Russell opens lower after Monday's wreckage

After the worst one day point drop since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, small caps are lower this morning, as AIG’s (NYSE:AIG) fate remained uncertain and as investors surveyed the wreckage from Monday’s session.
At 9:45 a.m. ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) had fallen 5.85, or 0.85%, to 683.91.
Following one of the most cataclysmic days Wall Street has seen, investors’ focus has shifted to AIG from Merrill Lynch’s emergency sale to Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) and Lehman’s (NYSE:LEH) declaration of bankruptcy on Monday. The insurance juggernaut, which saw its stock plummet 61% on Monday on liquidity concerns, was forced to scramble to raise $14.5 billion overnight to cover obligations in the wake of fresh rating agency credit downgrades. The firm is seeking to raise $75 billion. Shares plunged 42%.
Just one day after Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy, English bank Barclays’ interest has reemerged in the washed up bank’s core investment banking unit. Barclays, which initially walked away from a takeover deal over the weekend, has been looking to increase its exposure in the U.S. market.
In an effort to inject liquidity back into the markets, the Federal Reserve pumped $50 billion into the system. This is on top of the $20 billion the Federal Reserve Bank of New York was already slated to infuse the system with.
The Federal Reserve will meet today for a policy meeting, as the credit crisis has reached a climax. The central bank is expected to leave rates on hold, despite the market’s cries for a quarter point rate cut. The policy decision is . . .
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