Perfect Storm

Written by Writer on Thursday, October 9th, 2008

By The Nation, Agencies

US Fed and other cut rates to prop up financial system; Thai bourse nosedives 6%

Thailand is caught in a , with domestic and the combining to send the down more than 6 per cent to close below the 500-.

At the same time, the US Federal Reserve also slashed its key interest rate 50 to 1.5 per cent, in order to prop up its ailing . Other around the world have followed suit with their own monetary easing.

Thai shares yesterday plunged at the and fell further to the day’s trough of 483.91 points, or a loss of more than 8 per cent, before recovering slightly to end the day at 491.34 points, a 6.88-per-cent slump from Tuesday’s close.

The has sunk 42 per cent so far this year, with heading for the exits, as reflected by their net selling of more than Bt130 billion.

strategist Chakkrit Charoenmethachai said mounting anxiety over the outweighed that over the local .

However, he recommended investors avoid snapping up Thai shares, due to further .

State-owned Krung () has stopped extending working- to high-risk corporations amid the global , president Apisak Tantivorawong said yesterday.

That is why he estimated his bank’s net loans in this quarter would drop from the previous quarter.

The bank did not tighten lending following the US , but fewer customers qualified for loans, he added.

And there is more bad news on the international front.

The Fed, acting in coordination with other global authorities, cut its key rate from 2 per cent to 1.5 per cent.

Chairman and his colleagues revived the central bank’s rate-cutting campaign, which was halted in June out of concern that those low rates would worsen inflation.

But since then, economic and financial conditions have deteriorated dangerously,  forcing the Fed to reverse course.

In Europe, which also has been hard hit by the financial crisis, the Bank of England cut its rate by a half-point to 4.5 per cent, while the European Central Bank sliced its rate to 3.75 per cent.

China also cut its key interest rates yesterday for the second time in less than a month, in order to stimulate slowing economic growth amid the global credit crisis.

Frantically trying to stop the bleeding on Wall Street, the Fed took a first-time step on Tuesday to get cash directly to businesses and hinted that interest rates could come down soon. Stocks continued their free fall anyway and hit new five-year lows.

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