SEESAW
Financial markets seesawed again under the combined pressure of a global economic downturn and the worst financial crisis in 80 years.Wall Street looked set for a flat to negative start and European shares dipped in and out of positive territory after losing more than 4 percent on Tuesday.There were more corporate profit warnings with General Motors shares falling on Tuesday to levels not seen since World War Two."Whether it's economic indicators or company news, it's just too awful," said Takashi Ushio, head of the investment strategy division at Marusan Securities in Tokyo.The financial crisis continued to take its toll with France's Natixis SA announcing falling investment banking revenue and Italy's UniCredit posting a sharp drop in quarterly net profit. (nLC623541)In Germany, troubled property lender Hypo Real Estate Holding AG posted a pretax loss of 3.1 billion euros ($4 billion) in the third quarter, more than analysts had expected. Losses and property writedowns ate into its income.Dutch group ING posted its first-ever quarterly loss due to impairments on stocks and bonds, counterparty losses and property writedowns.Insurer Swiss Life said third-quarter premium volumes fell 11 percent to 3.075 billion Swiss francs ($2.61 billion) and warned it would not meet its full-year net profit guidance.
DECLINE AND FALL
This came against a background of continuing decline in world economies.Euro zone industrial production fell more than expected in September, underlining beliefs the economy contracted in the third quarter and entered a technical recession.Production in the 15-country area fell 1.6 percent month-on-month and 2.4 percent year-on-year.British unemployment rose to its highest level in more than a decade in the three months to September.The Bank of England said the British economy would shrink sharply next year and inflation could be less than 1 percent
The comments sent sterling to a record low against the euro and a six-year low against the dollar.China's retail sales data pointed to slowing consumption and South Africa reported that retail sales had fallen for the fifth month running.The World Bank said more countries were seeking its help. The head of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, Angel Gurria, said there was room for further interest rate cuts in the stagnating euro zone. World Bank President Robert Zoellick said global trade may drop next year for the first time in more than a quarter of a century as the worldwide credit crisis cuts into trade financing."It is our estimate that trade could actually fall, not grow more slowly or have growth fall, but actually fall next year, for the first time since 1982," Zoellick said in an interview with Reuters ahead of a meeting of world leaders.Zoellick said the bank expected its lending to increase to $35 billion this year from $13.5 billion last year.
As in the days of Noah...