* Scramble for Treasuries pushes bill yields near to zero
* MSCI all-country world index at lowest since Nov 2005
* Morgan Stanley, WaMu reportedly on auction block
* U.S. investor 'fear barometer' at near 6-year high (Updates prices, adds quotes and comments)
By Kevin Plumberg
HONG KONG, Sept 18 (Reuters) - Asian stocks fell, with shares outside Japan down 4 percent on Thursday, as emergency actions by central banks and governments around the world failed to ease a crisis that has investors fleeing to government bonds or sticking with plain cash.
European stock market futures <STXEc1> <FCEc1> <FDXc1> were down slightly, pointing to at least a temporary staunching of three days of heavy selling.
But the seismic shift on Wall Street this week continued to create a sense of global panic, with frenetic consolidation in the financial sector in the world's largest economy, sending the MSCI all-country world stocks index <.MIWD00000PUS> to its lowest since November 2005.
Investors have piled into short-term U.S. Treasuries and bailed from money market funds, pushing yields down close to zero. The cost of insurance against default or restructuring in the credit default swap market soared to record levels in Asia, reflecting deep-seated unease.
In the past 24 hours, No. 2 U.S. investment bank Morgan Stanley <MS.N> and top U.S. savings and loan Washington Mutual <WM.N> were reportedly up for sale, and Britain's Lloyds TSB <LLOY.L> agreed to buy rival HBOS <HBOS.L>, reflecting the unstable landscape that has contributed to gold's 18 percent surge in the last week. [
]"Credit fears have now reached a climax. It's presumptuous to assume it would end in one day," said Harushige Kobayashi, head of research department at broker Securities Japan.
"The market ignores fundamentals and is now 95 percent driven by psychological factors."
The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index <.VIX> or VIX, Wall Street's main barometer of investor fear, had its highest close in almost six years on Wednesday.
Another measure of investor distaste for risk, the TED spread of 3-month interbank lending rates over 3-month U.S. Treasury bill yields blew out to more than 300 basis points, far exceeding levels reached during the U.S. savings and loan crisis of the 1980s.
Japan's Nikkei share average <
> ended down 2.2 percent to a three-year low early on Thursday.The MSCI's index of other Asia-Pacific <.MIAPJ0000PUS> fell 3.7 percent after earlier touching the lowest since July 2006. The index is down about 39 percent so far this year.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng index <
> dropped 7.4 percent to the lowest in two years, led by HSBC <0005.HK>, down 5.9 percent.Industrial and Commercial Bank of China <1398.HK>, which gave up its title of world's biggest bank by market capitalistion to HSBC on Wednesday, saw its shares drop 11.7 percent.
Russia on Wednesday halted stock and bond trading on the country's MICEX and RTS exchanges as investors and dealers desperately liquidated positions for cash. It was not clear when the exchanges would open again.
NO SAFETY
Gold prices were on a roller coaster in the spot market, rising 0.5 in a volatile day and not providing hardly any of the stability the precious metal has afforded in the past <XAU=>. Gold posted its biggest nominal rise ever in dollars on Wednesday as frenzied investors sought relatively safe assets.
"This is stunning, and testimony to these historic times," said Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist with RBS Greenwich Capital, in a note. "It is clear that fear and a desperate search for a hedge against risk has trumped all."
For a graphic on world stocks and gold, go to
https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/GLBL_IDX0908.gif
Central banks in Japan and Australia pumped another $17 billion into money markets to prevent banks of hoarding cash amid an environment of distrust and uncertainty. [
]Fear of the unknown has also pushed investors to government bonds, chasing safety above all else, even yield. U.S. Treasury bill yields inched toward zero.
One-month Treasury yields <US1MTY=RR> dipped to 0.010 percent, from 0.040 percent late in New York on Wednesday, when it may have actually traded at negative levels, dealers said. Yields from 1-month to 6-months were less than 1 percent.
"This corner of the cash market is significant because its a rich, deep pool of liquidity that is tapped by insurance funds, banks and brokers. Stress here signals another impediment to vital liquidity," said Brett Williams, credit analyst with BNP Paribas in Hong Kong.
Investors are quickly learning that in the current crisis almost nothing is safe, even U.S. money market funds.
Late Wednesday, Moody's Investors Service sharply downgraded the Reserve Primary Fund after it fell below $1 a share in net asset value due to losses on debt issued by Lehman Brothers <LEH.P>, which has filed for bankruptcy protection.
Crude oil <CLc1> has not been immune to the large-scale liquidation in markets to feed the need for cash. The October future slipped $1 to $96.13 a barrel after jumping $6 on Wednesday. (Additional reporting by Taiga Uranaka in TOKYO; Editing by Lincoln Feast)