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| - World stock markets and oil prices plunged Monday, as panicking investors bolted for safer assets after China warned that the spread of a deadly coronavirus was accelerating. China extended its biggest national holiday to buy time in the fight against a viral epidemic and neighbouring Mongolia closed its border, after the death toll spiked to 81 despite unprecedented quarantine measures. Approaching the half-way stage in Europe, Frankfurt sank 2.3 percent, London dived 2.5 percent and Paris shed 2.4 percent, as fears mounted over the overall impact on the global economy. Benchmark oil prices tanked 3.5 percent with trade slammed by concerns over demand from the world's top energy consumer China, but haven assets like gold and the yen rallied. "Market participants in Europe have grave concerns about coronavirus," said Ava Trade analyst Naeem Aslam. "The bottom line is that the virus has become deadly and it has caused a major panic in markets." Chinese President Xi Jinping warned over the weekend that China was facing a "grave situation" given the "accelerating spread" of the new SARS-like virus that has infected nearly 1,300 people across the country. As the number of people infected affected worldwide approached 3,000, analysts said there were growing fears the crisis could become as bad as the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) outbreak that hammered Asian markets in 2003. "Coronavirus fears have gripped the markets .. as all the major European equity benchmarks are nursing big losses," said analyst David Madden at trading firm CMC Markets UK. "Stocks that are connected to China are feeling the pain ... as traders are afraid the health crisis will curtail economic activity." The outbreak has led China to lock down the epicentre of the disease, Wuhan -- a city of 11 million people -- while imposing tight travel restrictions on a number of other cities including Beijing. The move comes during the Lunar New Year holiday when hundreds of millions of people criss-cross the country and spend billions of dollars. The government decided late Sunday it would extend the holiday and related school closures beyond January 30 end date to "reduce population flows", state media said. Most Asian markets were closed for the Lunar New Year break, but Tokyo was open and fell two percent. Bangkok plunged nearly three percent on worries about the Thai travel sector. The flight to safety saw the yen rally against the dollar, with the unit now up more than one percent from eight-month lows touched earlier this year. Gold, another go-to asset in times of turmoil and uncertainty, is heading back towards $1,600 per ounce and the six-year peaks touched at the start of January. While the main focus is on the spread of the virus, traders will also be keeping an eye on the release of earnings this week from top companies including Apple, Facebook and Samsung. The oil market had already tumbled more than six percent last week owing to concerns about the effects on demand in China, which is the world's number two economy after the United States. London - FTSE 100: DOWN 2.5 percent at 7,399.95 points Frankfurt - DAX 30: DOWN 2.3 percent at 13,270.89 Paris - CAC 40: DOWN 2.4 percent at 5,878.73 EURO STOXX 50: DOWN 2.2 percent at 3,697.64 Brent Crude: DOWN 3.4 percent at $58.63 per barrel West Texas Intermediate: DOWN 3.5 percent at $52.29 Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 2.0 percent at 23,343.51 (close) Hong Kong - Hang Seng: Closed for a public holiday Shanghai - Composite: Closed for a public holiday New York - DOW: DOWN 0.6 percent at 28,989.73 (close) Dollar/yen: DOWN at 108.89 yen from 109.28 yen Friday Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1024 from $1.1025 Pound/dollar: UP at $1.3086 from $1.3073 Euro/pound: DOWN at 84.24 pence from 84.34 pence burs/rfj/bcp/jh
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