STOCKS TUMBLING Yet SVB's demise - the largest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis - sent bank stocks tumbling in Europe and the United States on Monday and in Asia on Tuesday.
Bond yields plunged on Monday as investors stampeded into safe assets and rapidly reconsidered the path of interest rates. Pricing in derivatives markets on Tuesday showed traders see a 30% chance the Fed leaves rates on hold on March 22 and a 70% chance of a 25 basis point (bp) hike . Just a week ago, a 50 bp increase was seen as most likely. The rapid drop in bond yields pulled down the dollar on Monday, despite its status as a safe asset, analysts said. Yet the dollar index , which measures the currency against six peers, rose 0.11% to 103.79 on Tuesday. It fell 0.94% on Monday. Britain's pound was down 0.28% to $1.215, after jumping 1.22% on Monday. Data on Tuesday showed UK pay growth slowed in the three months to January. The U.S. CPI data is expected to show that inflation cooled to 6% year-on-year in February, from 6.4% in January. Investors will keep a beady eye on the core reading, which strips out volatile food and energy prices and is closely watched by the Fed. "If the CPI data is strong, it's just going to confuse the market even more," said Jane Foley, head of FX strategy at Rabobank. "The market could be pivoting back towards this view that yes, we are going to have more Federal Reserve interest rate hikes."
Goldman Sachs analysts on Sunday said they no longer expect the Fed to deliver a rate hike at its March meeting in light of the recent stress, while Nomura forecast that the central bank will cut interest rates and hit the brakes on quantitative tightening. The dollar was down 0.13% to 0.911 Swiss francs on Tuesday, after dropping 1.04% against the safe-haven currency on Monday. The Australian dollar was down 0.14% at $0.666. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ World FX rates Euro to dollar ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Harry Robertson and Rae Wee; Editing by Stephen Coates, Sam Holmes and Ed Osmond)