New setback for the Tokyo Stock Exchange

In the wake of a turbulent session on world stock markets, Asian markets are moving in the red Friday, but less dark than its U.S. counterparts, where the Dow Jones unscrewed 3.5%, and Europe, where the EuroStoxx 500 flinched almost 2%.

For example, Hong Kong, the Hang Seng yields 0.17%, to 19,545 points, in Australia, the S & P / ASX Index plaice 0.57% to 4292 points and in India, the BSO Sensex down 1.3% at 16,305 points. In China, the CSI index is even 0.15% to 2730 points.

The Nikkei skids

However, the trend is much more frank in Singapore and Japan: the Singapore Straits Times stumbles to 6:50 2.3% to 2689 points and the Nikkei 225 below 10,000 rating points to 9784 points exactly, showing a sharp fall again 2.45%.

The key index in Tokyo was not dropped below the symbolic 10,000 points since February 8, 2010.Investors are concerned that growth in Europe is too weak in the coming years and that this drives up the appreciation of Asian currencies, the yen in the crosshairs.

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) announced it was maintaining its key rate at 0.1% and it injected 1,000 billion yen (8.85 billion euros) in the country's banking system, to reassure markets worried about the problems of the euro area. Thursday evening, Spain's new growth forecast apr_ès the anonce an austerity plan of 15 billion euros.The country's growth will be only 1.3% this year against a previous estimate of 1.8%.

This Friday, the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of Japan (BoJ) has held that "the fiscal health of some European economies," posed a risk to economic recovery.

Investments in companies

As for values, the Japanese carmaker Toyota (-2.5% to 3,335 yen) will invest 50 million dollars in capital of U.S. manufacturer Tesla for joint production of electric vehicles at a plant in California.

Under the agreement signed in Palo Alto headquarters of Tesla Motors, the two partners' intend to cooperate in developing electric vehicles, spare parts, in production systems and engineering, "said a joint statement released Friday.

In China, as PetroChina was down Friday morning at the Shanghai Stock Exchange, after the oil giant had announced its intention to invest 60 billion dollars abroad in ten years. It lost 2.3% to 10.62 yuan (1.6 dollars).

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