Greek
stock market hits 22-year low
Greece's
stock market has plummeted to a new 22-year low, over heightened
fears of an economic collapse.
26
April, 2012
Athens'
stock exchange, the Athex Composite, closed down 24 points at 503, a
drop of 4.53% overnight.
Uncertainty
in Greece has intensified despite EU leaders pledging support for the
country, because no new measures have been announced yet to avoid a
currency exit.
TVNZ's
business presenter Nadine Chalmers-Ross told TV ONE's Breakfast she
thought it could not get any worse for the Greek economy, "but
it has".
"It's
basically a continuation of the same theme, they're not feeling
reassured that European leaders have got it covered," she said.
However
the rest of Europe saw gains despite Greece's fall, with the German,
British and French stock exchange all on the up.
Overnight
London's FTSE 100 was up 84 points, Germany's DAX up 30, and the
French markets up 35 points.
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