billion in soured real-estate holdings, was unable to find an investment partner to throw it a lifeline despite a flurry of last-minute negotiations over the weekend.

Share prices in Tokyo fell across the board, with banking issues taking a particularly hard hit in the wake of Lehman's collapse. Investors unloaded shares in major Japanese banks listed as some of the biggest lenders, including Aozora Bank, Mizuho Financial Group and Shinsei Bank.

Japan's central bank issued a statement Tuesday that it will carefully watch the development and take appropriate measures to stabilize the market.

Downturns on the Australian and New Zealand markets were not as sharp as in some countries, in part because they had already absorbed some of the shock of Lehman and Bank of America news.

New Zealand Finance Minister Michael Cullen sought to reassure investors in his country but also warned that the turmoil may not be over.

"This is probably the worst financial crisis for a very long time ... that doesn't make it the same as the worst economic crisis," he told reporters. "The U.S. economy itself has continued to grow during the current year. The financial sector is in very serious difficulty and that has implications for the wider economy, but not what happened in 1929 to '31."

He said the latest round of turmoil in the United States "will tend to lower GDP forecasts for the world for the next year or two."

___

Associated Press writers Emma Vandore in London, Kelly Olsen in Seoul, South Korea, Ray Lilley in Wellington, New Zealand, and Rohan Sullivan in Sydney, Australia, contributed to this report.

TOKYO — The steep decline in U.S. stocks sent Asian stock markets tumbling sharply Tuesday as investors were rattled by concerns over an expanding global financial crisis. Japan's benchmark Nik...
TOKYO — The steep decline in U.S. stocks sent Asian stock markets tumbling sharply Tuesday as investors were rattled by concerns over an expanding global financial crisis. Japan's benchmark Nik...
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11:14 AM on 09/16/2008
Daddy Warbuck's banking legacy goes down in flames (Lehman Bros)
09:57 PM on 09/15/2008
The elimination of Merrill as an independent company is welcome news. They've been associated with corruption and mismanagement over the last 10-15 years. Remember their complicity with Enron in the late 90's? Good luck to Bank of America taking on Merrill.
07:52 PM on 09/15/2008
For all the blather about the "free market", has anyone ever actually seen one?

I was born in 1936 and all I see is 72 years of behind-the-scenes manipulation. From FDR's control policies onward, there has been intervention. Eisenhower tried to warn the country in his farewell address about the "military-industrial-congressional-complex" (yes, the one word was struck out of the draft speech.) The MI(C)C actually started before World war Two and has been getting stronger ever since.

Subsidies and tax breaks for the favored few, corporations and government working hand-in-hand is hardly the sign of a free market.
07:05 PM on 09/15/2008
Anyone want to sign up for my new "Yacht Repossessions from the Stinking Rich Thieves" company. Strong stomach required.

Then you also deal with sea-sickness.
07:42 PM on 09/15/2008
I bid $1 on anything you got that's over sixty feet and has 3000hp engines or better. But the seller has to pay for diesel for a year!

:-)
07:05 PM on 09/15/2008
The problem with America is the Federal Reserve. It matters not what politician is in office. The differences between Repubs and Dems is next to nothing. Window dressing. Our country was taken over by bankers, who bought our politicians. We need to get to the root of it , not bicker back and forth (which is what TPTB want us to do) as to what party should be in office. Politicians are just that - thieves, criminals, and elites who, contrary to what is coming out of their mouths, don't give a rat's ass about Americans. Regardless of who is in office, the same criminals behind the scenes run the show. That is where we need our attention - before they steal more from America than they already have. India and China are "opening up". Translation: the bankster will go there and rape the consumers as they leave spent America in the dust, with no money, no jobs, no food, and no one to complain to. There's nothing here, can't you see how deliberate it has been? And your going to trust a politician?
07:03 PM on 09/15/2008
Where's Phil Gramm today..?

Anybody hear from good ole, Phil Gramm today..?

Why doesn't Phil Gramm go ring the opening bell on Wall St. tomorrow..?
07:02 PM on 09/15/2008
People, it is your patriotic duty to vote conservative. Only the Republicans know how to get us out of this mess. After all, they are the ones who got us in there to begin with.

