Posts Tagged ‘US’

FTSE down amid doom and gloom March 8th, 2008

The FTSE 100 ended Friday 66.50 points down (1.15%) at 5699.90, taking the index to its lowest level in six weeks, largely thanks to more bad news from the other side of the pond.

Fears of a recession in the US grow as the impact of the credit crunch deepens. Employers cut 63,000 jobs, the highest level for nearly five years, and the Federal Bank didn’t deliver an anticipated emergency interest rate cut to help alleviate the pain. Although it has injected $100 billion of emergency financing into the system.

The news hit our mining stocks the hardest with BHP Billiton down 90p (5.36%) to 1590p, Antofagasta down 43.5p (5.2%) to 786.5p and Vedanta Resources down 111p (4.69%) to 2256p.

JD Wetherspoon was another notable faller off nearly 17% to 260p but that was a result of the smoking ban rather than anything going on in the US.

The FTSE 250, FTSE All-Share and FTSE Aim indices all followed suit ending the day down by 1.15%, 1.20% and 0.86% respectively.

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  • Selection from Glossary

    • Current Ratio
      current ratio = current assets / current liabilities The current ratio shows how easily a company could raise funds to satisfy its short-term creditors if they all required paying immediately. Ideally the ratio should be at leat 1:1 to ensure there are sufficient assets to meet liabilities. The ratio should not be too high, say 2:1, as this would indicate cash is not being used to full effect. As current assets include stock, the quick ratio (also known as the acid test ratio) is often preferred, as the stock may be slow moving and not readily realisable.