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Friday, December 4, 1998 Published at 21:30 GMT


Business: The Economy

Share prices bounce back

Shares have stormed back

US shares prices roared back on Friday, spurring a rally on Europe's financial markets.

The Dow Jones index of leading US stocks ended up 136.46 points, or 1.54%, at 9,016.14.


[ image: A great start on Wall Street helped kick-start a recovery in London]
A great start on Wall Street helped kick-start a recovery in London
Strong US job figures helped calm fears about a sharp slowdown in the domestic economy.

The number of jobs created in the US soared in November, suggesting the economy is going from strength to strength.

Stocks had fallen around the world over the previous few days on fears that the world economy still faces a torrid time following financial turmoil in Asia, Russia and now Latin America.

However US Internet and high technology stocks bounced back after a difficult few days.

UK recovery

The surge on Wall Street led to a rollercoaster day on the London market.

UK shares also rose sharply in afternoon trading after a dramatic turnaround.

Earlier in the day billions of pounds were wiped off shares as investors took fright about the state of the UK economy.

The FTSE 100 index closed up 15.8 points at 5581.9.

The surge in the US market outweighed concerns that the UK economy could be heading for a recession.

European stock markets also recovered in afternoon trading.

What a difference a day makes

It is a far cry from Thursday when the US stock market slumped 2%, unsettling other markets around the world.

Brazil's troubled finances prompted the sell off in New York. Asian markets are also showing signs of nervousness, Tokyo's Nikkei index fell 57 points to 14,640 while Hong Kong closed flat at 10,052.

In Brazil, the government's economic recovery plan has run into a brick wall as its parliament rejected a key measure in the austerity budget.

The budget's implementation is also the key to an International Monetary Fund loan package to help the country stave off the threat of financial meltdown that has gripped other emerging markets.

Crucial times

Brazil is viewed as a lynch-pin for Latin America's financial health, and weakness in that region would hit US economy, and American corporate earnings, hard.

Bill Meehan, chief market analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald, said: "Brazil is counterbalancing the European rate cuts, and the US markets are really concerned about exposure, especially hedge fund exposure, to Brazil."

Investors were also unhappy at figures which revealed that the Japanese gross domestic product had shrunk over the summer.

It means the second biggest global economic power has recorded negative growth for the fourth consecutive quarter.





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