Word: benchmarked
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...MSCI Asia Pacific Index finished the day up 1.2% after plummeting 16% during the previous week - the worst stock market rout suffered by the region since 1987. Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng index gained 3.3% after an 8.2% drop yesterday, while Korea's Kospi index rose .6%. Japan's Nikkei index fell .5% after rising in morning trading - hardly a robust recovery, but the panic selling that marked Wednesday's 9.4% free-fall dissipated, at least temporarily...
...Market-watchers credited the relative market calm to Wednesday's coordinated rate cuts by the U.S. Federal Reserve and five European central banks. China, South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan also reduced benchmark lending rates. Ting Lu, an economist with Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong, called local market reaction to the cuts "generally positive, but cautious...
...Japan, which is believed to already be in a recession, did not reduce its benchmark rate because it already stands at just .5%. But the Japanese government announced that $20 billion would be injected into the country's financial system to help free up frozen credit markets...
...Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Swiss, Canadian and Swedish banks. But the announcement arrived after Asian markets had closed, too late to put the brakes on a near free fall in Asian stocks that began on Monday. In Japan, the world's second-largest economy, the benchmark Nikkei index plummeted 9.4%, its biggest one-day drop since the global stock market crash of October 1987. Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng index fell 8.2%, while Seoul's Kospi dropped 5.8%. Indonesia shut down its stock market after shares plunged more than 10%. It is unclear when trading...
...tear gas cleared, members of the PAD regrouped around parliament and Government House, still vowing to keep up their protests. But six weeks of an opposition siege have left many Thais weary of the prolonged anti-government action. The country's stock market continues to swoon, with the benchmark index down nearly 40% since the PAD began its protest movement in late May. At a time when the government should be focusing on insulating the country from the global financial crisis, it is instead dealing with a clutch of protesters who want to replace a one-man-one-vote system...