May 8, 2010
US probes stock crash
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The panic that plunged the Dow well below 10,000 on Thursday spread to Europe, pulling down markets across the region. The European tumbles in turn spooked US investors beginning their trading day in New York, sending the Dow swinging wildly. -- PHOTO: AFP
NEW YORK - US REGULATORS on Saturday probed a stunning Wall Street crash that dragged the Dow Jones industrial average down almost 1,000 points in mere minutes and sparked panic on markets around the world. As indices in Europe plummeted and US markets swung wildly, President Barack Obama vowed Thursday's 'unusual market activity' would be investigated. The panic that plunged the Dow well below 10,000 on Thursday spread to Europe, pulling down markets across the region.
The European tumbles in turn spooked US investors beginning their trading day in New York, sending the Dow swinging wildly. Thursday's stunning dive began without warning. The drop was so precipitous and unexpected it prompted immediate speculation about whether trader error or a technical glitch was involved. At its lowest point, the Dow fell 998.5 points, dropping to 9,869.62. It then recovered half its losses, climbing back up almost as quickly as it had fallen. In little more than 10 minutes, billions of dollars in value was wiped out as investors deserted stocks wholesale.
By the session close, the blue-chip index had recovered significantly, but it was still down 348 points or three per cent - a steep drop that would have sparked concern even on an ordinary day. On Friday the Dow lost another 139.89 points (1.33 per cent), ending the week at 10,380.43 after a session in which it bounced in and out of positive territory. The shocking sell-off came amid continuing concern about the stability of the eurozone, with many uncertain that a 110-billion-euro (S$195 billion) bailout package for Greece would be sufficient to stem the country's debt crisis. -- AFP