Sharp decline, which covered the stock market indexes in Asia and the Pacific region last Friday, continued for the sixth consecutive day today, and slipped the regional MSCI Asia Pacific Index to its lowest level in ten weeks. Uncertainty about whether the rescue plan for Greece will put her country to the debt crisis, but it utterly severe recession, increased interest in Greek government securities to new record levels. Shares of banks and financial companies in the Asian region suffered the most from sales, cover all stock exchanges around the world yesterday. Regional stock measure MSCI Asia Pacific, which oversees securities markets in ten Asian countries, Australia and New Zealand fell 1.4 percent to 118.12 points to its lowest level since Feb. 26. It brings together 983 companies from the region today as shares of any appreciation in its composition accounted for five cheaper. In mid-April MSCI Asia Pacific reached its highest level in 20 months but within the past week he has lost 6.2 percent of its value. This is the strongest one-week decline from its February 2009. The Japanese index of blue-chip Nikkei 225 slid 3.1 percent to 10 364.59 points, after investors sought the safety of the yen, which raised its rate against the euro and dollar. Finance Minister of the country forms of the Khan said earlier that the group of seven largest economies, G-7 will be discussed during a conference call today, the Greek crisis.
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