By Jeremy Gaunt and Hideyuki Sano
LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan cut interest rates for the first time in seven years on Friday, expecting severe stress in the global economy to persist, while UK banking giant BARCLAYS (BARC.LO)said it was raising $12 billion in capital.
The Bank of Japan's move followed a cut in interest rates from the U.S. Federal Reserve earlier in the week and likely presaged the same from the European Central Bank and Bank of England next week.
Policymakers have been struggling to find the right response to a rapid slowdown in the global economy that has hammered corporate profits and sparked a record freefall in global stock markets in October.
Ripples from the crunch continued to flow on Friday with Barclays Plc saying it planned to raise 7.3 billion pounds ($12.06 billion) in additional capital from outside investors including from Gulf state Qatar.
Earlier this month, Barclays said it wanted to raise capital but would raise it privately rather than take UK government cash, as rivals Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds and HBOS are.
Mizuho Financial Group became the second major Japanese bank this week to cut its full-year net profit forecast by more than half because of bad loans and losses in its equity portfolio.
The global downturn has come hard on the heels of the credit crunch, the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, with investors facing what Japanese Prime Minister Tara Aso "a harsh storm seen only once in 100 years."
Equity markets fell again on Friday, with Japan's Nikkei closing down 5 percent on disappointment at the size of the interest rate cut and Asian shares set to post their worst month ever.
European shares were off about 0.5 percent..
The MSCI all-country world index has lost around 42 percent so far this year, although gains in the earlier part of this week were putting it on track for its best week in its more than 20 year history.
RATE CUTS
The Bank of Japan cut its benchmark overnight call rate to 0.30 percent from 0.50 percent, a slightly smaller reduction that the quarter point many had expected.
A 4-4 vote on the policy board meant the central bank governor had to cast the deciding vote.
"At a time of extreme financial uncertainty and volatility, to have a policy board so evenly split is hardly reassuring," said Glenn Maguire, Asia Pacific chief economist with Societe Generale in Hong Kong.
"Whatever the desired outcome -- the fact that the board was so evenly split jeopardizes that outcome."
The rate reduction was the latest in a series of rate cuts globally as central banks move rapidly to try to cushion growth now that interbank lending rates have been consistently falling.
The average benchmark interest rate in the Group of Seven countries has dropped to 2.36 percent, the lowest since April 2005, from 4 percent in August 2007 when credit markets began imploding because of mounting subprime mortgage defaults.
Economists widely expected Australia, Britain and the euro zone to cut rates next week.
European policymakers have some lingering concerns about inflation but will get an update with the release of euro zone prices data later in the day (1000 GMT).
CONTRACTION
The economies of Britain, Europe, Japan and the United States are contracting. The latest growth data showed the U.S. economy shrank in the third quarter, three months that ended with the dismantling of Wall Street in September.
The U.S. economy shrank at a 0.3 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the sharpest contraction in the United States in seven years. U.S. consumers slashed spending at the fastest rate in 28 years in the third quarter.
Along with central banks, governments around the world were waging an all-out battle to contain the fallout from the financial crisis, including by cutting taxes, taking equity stakes in banks and backing bank deposits.
The South Korean government is considering $7.3 billion in additional spending to support domestic demand, according to a local business paper, as the worst fears appeared to have dissipated about a meltdown in Asia's fourth-largest economy.
On Thursday, Japan also unveiled a $50 billion economic stimulus package and German cabinet minister Michael Glos said the European country planned to introduce a range of steps worth up to $39 billion.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaus worldwide; Editing by Mike Peacock)
(jeremy.gaunt@thomsonreuters.com; +44 207 542 1028; Reuters Messaging: jeremy.gaunt.reuters.com@reuters.net))
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