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Worries Grow About Breadth of Debt Crisis

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  • XDMAR

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    Aug 15, 2008
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    Clear Lake
    The tumult in the European monetary zone is spreading concern among investors of a broader crisis in financial markets from Ireland to Spain.
    euro_coin_symbol_200.jpg
    Thomas Lohnes | AFP | Getty Images​
    Euro coin in front of the giant symbol of the Euro outside the headquarters of the European Central Bank.

    The worry is that the worst case, a Greek debt default, would lead to damaging losses for European banks and spur a global panic, replaying the events of September 2008. Then, investors fled all but the safest government debt, unloading everything from corporate bonds to American and emerging country stocks. Global markets froze.
    As European officials headed into a long weekend of critical talks, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund said that they were confident of a deal to secure a vital 12 billion euros ($17 billion) in outside aid needed to stave off an imminent Greek default.
    The comments, reflecting belated advances in negotiations that have been going on for weeks, were aimed at calming anxious financial markets. But so far, the deepening concerns are stopping short of transferring forcefully to the United States. For the time being at least, investors seem to believe enough shock absorbers have been built in to comfortably withstand any default by Greece or other highly debt-ridden nation.


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