
	Octubre 10, 2008
	
	del Sitio Web
	
	TrinityATierra
	
	 
	
	El primer ministro Silvio Berlusconi ha dicho hoy viernes que los lideres 
	mundiales están considerando suspender todos los mercados financieros en 
	respuesta a la crisis financiera. Berlusconi ha dicho en una conferencia de 
	prensa en Nápoles que los líderes de la UE estaban considerando celebrar una 
	cumbre el Domingo (este domingo día 12 de Octubre) en París. También dijo 
	que los líderes del Grupo de los Ocho también estaban considerando reunirse 
	en los próximos días.
	
	Las soluciones a la crisis tendrán que ser “globales e innovadoras”, dijo 
	Berlusconi. “Se habla de suspender los mercados” meintras se reescriben las 
	reglas financieras internacionales”.
	
	Huelga decir que si esto se lleva acabo tus acciones, bonos, fondos de 
	seguro, etc no estarán accesibles de ninguna manera.
	
	Fuente: leer informe abajo...
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	Berlusconi - G-8 might Meet on Crisis
	The Associated Press
	October 10, 2008
	
	from
	
	InternationalHeraldTribune Website
	 
	
	ROME: 
	
	Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi on Friday cited rumors that 
	stock 
	markets might be suspended in response to the financial meltdown but 
	cautioned that no world leader has been raising that hypothesis.
	
	Earlier, Berlusconi told a news conference in Naples that world leaders 
	might consider such a suspension, but later told reporters that he was 
	actually referring to rumors that he had heard on radio.
	
		
		"They are rumors that are in the newspapers," the premier was quoted as 
	saying by the Italian news agency Apcom.
"Maybe I made a mistake to say it, but I thought you also knew" it was only 
	a rumor, Berlusconi was quoted as telling the reporters.
	
	
	The premier told the news conference that EU leaders might hold a summit on 
	the crisis Sunday in Paris and that leaders from the Group of Eight also 
	were considering a summit in the coming days.
	
		
		The solutions to the crisis will have to be "global and innovative," 
	Berlusconi said. "There is talk of suspending the markets" while 
	international financial rules are "rewritten."
	
	
	Also on Friday, Italy's stock market regulator widened a 
	month long ban on 
	short selling to include all shares traded in the country.
	
	The measure bans the common practice of selling borrowed shares in hopes of 
	buying them at a lower price, and it will be in effect until Oct. 31. Last 
	week the regulator had banned short-selling bank and insurance company 
	stocks.
	
	The ban aims to help stop the free fall of the Milan Stock Exchange, which 
	along with other global markets has been suffering heavy losses in the wake 
	of the U.S. financial crisis.
	
	The benchmark S&P/Mib index was down 4.5 percent Friday afternoon.