A display board at the Hang Seng in Hong Kong
Asian stock markets plunged Friday after opening in line with the worst one-day drop since 2008 on the New York Stock Exchange and elsewhere the previous day. Already-fragile
investor confidence was hammered by more weak US economic data and a warning from the head of the European Commission that the eurozone debt crisis had likely spread to other economies. On Wall Street, the Dow fell more than 500 or 4.3 percent at close Thursday.
"It's going to be a very ugly end to an even uglier week," IG Markets analyst Ben Potter said in Sydney, adding that all sectors were expected to take a battering.
Tokyo tumbled 3.72 percent, or 359.30 points, to close at 9,299.88 while Hong Kong plummeted 4.68 percent in the afternoon.
Sydney slumped 4.00 percent, or 171.1 points, to 4105.4 and Seoul slumped 3.70 percent, or 74.73 points, to 1,943.74.
Sydney has lost 8.72 percent in the past four days, while Seoul has shed around 10.5 percent in the same period.
Taipei saw the heaviest fall, diving 5.58 percent, or 464.14 points, to close at 7,853.13.
Shanghai slipped 1.68 percent and Mumbai was 2.71 percent off in intraday trade.
Fear swept across Asia from Europe and the United States, where the Dow Jones Industrial Average suffered its worst one-day drop since December 2008 to close 4.3 percent lower at 11,383.68, erasing all this year's gains.
The broader S&P 500 dropped 4.8 percent to end the day at 1,200.07, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dived 5.1 percent to 2,556.39.
London's benchmark FTSE 100 index fell 3.43 percent, retreating to levels last seen in September 2010, while in Frankfurt the DAX fell 3.40 percent, and France's CAC 40 dropped 3.90 percent.
However most Asian stocks gained after Japan intervened in the foreign-exchange market to sell the yen, boosting the outlook for the nation's exporters.
Toyota Motor Corp, the world's biggest carmaker, reversed earlier losses after Japan's Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said the country intervened to stem the yen's gains against the dollar. Kaoru Yosano, Minister of State for Economic and Fiscal Policy, followed this by suggested more market action may follow, saying "it would be too hasty to think Thursday's intervention was a one-off measure". Canon Inc, the world's biggest camera maker, advanced 1.9 per cent in Tokyo.
Hitachi Ltd and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd jumped at least 3.2 per cent after the two companies were said to be in talks to merge some businesses. BHP Billiton Ltd, the world's No 1 mining company by market value, increased 0.5 per cent in Sydney after copper and oil prices increased.
Samsung Electronics Co fell after the company said it stopped production of some products.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 0.8 per cent to 132.62 as of 11:50am in Tokyo, after falling as much as 0.5 per cent and gaining as much as 0.2 per cent.
Five stocks rose for every four that fell on the gauge. Stocks also declined amid concern the US economic recovery is faltering after growth slowed in service industries and employment cooled in the world's biggest economy.
Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average gained 0.9 per cent after the yen dropped against the dollar after the nation's finance ministry said unilateral action was taken to sell the yen.
South Korea's Kospi index slipped 0.6 per cent, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index dropped 0.3 per cent.
"We're seeing the erosion and now the loss of confidence, confidence in the economy, confidence in the market, confidence in the policy makers. It's all showing up," said US-based Hugh Johnson, of Hugh Johnson Advisors.
Weak jobs data out of the United States on Thursday fuelled concerns among some analysts that the world could be heading towards another recession following the 2008 financial crisis.
The US Labor Department reported that weekly claims for unemployment benefits remained at a high 400,000 last week.
Those figures followed data this week showing manufacturing in the United States, Europe and Asia had come to a virtual standstill.
"There is a deep concern about global growth and of the state of play in the United States in particular," said City Index analyst Giles Watts.
"Traders are growing increasingly concerned about a sharp slowdown in US economic activity in the third quarter."
Eyes will be on the United States later Friday when Washington releases key government jobs data and a weaker-than-expected result could lead to a further sell-off.
European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso on Thursday urged eurozone leaders to re-think their currency's financial defences, admitting debt contagion has now spread.
"It is clear that we are no longer managing a crisis just in the euro-area periphery," Barroso warned in a letter sent to the 17 eurozone leaders.
A July 21 deal on a second bailout for Greece worth $226 billion has failed to prevent sharply higher debt-risk premiums for Italy and Spain, the eurozone's third and fourth-largest economies.
His comments came as the European Central Bank announced it would resume emergency credit-easing measures, some of which were last enacted at the height of the financial crisis.
But the ECB's efforts still failed to restore confidence. The risk premium investors demand to buy Spanish 10-year bonds over safe-bet German debt shot back up to near a record high on Thursday.
The eurozone debt crisis has put Italy and Spain under huge pressure in recent weeks after Greece, Ireland and Portugal had to be bailed out by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.
The Financial Times said investor reaction was also compounded by fears of a global recession.
"The past week's market downdraft has been associated, above all, with growing evidence that the second quarter global 'soft patch' is not giving way to a third quarter rebound as quickly as might have been hoped," the Times reported, citing Barclays Capital's note to clients.
"The conventional wisdom on Wall Street was that the economy was growing -- that the worst was behind us," CNN reported, quoting Peter Schiff, president of Euro Pacific Capital. "Now what people are realizing is the stimulus didn't work, and we may be headed back to recession."
Safe Havens
Gold scored to a new record at $1,681.72 per ounce on the spot market in New York as investors flocked to the precious metal, regarded as a safe bet in times of economic turmoil. It later retreated to $1,647.57.
The precious metal opened at $1,643.00-$1,644.00 an ounce in Hong Kong.
Prices for US government bonds, another safe haven, also rose.
The yield on the 10-year US Treasury dropped to 2.46 percent from 2.60 percent late Wednesday, while that on the 30-year bond fell to 3.72 percent from 3.87 percent. Bond prices and yields move in opposite directions.
New York's main contract, West Texas Intermediate light, sweet crude for delivery in September, was down $1.10 to $85.53 a barrel in afternoon trade after plunging $5.30, or 5.8 percent, in US trade Thursday.
It was the lowest closing price for WTI since February.
Brent North Sea crude for September delivery inched up four cents to $107.29 after falling $5.98, or 5.3 percent, in London trade.
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