* Yen gives up gains as extreme risk aversion pared back
* Stock markets trim loss, but still sharply lower
* G7 eyed for coordinated action amid deepening crisis
(Recasts changes dateline, byline, adds quotes, updates prices
PVS TOKYO)
By Veronica Brown
LONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) - The Japanese yen retreated from
three-year highs against the euro but remained elevated in
highly volatile trade on Friday, as unnerved investors unloaded
risk on deep worries about the global financial system.
Stock markets in Europe were down sharply -- but off earlier
lows -- keeping the Japanese unit as the currency of choice.
In overnight Asian trade, Japan's Nikkei share average
<> plunged nearly 12 percent at one stage and was down 23
percent for the week -- about twice what it suffered in the week
of the 1987 crash -- after U.S. stocks slid sharply on huge
selling of bank and insurance shares.
Tokyo stocks were also hit by the bankruptcy filing of
insurer Yamato Life, the first Japanese financial institution to
fall victim to the credit crisis.
Coordinated interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve and
major central banks this week failed to relieve investor fears
that the freeze in credit markets will cause more damage to
banks and a sharp economic recession around the world.
"Essentially we're flying blind. No-one has a clue what's
going on," DZ Bank currency strategist Sonja Marten said.
"The uncertainty is too great and volatility is incredible.
It's a question of market confidence and somehow we're going to
have to get it back," she added.
Leaders from Group of Seven powers are meeting in Washington
to mull other joint measures to try and stop the panic in
markets. []
The euro slid to a three-year low of 132.80 yen before
substantially cutting losses to 134.89 yen <EURJPY=R>, down 0.2
percent on the day, according to Reuters data.
The dollar hit a 6-1/2 month low of 97.92 yen before clawing
back to 98.96 yen <JPY=>, down 0.4 percent on the day.
The Australian dollar, the most battered of major currencies
due to its once favoured status in the carry trade, was down
almost 4 percent at 65.18 yen <AUDJPY=R>.
As investors continued scrambling for cash, the dollar hit a
14-month peak <.DXY> against a basket of major currencies before
retreating to trade flat on the day. The euro was up 0.1 percent
to $1.3620 <EUR=>.
G7 SOLUTION?
The world's economic powers are facing huge pressure to
contain the financial crisis on growing fears of a global
economic recession.
In a bid to unfreeze bank lending and staunch massive losses
in equity markets, the U.S. government is weighing guaranteeing
billions of dollars in bank debt and temporarily insuring all
U.S. bank deposits, The Wall Street Journal reported
[].
"Markets would appear to require reassurance that global
policymakers are prepared to be global leaders," RBC strategists
said in a note to clients.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called for a global
solution to the crisis and urged other countries to adopt
Britain's actions to save the banking system.
Other governments should follow Britain in putting money
into struggling banks and offering guarantees worth hundreds of
billions to persuade banks to start lending to each other, Brown
wrote in an article in The Times newspaper.
(Reporting by Veronica Brown; Editing by Chris Pizzey)