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And in the U.S., bailed-out insurer American International Group Inc. said it is evaluating "potential new alternatives" to tackle its continuing financial problems amid reports it will soon announce a $60 billion loss and ask the government for more aid. After the markets closed, JPMorgan Chase said it was slashing its quarterly dividend to preserve capital in case economic conditions drastically worsen. U.S. investors seemed unconvinced after regulators promised to ensure the viability of banks by providing capital and said they would start conducting "stress tests" on Wednesday to gauge the health of financial firms. Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea's Kospi fell 3.2 percent to 1,063.88, while mainland Chinese shares, among the year's best performers, got slammed, pushing the Shanghai benchmark down 4.6 percent. Sentiment there also took a hit after China's central bank said the country's economic downturn could worsen and warned the risk of deflation is "quite big" amid collapsing consumer demand. The bank's report could temper expectations that China's slump might be bottoming out and a recovery might be taking shape, Elsewhere, Australia's stock measure was off 0.6 percent, and Singapore's benchmark lost 1 percent. Oil prices were steady, with light, sweet crude for April delivery up 2 cents at $38.46 a barrel the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract lost 4 percent, or $1.59, to settle at $38.44 overnight. In currencies, the dollar strengthened 0.8 percent to 95.54 yen. The euro was up 0.8 percent at $1.2799.
[Associated
Press;
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