Tokyo shares fell sharply in early trading on
Tuesday, following tumbling markets across Europe and the US.
The Nikkei 225 continued to fall throughout the day, down 5.2% to 16,601.
Earlier,
US and European shares were pulled down by big falls among banking and
technology stocks. Deutsche Bank led the fallers, dropping 9.5%.
The Dow Jones dropped 1.1%, London's FTSE 100 fell 2.7% and the Athens stock exchange dropped to a 25-year low.
Investors
have been spooked by weak oil prices, with Brent crude hovering around
$33 a barrel, concerns over slowing economic growth, particularly in
China, the world's second largest economy, and the threat of a further
interest rate rise in the US.
In Tokyo, the banks were the biggest fallers, with Mitsubishi UFJ dropping 8.3%, Sumitomo Mitsui down 8.7% and Mizuho Financial Group losing 5.8%.
The strengthening yen also hit big exporters, with the currency up 0.8% against the dollar.
Toyota dropped 5.9%, Honda lost 6.4% and Nissan fell 6.8%.
'Struggling what to buy'
The Nikkei 225 is down more than 20% from its peak levels, reached last June.
"When
the strong yen is a concern, you would buy domestic-demand sensitive
stocks like banks, but we can't buy them now so we are really struggling
what to buy on a day like this," said Masashi Oda, senior investment
officer at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank.
Meanwhile, in Australia the ASX index closed down 2.8% at 4,832, led by the country's banking sector.
There
was little trading elsewhere in Asia, with China's mainland markets
shut all week for Lunar New Year celebrations. Hong Kong and South Korea
are both closed for three days.
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