Tin tức,, comments xấu khắp nơi:
http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_new...al-stocks-rout
http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_new...than-the-first
- Global recession fears lead to global stocks rout;
- A panic over rising fears that a new global recession was imminent;
- Investors unloaded almost everything – stocks, gold, silver, oil;
- At the heart of the selloff was the growing concern that nothing governments could do would head off another economic slump;
- “The world economy is in a dangerous new phase, with risks on the rise..." - IMF chief;
- "There are significant downside risks to the economic outlook." - FOMC statement;
- "In financial markets, the thinking seems to be: If the Fed is worried, the rest of us ought to be really worried." - Cetera Financial Group senior investment strategist;
- There were few places for investors to hide;
- Factory output in China, the world's second largest economy, slowed for the third month in a row;
- Fresh data out of Europe showed the Eurozone's service sector shrinking for the first time in two years;
- Gold lost 4 percent. Silver shed 9 percent;
- Oil prices fell more than 6 percent;
- Recession's second act would be worse than the first;
- Fresh evidence of a global economic slowdown has raised fears that governments around the world may be powerless to reverse it;
- If the world does fall into back into recession, it could be much harder to escape than the contraction that ended in 2009;
- “We could be in for a repeat of the experience of 1937, when America fell back into recession after three years of recovery from the Great Depression.” - Roger Altman, a senior Treasury official in the Clinton administration;
- Fresh data showed the Eurozone's service sector contracting for the first time in two years; a separate index of the manufacturing sector, which has provided much of the region’s growth, slowed for the second month in a row;
- A report out Thursday showed that China’s factories slowed for the third month in a row;
- "There is a global slowdown. There is no doubt the risks of a global recession have grown." - Jeavon Lolay, head of global research at Lloyds Banking Group.
- "We are seeing a slow-motion train crash in the euro area, where credit contraction risks leading to a new recession by Christmas unless governments face up to the task swiftly and forcefully." - Martin Enlund, market strategist at the Swedish bank Handelsbanken;
- European central bankers appear increasingly unable to contain a widening banking crisis, sparked by the threat of bond defaults in Greece and Italy, Europe’s third-largest economy;
- "Europe and the United States could slip back into recession next year without bold action." - IMF.
Bookmarks