In a joint statement, the Swiss financial regulator and the nation's central bank said Credit Suisse "meets the capital and liquidity requirements imposed on systemically important banks." They said the bank could access liquidity from the central bank if needed. The moves follow the collapse of U.S. lenders Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in recent days which have sent financial markets on a roller-coaster ride.
The Bank of England was holding emergency talks with international counterparts the Telegraph newspaper reported on Wednesday. The Bank of England declined to comment. Expectations for a 50 basis rate hike in Europe have evaporated as markets radically rethink the global interest rate outlook in light of the banking jitters. Money market pricing implies a less than a 20% chance of a 50 bp hike from the ECB, down from 90% a day earlier.
Shares in big U.S. banks including JPMorgan Chase ,
Citigroup and Bank of America fell overnight,
pushing the S&P 500 banking index down 3.62%.
Bonds rallied hard, driving two-year U.S. Treasury yields to their lowest since September at 3.72% at one point
overnight. Benchmark 10-year yields fell 14 bps to 3.494%. The euro also dropped heavily overnight as the
U.S. dollar surged, falling 1.4% to $1.0578. The flight to
safety lent support to the yen and it rose 0.6% to 132.59 per
dollar in Asia trade on Thursday.
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World FX rates YTD Global asset performance Asian stock markets ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Editing by Shri Navaratnam)