2011年4月19日星期二

Asian stocks fall after S. & p.-warning

Standard & poor's, the credit rating agency, lowered the Outlook on the United States from stable to negative Monday due to the high budget deficits of the country and the rising government debt. He cited the "material risk that budgetary challenges cannot reach an agreement on the response of medium- and long-term U.S. policy makers by 2013."

S. & p. not actually that downgrade U.S. credit rating, and Government officials expressed opinions its support of the United States in Japan on Tuesday.

"The United States combat is tax issues in different ways, so I think still US Treasuries are in fact an attractive product for us," said Minister of Finance of Yoshihiko Noda of Japan, Reuters reported.

Still, S. & p.'s statement short tremors of the Treasury sent bond markets and spooked Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average, 1.1 percent fall Monday. In Europe, also shares fell sharply, pulled down by characters that the debt crisis in some of the periphery of the continent could be deepening.

The markets in the Asia Pacific region followed on Tuesday.

In Japan, caused by the devastating earthquake and tsunami last month fighting yet in the midst of the turmoil, the Nikkei index fell 225 1.2 percent to 9,441.03 points to close.

Taiwan fell by 0.9 per cent, South Korea fell 0.7 per cent lower, and in Australia, 1.4 percent include the S & P/ASX 200 index.

The Hang Seng in Hong Kong sagged 1.4 percent by mid-afternoon, although the key index for mainland China 1.6 percent declined.

In India, the Sensex index managed a gain of 0.2% in the course of the afternoon.

Despite fundamentally good economic background in many of the fast-growing Asian economies investors are increasingly fretting about how policy makers inflation include the Assembly, which is much of the region of plagues will be.

The United States budget problems deficit and debt levels "of United States alone are not" touch analyst of DBS in Singapore in a research said on Tuesday.

"The rest of the world must accept that the United States is no longer able to withstand their role of consumers of alternative character set for the global economy for an indefinite period." Two years after the exit from the 2008 global crisis, will it focus greater urgency for emerging markets, especially those with large surpluses, and depend more on domestic demand growth, "the DBS Analyst commented."


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