Just last week, pricing suggested a 50 bp increase was the most likely outcome. The rush into safe-haven assets included long-dated bonds, with Germany's 10-year yield down 23 bps at 2.228%, after earlier falling to its lowest since Feb. 3 at 2.168%. Italy's 10-year yield fell 16 bps to 4.156%. European shares fell sharply, although U.S. stocks rose. Europe's bank index slumped 5%, having shed 3.8% on Friday. Meanwhile, a variety of indicators of market stress began to flash. The European Central Bank is not planning an emergency meeting of its banking supervisory board on Monday after the collapse of SVB, a senior source told Reuters. Some analysts said they still believe interest rates will rise. "We don't think that the developments will derail the Fed from hiking 50 bp next week, as also the labour market remains tight even with a slightly higher unemployment rate and a tad slower wage growth," said Rainer Guntermann, rates strategist at Commerzbank. Antoine Bouvet, head of rates strategy at ING, said: "We think euro rates are headed higher, with at least one more spike before the end of this cycle." He added: "This could put the 10-year Bund at 3%." <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Fedfunds German 2-year yield after SVB collapse ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Stefano Rebaudo and Harry Robertson, editing by Sharon Singleton, Kirsten Donovan)
harry.robertson@thomsonreuters.com)) (Updates prices; adds chart and analyst comment)
By Stefano Rebaudo and Harry Robertson
March 13 (Reuters) - Euro zone government bond yields
tumbled on Monday as the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB)
sent investors rushing into safe-haven assets and caused traders
to bet on a smaller rate hike from the European Central Bank
(ECB) on Thursday.
U.S. authorities launched emergency measures on Sunday to
shore up confidence in the banking system after the failure of
SVB threatened to trigger a broader financial crisis.
Regulators said the failed bank’s customers will have access
to all their deposits starting Monday and set up a new facility
to give banks access to emergency funds.
SVB's collapse sparked a massive rally in European and
global bond markets on Monday.
The German 2-year bond yield was last down 34
basis points (bps) at 2.746%, on track for its biggest one-day
drop since 1995. Yields move inversely to prices.
The 2-year yield, which is highly sensitive to ECB interest
rate expectations, stood above 3.3% last week.
Expectations for the ECB's next decision, due on Thursday,
also shifted dramatically on Monday. Market pricing showed
traders thought a 25 bp hike is now the more likely outcome,
despite 50 bps appearing almost certain last week.
In U.S. markets, the 2-year Treasury yield was
down 36 basis points (bps) at 4.232%, its biggest daily fall
since 2008.
"(Investors) are out there looking for what the next
fragility might be... and looking to reduce risk as quickly as
possible," said Giles Gale, head of European rates strategy at
NatWest Markets.
"I think there's an element of, where is the safest place to
put money? I think low-duration, high-quality bonds especially
is an obvious choice."
He added: "But an enormous part of this (is that) markets
are taking the view that the rate hikes that haven't taken place
yet are much less likely to take place."
Goldman Sachs analysts on Sunday said they no longer expect
the Federal Reserve to deliver a rate hike at its March 22
meeting and saw considerable uncertainty about the path beyond
March in light of SVB's failure.
Pricing in money markets on Monday showed traders think
there's a roughly 20% chance that the Fed could leave rates on
hold, and a 80% chance of a 25 bp hike .
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