Image copyright Getty Images

Stock markets across the world have fallen sharply as fears of a Chinese economic slowdown continue to haunt investors.

London's FTSE 100 index closed down 4.6% at 5,898.87, with major markets in France and Germany down by 5.5% and 4.96% respectively.

In total, £73.75bn was wiped off the FTSE 100 as a result of Monday's falls.

In volatile trading, Wall Street's Dow Jones fell 6%, then almost recovered its losses before closing 3.6% lower.

At one point it fell below 16,000 for the first time since February 2014, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq index closed 3.8% lower, recovering from an earlier plunge of 8%.

The S&P 500 ended trading 3.9% lower and 11% below its May record, putting it officially in "correction" territory - a fall of 10% or more from its peak.

Shares in Asia were hit overnight, with the Shanghai Composite in China closing down 8.5%, its worst close since 2007.

At its lowest point in the day, the FTSE 100 had lost as much as 6%, wiping some £100bn off its value.

Global investors are worried about growth in the world's second largest economy.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Stephen Guilfoyle, New York Stock Exchange floor trader: Markets "bordering on edge of panic"

Analysis: Michelle Fleury, New York business correspondent

The floor was buzzing long before the US market open. All the traders knew this wouldn't be a typical sleepy August Monday.

Minutes after the opening bell, the Dow fell a staggering 1089 points, its biggest ever points drop. One floor trader complained his shirt was soaked with sweat after the early plunge in stocks.

Another, Stephen Guilfoyle from Deep Value, told me the US markets were 'bordering on the edge of panic but not quite there yet.' He can remember the crash of 1987 and said this didn't feel as bad.

Indeed by late morning, US markets were showing some resilience, leading Mark Otto of J Streicher to conclude that Monday's big market moves in the US were similar to the 'flash crash' of 2010, when billions of dollars were wiped off some of the world's biggest companies in a matter of minutes, only to recover almost as quickly.

Karishma Vaswani: China counts cost of Black Monday

Robert Peston: Will China’s slowdown make us poorer?

Duncan Weldon: China share falls - why it's not 2008

Stock market woes 10th session in a row that the FTSE has fallen 8.5% fall in Chinese stocks - biggest one day loss since 2007

$42.51 Brent crude fell to lowest level since March, 2009

-2% At one point, the pound saw the biggest fall against the euro in six years

China's central bank devalued the country's currency, the yuan, two weeks ago, raising fresh concerns that a slowdown in the country's economy was worse than originally feared.

Currencies and commodities are also falling sharply, because those markets rely heavily on strong demand from China.

Without strong reassurances from officials in China, investors have not had much reason to buy.

Analysis: Karishma Vaswani, Asia business correspondent

Beijing's official mouthpiece has called it China's "Black Monday".

The Shanghai Composite tumbled by 8.5%, its biggest fall since 2007. That plunge wiped out this year's gains as investors refused to buy into the Chinese government's repeated attempts to shore up confidence.

Everyone wants to know what the Chinese government is going to do next to shore up shares and confidence in the economy.

The smart money is on the central bank reducing interest rates and injecting a semblance of consumer confidence into the markets.

That is what many had hoped would happen over the weekend.

But at each point in what appears to be an ever-deepening Chinese slowdown, the government has seemed slow to react.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption The BBC's Celia Hatton said Chinese investors went on microblogging website Weibo to vent their frustrations

Selling that started earlier this summer has gained momentum, experts say.

"It does appear that we're moving very quickly to the downside," said David Madden, market analyst at IG.

Widespread investor fears about the sharp drops in Asia were exacerbated by thin trading volumes in Europe, with many investors away on holiday.

"I think more uncertainty lies ahead," Mr Madden said.

Investors might have to wait for several weeks for bargain hunters to come into the market to lift stocks.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption India did not escape the global sell-off with the main index falling nearly 6%

Beijing's latest intervention, to allow its main state pension fund to invest in the stock market, failed to calm traders' fears, both in China and abroad.

Over the past week, the Shanghai index fell 12%, adding up to a 30% drop since the middle of June.

The sharp fall sparked a global sell-off, with the Dow Jones in the US losing 6%, while the FTSE 100 posted its biggest weekly loss this year, of 5%.

Earlier this month, the Chinese central bank devalued the yuan in an attempt to boost exports.

European investors worry that a cheaper Chinese currency will make European exports less competitive.

In other developments: