GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks sell off, near 14-year lows

Mon Mar 9, 2009 9:03am EDT
 
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* World stocks in broad-based sell off, near 14-year lows

* FTSEurofirst loses 2.3 pct, Japan's Nikkei at 26-year low

* Wall Street set for losses

* Dollar firms against major currencies

By Jeremy Gaunt, European Investment Correspondent

LONDON, March 9 (Reuters) - World stocks sank towards 14-year lows in a broad-based sell off on Monday, dragged lower in Europe and Asia by economic gloom and worries about the U.S. banking system.

Wall Street looked set to join in the decline.

Japan recorded its largest current account deficit on record, underlining the economic headwinds that continue to buffet investors.

MSCI's all-country world stock index .MIWD00000PUS was down 1.2 percent, bringing year-to-date losses to around 24 percent.

The index, a benchmark for major investors, is only a few percentage points away from lows reached in 1995, before that decade's Russian and Asian crises.

"The recession is very dire. You have an incredible rise in risk premium so people expect the worst. Banking results are getting worse," said Giorgio Radaelli, chief strategist at wealth manager BSI in Switzerland.

Investors remain particularly concerned about the banking sector, with uncertainty about the potential nationalisation of U.S. banks weighing hard.

European shares fell, with the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top shares down 2.3 percent. The broader STOXX 600 .STOXX was also down 2.4 percent, hitting its lowest level since September 1996.

Earlier, Japan's Nikkei average .N225 fell 1.2 percent to a 26-year closing low. The broader Topix slipped 1.5 percent to a fresh 25-year low.

Export giant Japan's current account balance swung to its largest deficit on record in January, with the income surplus tumbling about a third from a year earlier.  Continued...