Friday's market reports:
Telegraph
The Times
The Times (Need to know)
FT
The Guardian
The Independent
This is Money
Families have been warned of a looming credit drought as banks and building societies stop handing out cards and overdrafts to hard-pressed households. Industry experts have said that lenders are clamping down on debt applications for fear that borrowers default as the economy worsens.
Families face credit card squeeze as banks react to market turmoil
Pressure is growing on the US Federal Reserve to announce an emergency cut in interest rates after the worst employment data in four years sparked fears of a recession.
Fed faces growing pressure for rate cut
Britain's biggest banks could be forced to cough up as much as 70bn over the next 10 days, as the credit crisis that has seized the global financial system sparks a fresh wave of chaos.
Banks face 10-day debt timebomb
LEADING bankers are warning of the worst crisis in the money markets for 20 years, which will come to a head this week when $113 billion (57 billion) of commercial paper market IOUs comes up for refinancing.
Worst crisis for 20 years, say banks
The Bank of England will pump in 4.4bn to ease the liquidity squeeze on banks. But is it too little, too late?
Emergency injection
This may be the month that decides the outlook for the economy for the next two years. The miserable figures from the US Labour Department show how quickly the problems of the sub-prime mortgage crisis have gone beyond the financial markets and leeched into the real economy.
Americas slowing economy could put brake on our own
The recent resilience of US equities to strains in the money markets was tested on Friday by the news that the labour force had contracted for the first time in four years. Investors had expected a gain of 110,000 new jobs for August, but a loss of 4,000 sparked sharply lower stock prices. The report left investors contemplating whether the US economy could face a recession, rather than a period of below average growth.
Wall Street stunned by jobs figures
A surprise decline in the number of US jobs provided new evidence that the world's largest economy is slowing, as the effects of falling house prices and a crisis in the global financial markets begin to bleed into the rest of the real economy. The nervously-awaited August employment data, released by the US government yesterday, recorded 4,000 fewer positions in August the first decline since 2003, when the US economy was emerging from recession. The data prompted a sharp fall in the value of the dollar, and a crescendo of calls for an interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve.
Markets dive on fears of US slowdown
CB Richard Ellis, the property agent, is to wipe up to 10bn off the value of Britain's commercial property market when it carries out its quarterly valuations at the end of this month.
Real estate faces 10bn loss of value
Lehman Brothers' plans to cut another 850 jobs as it restructures its mortgage business in the UK and US has sent shockwaves across London's commercial property market, creating fears of a full-scale downturn.
Lehman's plan to cut 850 jobs spreads fear of City rental downturn
The House of Commons' powerful Treasury Select Committee is poised to quiz Barclays' Bob Diamond and other leading bankers in the coming months in a wide-ranging inquiry into the credit crisis. Philip Dunne, a Conservative member of the committee and former investment banker, is writing to John McFall, the committee's chairman, saying it should call on all the major players in the market meltdown to call them to account.
Top bankers face grilling over credit crisis
The global credit crunch is forcing the Royal Bank of Scotland-led consortium bidding for ABN Amro to scramble for new sources of finance to back the 71bn (48bn) deal.
RBS scrambles to refinance ABN bid