Insurers, banks, miners and consumer-exposed stocks led
the losses around Asia as worries grow that a potential credit
crunch can worsen a looming economic slowdown. Commodities also nursed big falls. Brent crude futures were struggling to lift from 15-month lows and hovered
around $74.16 a barrel. Copper slid 2.5% in Shanghai after a 4% drop in London overnight. S&P 500 futures were up 0.4% in bumpy trade,
while support for Credit Suisse from the Swiss National Bank had
EuroSTOXX futures up 2% and Britain's FTSE futures up 1%.
"The concrete response from Swiss authorities may help to
shore up sentiments in the interim," said OCBC Bank currency
strategist Christopher Wong. "But it remains to be seen if they
are sufficient to shore up confidence."
BONDS, DOLLAR GAIN Credit Suisse's troubles have been long and well publicised, with exposure to a string of scandals from the implosion of heavily-levered U.S. investment firm Archegos in 2021 to the bust of British supply-chain financier Greensill. The latest pressure came in the wake of the collapse of three U.S. banks in the space of a week and was triggered after the bank said it hadn't stemmed deposit outflows and its biggest shareholder declined to offer further support.
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 also 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.
Bonds have rallied hard, driving two-year U.S. Treasury
yields to their lowest since September at 3.72% at
one point overnight. They last yielded 3.97%. Benchmark 10-year
yields fell overnight and held at 3.492% in Asia. The euro and Swiss franc found some
support from news of the central bank's help for Credit Suisse,
steadying after steep overnight drops.
The euro last stood at $1.0589 and the franc at 0.9309 to
the dollar. The flight to safety lent support to the yen and it rose 0.5% to 132.83 per dollar.
($1 = 0.9310 Swiss francs)
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(Editing by Shri Navaratnam)