The Chinese automobile market remains an area with growth potential despite the current slowdown, German top-of-the-range carmaker BMW said on Tuesday.
"Despite the current development, China still has substantial growth potential," BMW's chief financial officer Friedrich Eichiner told journalists on the sidelines of the IAA motor show.

China said it is cracking down on thousands of stock accounts linked to illegal trading, in its latest bid to restore order to markets pummeled by a rout that has wiped trillions off valuations in the country since June.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has so far targeted 3,255 accounts, shutting some and forcing others to trade through legal channels, it said in a statement late Monday.

Malaysia will inject up to $4.6 billion to bolster its stock market and will spend tens of millions of dollars on infrastructure projects to try to stimulate the slowing economy, Prime Minister Najib Razak said Monday.
Najib, who is also finance minister, said up to 20 billion ringgit ($4.6 billion) would be used to reactivate the dormant equity investment firm ValueCap, which was set up in 2002 to invest in undervalued local firms.

The dollar broadly weakened against its Asian peers on Monday, fueled by persistent worries over China's economy ahead of a crucial U.S. interest rate decision later this week.
Nervous traders moved into safer assets, pushing up the Japanese currency to 120.30 yen against the dollar, compared with 120.57 yen Friday in New York.

Three years ago India was the weakling of the emerging markets clan, politically stagnant and struggling to grow -- but as gloom engulfs other developing economies, the subcontinent is enjoying a moment in the sun.
Brazil and Russia lie deep in recession and South Africa is teetering on the brink after demand for raw materials collapsed, while alarm bells have sounded over fears the China juggernaut may be faltering.

When Chinese Premier Li Keqiang sought to reassure business leaders that the world's second-largest economy can stave off a hard landing, he acknowledged mounting fears of exactly that, and analysts say the adjustment to slower growth will be painful.
Just six months ago, Li set a 2015 economic growth target of "around seven percent", confidently telling lawmakers that the economy was adjusting to a "new normal".

Germany's powerful finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Saturday sharply criticized an EU proposal to create a common deposit-insurance system for eurozone banks.
"We have to make sure not to put the cart before the horse," the influential minister said on the sidelines of an EU meeting of finance ministers.

Italy is on the mend and will have 17 billion euros extra to spend next year after winning its battle for greater flexibility on EU deficit rules, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said Saturday.
Renzi, who is preparing tax and spending cuts for a 2016 budget due to be unveiled in October, said the Eurozone's third-biggest economy was finally set to accelerate after years of stagnation or worse.

Cheap oil prices ushered in by Saudi Arabia's policy of protecting its market share will end up squeezing high-cost producers like U.S. shale drillers, leading next year to the biggest drop in output in nearly a quarter century, the IEA said Friday.
Cheap fuel is also hooking consumers, with oil demand growth set to hit a five-year high this year, the International Energy Agency said in its monthly report.

Standard & Poor's cut Brazil's sovereign credit rating to junk Wednesday, citing the struggle by President Dilma Rousseff's government to master growing debt and political turmoil.
"We are lowering the long-term foreign and local currency ratings on Brazil to 'BB+' and 'BBB-' respectively," the agency said in a statement.
