Stocks from London to Paris to New York all bled, tracking heavy meltdown in Asian markets led by China.
Key European stock indices were sharply down -- as much as 8 per cent in late-afternoon trade. The US shares too started off on a shaky note, registering a significant fall, with benchmark 30-share Dow index dropping over 3 per cent.
India's benchmark Sensex took the bloodiest blow of its lifetime, crashing 1,624.51 points, or 5.94 per cent, to close at 25,741.56 points. The sell-off was across sectors, including energy, banking, auto, IT, infrastructure and real estate.
In the US, the Dow index saw a huge fall in the beginning, but managed to recover and was down over 310 points at 16,147.61 points in early morning trade.
S&P 500 slumped over 2 per cent to 1,927.11 while the tech-heavy Nasdaq shed nearly 3 per cent to trade at 4,594.17.
Shanghai shares dived 8.49 per cent to 3,209.91 while Japan's Nikkei 225 tumbled nearly 5 per cent to 18,540.68 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell more than 5 per cent to 21,251.57.
The market bloodbath, one of the worst since the 2008 global financial crisis, has also stoked fears about the overall health of the world economy, which is witnessing a fragile and uneven recovery.
The rout was triggered by concerns about a sluggish Chinese economy as recent steps by the government have failed to dispel investor fears.
