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STOXX 600 down 2.2%
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Bank stocks set for worst day in a year
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US acts to shore up banking confidence
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S&P 500 futures up 0.4%
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"VICIOUS" SELL-OFF: 99% OF STOXX IN THE RED (0950 GMT)
Markets in Europe are in clear sell-off mode with traders making little distinctions and dumping almost everything for a second consecutive session as they fret over the fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank . One stat is quite telling: more than 99% of companies listed on the region's STOXX 600 benchmark index is trading in the red. Only three stocks are in the back, which - for the record - are Qinetiq , Reckitt and Vantage Towers , up 0.4%, 0.2% and 0.1%, respectively. "This has been an vicious sell off," says one trader.
(Danilo Masoni)
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BANKS DRAG ON EUROPEAN STOCKS (0912 GMT) European stocks have slid in the first hour of trading, with the STOXX 600 last down 2%, with European banks have fallen 4%, on track for their largest 2-day drop since the Ukraine war began in February 2022. Credit Suisse shares are near the bottom of the STOXX 600, down 9.2%, along with Commerzbank , falling 9.3%. Austria-based bank BAWAG Group fell 10.6% and Direct Line is down 5.5%. The heavy selling came even as U.S. authorities stepped in to shore up confidence in the banking system after fears that the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank could trigger a broader financial crisis.
Europe's volatility index has jumped to its highest
since last October, reflecting the degree of nervousness in the
market.
(Lucy Raitano)
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BANK RESCUE LEAVES FED IN A RATE BIND (0744 GMT) So, U.S. authorities have ridden to the rescue of the financial system, generating the biggest rally in short-term bonds in decades amid talk the Federal Reserve might not hike rates at all next week given the stakes at play. The Asian day began with a bang when the Treasury and Fed announced they would cover all depositors at SVB, not just those under the $250,000 insurance cap, although share and bond holders would get no help. The same went for depositors at New-York based Signature Bank which was wrapped up over the weekend - marking the second- and third-largest failures in U.S. banking history.
They also announced a new acronym - the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) - which will lend for up to one year to any federally insured bank that is eligible for discount window access, in return for eligible collateral including Treasuries and agency securities. Crucially, the collateral will be valued at par, with no haircut, meaning banks can use bonds that are trading below book value without having to realise any losses. This was not a blanket guarantee for uninsured depositors, but the hope is clearly that it will prevent runs on other institutions. It was enough to spark a rally in U.S. stock futures, but banking stocks were still under pressure across Asia with Japan's bank index down almost 5%. Given the strain on the U.S. banking system, investors were also wondering whether the Fed would really risk hiking interest rates by an outsized 50 basis points next week. Goldman Sachs came right out and predicted a pause, although it still foresees hikes in May, June and July. Fed fund futures duly extended an early surge to completely price out the chance of 50 basis points, when this time last week it was priced at 72%. Yields on two-year Treasuries dived 19 basis points to 4.40%, and got as low as 4.34% at one stage. That brought the fall since Thursday to an astounding 66 basis points, the biggest three-session decline since the Black Monday crash of 1987. That was a drag for the dollar, while lifting the euro above $1.0700 resistance to a four-week high. The move was contagious with markets now wagering Australia's central bank will pause in April, while lengthening the odds on a hike by the Bank of England. The ECB is still expected to go 50 basis points this week, but it will have to at least acknowledge the risks to financial stability, which could make it a dovish hike. This also promises to seriously complicate the market reaction to U.S. CPI data on Tuesday, where an upside surprise would put the Fed between a rock and a hard place. It was notable that yields on long-dated Treasuries actually rose in Asia, perhaps signalling concerns that a constrained Fed would result in inflation staying higher for longer.
Key developments that could influence markets on Monday:
- Member of the ECB's Executive Board Fabio Panetta
participates in Eurogroup meeting in Brussels
- President Joe Biden will address the banking crisis and
maybe flag proposals for tougher regulations
(Wayne Cole)
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EUROPEAN FUTURES EDGE UP AFTER SVB UK DEAL (0734 GMT)
European futures are signalling small gains at the open, having reversed course from heavy losses overnight after U.S. authorities launched emergency measures to limit the fallout from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB). Meanwhile HSBC said on Monday it had stepped in to buy the UK arm of SVB. Eurostoxx futures and Germany's DAX futures are 0.2% higher while FTSE futures are more or less flat. U.S CME e-mini S&P 500 futures are up 1.5%. On Sunday, the Federal Reserve unveiled a new "Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP)", program as fears ramped up of broader financial market instability.
Global rate hike expectations fell in the aftermath, with a 50bps rate hike from the Fed next week now no longer considered a certainty.
Eyes will be on European banks at the open, with Deutsche Bank's shares already up 4.3% higher in early Frankfurt-trading while Commerzbank shares were up 3.8%.
European banks shed 3.8% on Friday. The Frankfurt-listed shares of several U.S. banks including Bank of America , Goldman Sachs and Citigroup were also around 2.4%-3.2% higher.
And don't forget about the rest of the week. Markets can look forward to U.S. inflation data on Tuesday, a new UK budget on Wednesday and a European Central Bank meeting on Thursday.
(Lucy Raitano)
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