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World markets close 2008 bruised and confused

This article was posted on Dec 31, 2008 and is filed under Press Releases

LONDON (AP) — World stock markets were seeing out 2008 in a bruised and confused state after a year of dizzying turmoil, with stocks in Europe and Asia little changed Wednesday in light trading.

In very modest shortened New Year’s Eve trade, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closed up 41.49 points, or 0.9 percent, at 4,434.17, while France’s CAC-40 close up a bare 0.84 point, or 0.03 percent, at 3,217.97. Germany’s DAX was closed for New Year’s Eve.

Earlier, markets that were open in Asia ended the year mixed. In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index rose 152 points, or 1.1 percent, to end at 14,387.48 — 48 percent lower than when the year began. Australia’s key index added 1.9 percent but stock averages in Mumbai, Shanghai, Malaysia and Singapore fell modestly. Markets in Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand were closed for the holiday.

In the U.S., Wall Street was set to end the year with a whimper, with futures markets predicting a slightly higher opening after Tuesday’s advance on the news that General Motors Corp.’s troubled financing arm received $5 billion through the U.S. government’s bank rescue program. The Dow Jones industrial average was predicted to open 18 points higher at 8,658 while the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index was set to open 3.4 points higher at 891.60.

The world’s main markets will not reopen until Friday and investors will be hoping December’s modest year-end rally across the world augurs a change of fortunes in 2009, especially if a massive stimulus package from the incoming Obama administration makes the U.S. recession shorter than would otherwise have been the case.

“I remain upbeat enough to believe that we will begin to move in the right direction before 2009 is out. Between now and then it will be a torrid affair,” said Howard Wheeldon, senior strategist at BGC Partners.

2008 will go down as one of the worst years ever in stock markets as the credit crunch claimed a number of high-profile investments banks in the U.S. and brought the financial world to near-ruin. Governments and central banks intervened to shore up confidence but could not prevent the world’s leading economies sliding into recession.

Among the world’s major indexes, Japan’s Nikkei index tumbled 42 percent during 2008, its biggest loss since its inception 58 years ago, while Britain’s FTSE 100 closed around a third lower than a year ago, its worst year since it was created in 1984. Germany’s DAX closed out 2008 Tuesday down around 40 percent on the year, its second biggest fall in its 20-year history.

In the U.S., where the financial crisis proved to be most acute following the collapse of the subprime housing market and the bankruptcy of such Wall Street luminaries as Lehman Brothers, the Dow Jones was poised to end 2008 around 35 percent lower on the year while the broader S&P 500 was set to end around 40 percent down.

Grim as those numbers are, they were even worse before a December rally. The FTSE 100, for example, is 20 percent higher than its October lows.

Most stock market observers think things are likely to get worse before they get better, as the start of 2009 will likely provide mounting evidence that the world economy is experiencing one of its worst recessions since the 1930s.

With companies struggling to make ends meet and unemployment set to soar in the U.S. and Western Europe in particular, investors will likely remain wary of dipping their toes back into stocks.

Some analysts are also concerned that policy-makers around the world appear reluctant to accept that the world has changed and that the credit-driven growth over the last decade is unlikely to recur.

“Financial markets are only likely to regain their confidence if the authorities create a tightly controlled supervisory environment and are ready to crack down on financial activities that have no clear economic justification,” said Stephen Lewis, an analyst at Monument Securities.

“The fact that we are a long way from that state is a major reason for pessimism as we enter 2009,” he added.

One potential bright spot, at least in terms of its impact on economic activity, has been the collapse in the price of oil from $147 a barrel as recently as July.

Oil prices were lower in European trade, with light, sweet crude for February delivery falling $1.31 to $37.72 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The turmoil in the stock markets in 2008 was replicated in foreign exchange markets too, with the yen being the biggest gainer among the major currencies and the British pound the biggest loser.

In low volumes, the dollar was up 0.1 percent at 90.38 yen, while the euro slipped 0.7 percent to $1.3970.

AP Business Writer Jeremiah Marquez in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

Source: yahoo finance.

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