US SHARES - Tumble again

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BBC US shares tumble again

Asia and Europe are mirroring the gloom of Wall Street

US shares fell heavily on Thursday, after closing almost 150 points lower the previous day.

By 1548 in New York (1950 GMT), the Dow Jones Industrial Average had fallen 381 points to 8,377.5.

Shares had already fallen in Asia and Europe on Thursday, as the markets grow increasingly nervous of US retaliation after last week's terrorist attacks.

The fresh burst of selling in the US came after Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the attacks would have a significant effect on the US economy in the short term.

London's FTSE index, which had already been well down in morning trade, dropped further in sympathy with US markets and closed 165 points lower at 4,557.

This is lowest close of London's leading index since June 1997 as concern deepened over global recession and fresh conflict.

'Blinded'

Oil and bank shares were down in the UK, but most attention focussed on the outlook for airlines.

British Airways shares dropped more than 12% to a 10-year low of 143p after the company said it was cutting 5,200 more jobs on top of 1,800 announced earlier this month and trimming its flight schedule by 10%.

Investors were also occupied with concerns over the US military build-up in the Gulf.

"The market is still blinded by uncertainty over the extent of American retaliation in the Middle East and how on earth they are going to do it," said Jeremy Batstone, head of research at NatWest Stockbrokers.

Global gloom

French and German stock markets were also substantially lower, primarily because of the same fears over US retaliation and the impact on the global economy.

Paris's Cac 40 closed 151 points lower at 3,738 while Frankfurt's Dax ended 232 points down at 3,810.

Asian markets had already closed lower, ending three days of stability.

Overnight, Japan's leading Nikkei index moved 154 points lower to 9,785 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 240 points to 9,317.98.

-- Anonymous, September 20, 2001


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