Stock Markets

Banking shares rally in London after US mortgage lender move

London - Shares in leading British banks rallied strongly on the London Stock Exchange Monday following news of the US government's bail-out of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Paris Bourse in strong recovery after US mortgage lender bail-out

Paris Bourse in strong recovery after US mortgage lender bail-out

Leading German DAX index claws back much of last week's losses

Frankfurt - The DAX index of the 30 top German shares clawed back much of last week's losses in early trade Monday, rising more than 3 per cent on news of a government bail-out for battered US mor

Shares jump 5 per cent in Seoul on US bailout of mortgage firms

Seoul - Shares surged more than 5 per cent Monday on the Seoul Stock Exchange as investor sentiment was boosted by the US government decision to bail out struggling mortgage giants Fannie Mae and

Asian stocks surge on bailout of US mortgage lenders

Asian stocks surge on bailout of US mortgage lenders Tokyo - Asian stocks, led by financial issues, made major gains in early trading Monday, reacting to a US decision to take control of the two largest US mortgage lenders and guarantors, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

In Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average jumped 438.04 points, or 3.59 per cent, in morning trading to 12,650,27 on investor confidence that the US government move would calm turmoil in global financial markets.

The broader Topix index of all first-section issues also rose 46.49 points, or 3.97 per cent, to 1,217.33.

Hong Kong shares soar by nearly 4 per cent in morning trading

Hong Kong shares soar by nearly 4 per cent in morning trading Hong Kong - Hong Kong shares rocketed up by nearly 4 per cent in early trading Monday as the US mortgage bailout generated global optimism that the credit crunch might be over.

Shortly after midday, the Hang Seng Index stood at 20,701.13, up 767.85 points, or 3.85 per cent. Turnover was 36 billion Hong Kong dollars (4.6 billion US dollars).

The surge in prices followed a black week on the Hong Kong stock market, which saw shares tumble below 20,000 for the first time in 17 months.

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