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It was the first time in three days that the BoJ had pumped emergency funds into the financial system as part of a concerted action by global central banks to try to avert a credit squeeze caused by problems in US mortgages.
On Wednesday and Thursday, the BoJ had drained a total of 3.6 trillion yen from the domestic banking system – more than the amount it had pumped in over the past two working days – as fears of a domestic credit squeeze faded.
The Japanese central bank's latest injection came after the Tokyo stock markets tumbled for a second straight day in early deals after another rout overnight on Wall Street.
The Tokyo Stock Exchange's benchmark Nikkei-225 index of leading shares fell 339.30 points or 2.06 percent to 16,136.31 in early trading, a day after sinking 2.19 percent to an eight-month low.
Wall Street suffered another heavy sell-off on Wednesday as another big injection of funds by the US Federal Reserve into the financial system failed to calm jitters.
A persistent housing slump and rising property foreclosures in the United States have sparked a financial storm that has prompted investors to shun mortgage-backed securities and other risky investments. - AFP/so
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