The Ftse 100, which marked its biggest weekly loss of the year on Friday, has now fallen for 10 sessions in a row, its longest continuous decline since 2003.
US stocks initially posted their sharpest rally of the year in Tuesday morning trading after investors looked for bargains a day after Wall Street’s worst performance in four years.
China’s Shanghai Composite plunged further this morning, opening more than six per cent down – but other major indices in Asia regained ground in morning trading as investors made the most of yesterday’s bloodbath.
The US stock market has rebounded slightly following an early trading plunge in the wake of a big drop in Chinese stocks. Minutes after the opening bell Monday, the major indices tumbled wildly, making Friday’s 530-point sell-off in the Dow look like a minor blip, but...
U.S. inflation in the first half of the year was probably “markedly lower” than reported, but policymakers are unlikely to set interest rates incorrectly as a result, according to an analysis published Monday by the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank. The Fed stepped...
China has sought to calm its panic-stricken stock markets by cutting interest rates and loosening constraints on bank lending after a second day of plunging share prices.
The British lobbying body is forecasting 2.6 percent growth for 2015 and 2.8 percent for 2016, up from its June’s projections of 2.4 percent and 2.5 percent respectively.
The speed at which this happened yesterday was eerily reminiscent of the May 6, 2010 flash crash, as bids seemingly disappeared only to resurface as fast as they vanished.
South Africa’s currency tumbled the most since October 2008 in thin Asia trading that exaggerated moves on Monday on concern lower prices for commodities, which account for more than half of the nation’s exports, will deepen as China’s economy slows.
Shanghai: Shanghai stocks tumbled 6.41 per cent in early trading on Tuesday, extending the worst plunge for eight years after worries China’s faltering economy could hurt global growth sent world markets nosediving.