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Markets

European stocks, euro slump before Greece crisis talks

LONDON : European stocks markets slumped and the euro fell sharply against the dollar on Monday as Greece prepared to
Published September 19, 2011

european-stocksLONDON: European stocks markets slumped and the euro fell sharply against the dollar on Monday as Greece prepared to convince international leaders that it was able to avoid defaulting on its debt.

Greece's finance minister will hold a teleconference with eurozone and IMF officials at about 1200 GMT on extra steps by Athens to meet conditions for urgently needed rescue funds, the ministry said on Monday.

It comes as markets increasingly expect Greece to eventually default on its debt mountain under a crippling domestic austerity drive, especially after European finance heads failed to agree a plan to solve the eurozone situation.

A weekend meeting in Poland delayed a decision on blocked loans for Greece and highlighted divisions between Europe and the United States over the best way forward for the eurozone, raising fears of another global financial crisis.

"The financial markets had, naively it would appear, held out hope that there would have been some policy steps taken to help support declining investor confidence over concerns over a Greek default," said Derek Halpenny,

European head of global currency research at The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.

"We got nothing of the sort. Indeed, it was more of the opposite with nothing but delays agreed."

In morning deals, London's FTSE 100 index tumbled 2.12 percent to 5,254.61 points, Frankfurt's DAX 30 dived 3.20 percent to 5,395.20 points and in Paris the CAC 40 retreated 2.73 percent to 2,948.28. Madrid shed 2.20 percent, Milan 2.35 percent and Stockholm 2.52 percent.

Banking shares were the biggest losers on worries over lenders' large exposure to Greek debt. In Paris, Societe Generale was down almost six percent.

The euro dropped to $1.3680 from $1.3797 late in New York on Friday.

Asian stock markets meanwhile closed sharply lower, with Hong Kong tumbling 2.76 percent. Tokyo was shut for a Japanese public holiday.

Greek media are reporting that following Monday's talks, the Athens government will likely announce new austerity measures worth about 4.0 billion euros ($5.5 billion).

"For most market participants it is not a question of 'if' Greece will default but rather 'when' and 'how'," said Rabobank analyst Jane Foley.

"An orderly and managed default would clearly have a less damaging impact than a messy one. The latter clearly has the potential to send shockwaves throughout Europe's banking system," she said.

On Friday, eurozone finance ministers said they would delay until October a decision on eight billion euros ($11 billion) of bailout cash for Greece, which it cannot tap until it has persuaded auditors it is on track to cut its deficit.

Attention this week is also on the Federal Open Market Committee, the key policy body of the US Federal Reserve, to see whether it takes action to boost the ailing economy.

Due to internal divisions, the FOMC is unlikely to take the drastic step of launching a third round of quantitative easing -- effectively printing dollars to inject liquidity into the economy -- but might take less contentious steps.

 

Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2011

 

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