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Investors rush to sell

makapaaa

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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>Oct 26, 2008
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Analysts say South Korea and other emerging markets are under pressure as investors scramble to reduce overseas exposure and secure liquidity. -- PHOTO: AFP
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SEOUL - SOUTH Korea, Asia's fourth largest economy, is bearing the brunt of a global financial crunch with net selling of local stocks by foreign investors at a record high this year, data showed on Sunday.
The Financial Supervisory Service statistics, disclosed by Yonhap news agency, said foreign investors had sold a net 42.61 trillion won (US$96 billion) worth of stocks here this year, up until Friday.
The volume marked the highest disposal since the 1992 opening of the local stock market to foreign investors, it said, adding that this year's foreign investors' net selling already dwarfed the 30.56 trillion won figure of 2007.
Analysts say South Korea and other emerging markets are under pressure as investors scramble to reduce overseas exposure and secure liquidity to ride out the global credit crisis.
South Korea's stock market plunged on Friday, with the benchmark KOSPI index falling 10.6 per cent to 938.75 amid massive foreign selling.
The country's growth hit a four-year low in the third quarter.
Yonhap said South Korean President Lee Myung Bak on Sunday convened an emergency meeting with his top economic policy planners and advisers to discuss stabilising jittery financial markets.
Mr Lee's office would not immediately confirm the meeting.
But Yonhap said the president, who returned from the Asia Europe Meeting (ASEM) in Beijing on late Saturday, used the Sunday meeting to address panic in the nation's foreign currency and stock markets.
Prime Minister Han Seung Soo, Finance Minister Kang Man-Soo, central bank chief Lee Seong Tae, Financial Services Commission Chairman Jun Kwang Woo and senior presidential economic aide Bahk Byung Won took part, it added.
'Korea's economic fundamentals are solid, but the financial markets and investors have reacted excessively sensitively to some external factors,' one unnamed presidential aide told Yonhap on Sunday.
The aide said President Lee and his advisers discussed addressing jitters over the financial markets and follow-up measures to the agreements reached at the ASEM summit to fight the global credit crisis.
Seoul has announced sweeping measures to stabilise its stock markets.
The central bank said on Friday it provided two trillion won to local securities houses and asset managers through repurchase agreement deals in an attempt to ease current difficulties. A week ago, the government announced a 130 billion dollar package ? including a 100-billion-dollar state guarantee on its banks' foreign debts - aimed at allaying uncertainty. -- AFP
 
The stock market is now like a house on fire, everyone all tries to escape out of the house for survival
 
this world is a burning house. get out as soon as possible.the stock market is hell created and run by demons. only fools rush in.
 
The stock market is now like a house on fire, everyone all tries to escape out of the house for survival


The three local banks are getting hit by the financial woes of Las Vegas Sands up to an amount of $2.2 bln.

UOB has lent to LVS $890m, DBS - $740m and OCBC is around $570m.

In the coming weeks the three banks share price will be sold down to $2 - $5.
 
south korea borrow too much money

global slowdown mean export drop

and where do they get the money to repay the debt?

they are in trouble.

like many other countries in asia pacific
 
The three local banks are getting hit by the financial woes of Las Vegas Sands up to an amount of $2.2 bln.

UOB has lent to LVS $890m, DBS - $740m and OCBC is around $570m.

In the coming weeks the three banks share price will be sold down to $2 - $5.

Did not the likes of Divzzz tell u not to worry even as they are shitting in their pants?
 
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