:-)
07:05 PM on 09/15/2008
Actually you're wrong but I won't waste time explaining why.
07:24 PM on 09/15/2008
It seems you missed the humor in my post. Do I really have to explain the joke?
06:57 PM on 09/15/2008
my guess is that wamu is next... their books are cooked more than a marshmallow on fire ..

you people should watch I.O.U.S.A, its a documentary about the national debt, it has allen greenspan, warren buffet(my hero), and other financial professionals.. IT IS THE SCARRIEST MOVIE I HAVE EVER SEEN, it puts into perspective the Actual debt of the United States..

its over people.. this election will determine who pays for this debt, the rich or the poor... i dont know about you but im putting my money on obama
07:26 PM on 09/15/2008
Americans can't be scared by debt. It is part of the American Dream to owe somebody else money.

At least that's what the credit card commercials on tv say all the time...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drkazmd65
Mom Taught me - Question Everything - Thanks Mom!
01:36 PM on 09/16/2008
WAMU going under won't hurt my feelings one little bit politisophical - those are the arseholes that raised my credit card interest rate an arbitrary 9% last October just because their financial boat was sinking.

Needless to say,... I am clearing balances off this card and dumping them as quickiy as I can manage.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ricitizen
none of your business
05:40 PM on 09/15/2008
Hear Joe Biden Today. Great!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ImuE0IVamk
06:51 PM on 09/15/2008
This is a MUST-SEE, everybody !!!!
04:43 PM on 09/15/2008
You are watching REUBLICAN economic policy in action!! It is not so funny now, is it??
06:39 PM on 09/15/2008
Actually Clinton signed the law repealing Glass-Steagull and didn't try to veto it.

Also Greenscarm was part of a dem administration.

The people here would probably blame the repubs for everything including football teams losing the super bowl if they could - but most people realize it's never that simple.
07:28 PM on 09/15/2008
NicoleAnon, part of being an adult is to accept responsibility. We can firmly conclude that an adult Republican still has to be born. None of you guys/gals will ever admit that they made a mistake. Let alone a million of those.
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
04:39 PM on 09/15/2008
Where are we going and why are we in this hand basket?
04:37 PM on 09/15/2008
The public is waiting for all those who govern our lives to come clean about what they knew and when they knew it. As they continue to lie to us, any confidence we had in any of them doing the right thing for the average American slips quickly away. We're not only facing the clay feet of Wall Street but the lying and deceit of politicians who are just more interested in getting elected any way they can.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drkazmd65
Mom Taught me - Question Everything - Thanks Mom!
04:09 PM on 09/15/2008
We are now down about 21% from the highs of last year (~14,000 Dow) - Has the bottom fallen as far as it is going to go?

My guess (and I hope I am wrong) is no.

Thanks again Ronnie Raygun, Poppy Bush, Willie Clinton and Georgie Jr. for you exemplary leadership into these financial crises.
07:39 PM on 09/15/2008
Dow 8000 is in the cards. Looks like a couple million old people will not get to retire after all this year. And another couple million next year... not to mention a couple million young people who won't get a job to begin with.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drkazmd65
Mom Taught me - Question Everything - Thanks Mom!
01:33 PM on 09/16/2008
I'm just glad that I was not planning to retire for at least another 20 years KTM. It's going to take at least half that time (my ballpark guess) to make up the losses in retirement portfolios / savings on the part of us citizens.

Does suck for those that were planning on retiring within the next several years though.
03:59 PM on 09/15/2008
Remember when Bush kept interrupting Gore during the debate saying "there you go again, with your fuzzy math."
Apparently to Bush anything beyond fourth grade level math is fuzzy.

Okay I'll take this slow and easy. Dems left office with a huge surplus... yeah that was a result of Bubba bringing in the best economic minds he could and having them look at the... Republican deficit and find ways to bring it down--they kicked butt and turned it into a surplus (That means being in the black... not red) The economy was healthy.
Look how much destruction can be wrought in 8 years. Not only are we deeper in debt (larger deficit) but they squandered the Clinton administration's surplus. On what???? Health coverage still in the toilet, infrastructure falling to pieces, no investments in tech.
This Republican admin has been acting since day one like there are no consequences and believing that even if there are, they won't stick to them. They think they all have Teflon (Reagan long gone but not his Teflonism).
Come on fellow Americans, this is not rocket science. Who is practicing the fuzzy math, and who was practicing it along? Bush.
Give the Democrats a chance to fix this.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kkayralene
03:57 PM on 09/15/2008
Stop the madness...send these corporate welfare giants, including Paulson, Bush and Cheney to Rykers, where they belong!