New York's Dow Jones has recorded its biggest one-day points fall in history as the coronavirus stock market sell-off gathered pace.
The Wall Street index fell by 1,191 points, or 4.4%, as share indices across the globe entered "correction" territory amid heightening worries about the economic impact of the outbreak.
It put US markets on course for their worst week since October 2008 - at the height of the financial crisis.
Earlier on Thursday, the FTSE-100 suffered its biggest one day fall in percentage terms since August 2015.
Markets in London, Europe, and the US were in so-called "correction" territory after the latest declines - meaning they have lost more than 10% of values off their most recent highs.
The FTSE's fall of 3.49%, or 246 points, knocked £62bn off the combined value of the its constituent companies - and meant they are £152bn down over the course of the week so far.
The latest falls came after declines in Asia overnight linked to the latest COVID-19 developments including confirmation that a woman had been
reinfected in Japan.
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-stock-markets-taken-sick-again-on-speed-of-spread-11944193