Market Update: 24 Oct 2008

4:30 pm : Stocks may have closed with substantial losses Friday, but the extent of the downturn was far better than many initially feared.

Index futures were limit down ahead of the session's opening bell, which occurs when trading is halted in order to pace losses amid frantic selling efforts. That had participants spooked and anticipating a large scale sell-off.

Stocks fell to their session low early on. At that point, the Dow was down 5.8%, the S&P 500 was down 6.1%, and the Nasdaq fell 6.9% to a new five-year low. Choppy trading gave way to a late session rally that helped stocks finish off their lows.

The bleak mood in early trading stemmed from continued fear of a global recession as England's economy contracted by a worse-than-expected 0.5%. That prompted London's FTSE 100 to close with a 5.0% loss. Other major European markets also saw losses, but none matched the 9.6% drop in Japan and the 8.3% fall in China.

The argument that slower global growth will undercut demand for oil has crude prices down 56% from their July high. That prompted OPEC to schedule an emergency meeting in which it decided to cut daily production by 1.5 million barrels, effective immediately. Oil prices fell further, though. Crude futures were down 7.7% at one point, but ended around 4.5% lower at less than $65 per barrel. Oil last traded there in mid-2007.

A dour outlook from global tech company Microsoft (MSFT 21.96, -0.36) only reaffirmed the fear that earnings prospects are clouded by macro concerns. The company posted better-than-expected revenue and earnings per share results for its latest quarter, but guided profits below the consensus estimate for both the fourth quarter and fiscal 2009.

http://finance.yahoo.com/marketupdate/overview?u

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Two more banks on A-share custodian list | SCMP

China Construction Bank and Bank of Communications have gained central bank approval to act as custodians for overseas investors buying local-currency shares.

HSBC Holdings, Citigroup, Bank of China, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China and China Merchants Bank have all been approved as custodians by the central bank.

Participating money managers, insurance companies and brokerages must designate a custodian - responsible for submitting the relevant documents to the China Securities Regulatory Commission and the State Administration of Foreign Exchange. Those two bodies also have to approve applications from banks wishing to be custodians. All of the banks so far named are still awaiting this endorsement. more