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World stocks see $2t wiped off, pound 31-yr low on Brexit

World-stocks

World stocks saw more than $2 trillion wiped off their value on Friday as Britain’s vote to leave the European Union triggered 5-10 per cent falls across Europe’s biggest bourses and a record plunge for sterling.
The British pound sank a staggering 10 per cent at one point to its weakest since before the 1985 Plaza Accord and was last down 8 per cent at $1.3667, having carved out a range of $1.3228 to $1.5022. The fall was even larger than during the global financial crisis and the currency was moving two or three cents in the blink of an eye, triggering a global rush of capital into the traditional security of the yen and the Swiss franc.
Such a body blow to global confidence could prevent the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates as planned this year, and might even provoke a new round of emergency policy easing from all the major central banks.
Risk assets were scorched as investors fled to the traditional safe-harbours of top-rated government debt, Japanese yen and gold.
Almost $1 trillion had been lost from European share prices. US stocks tumbled early Friday, joining the international rout.
London’s FTSE dropped almost 5 per cent while Frankfurt and Paris fell 6 to 8 per cent. Italian, Spanish and European bank stocks all headed for their sharpest one-day drops ever.
Worries that other EU states could hold their own referendums were compounded by the fact that markets had rallied on Thursday, seemingly convinced the UK would vote to stay in.
Britain’s big banks took a $100 billion battering, with Lloyds, Barclays and RBS plunging as much as 30 per cent at one point.
The British pound dived by 18 US cents at one point, easily the biggest fall in living memory, to hit its lowest since 1985. The euro in turn slid 3 per cent to $1.1050 as investors feared for its very future.
Having campaigned to keep the country in the EU, British prime minister David Cameron announced he would step down.
Results showed a 51.9/48.1 per cent split for leaving, setting the UK on an uncertain path and dealing the largest setback to Euro pean efforts to forge greater unity since World War Two.
More angst came as Scotland’s first minister said the option of another vote for her country to split from the UK — rejected by Scottish voters two years ago — was now firmly on the table.
‘It’s an extraordinary move for financial markets and also for democracy,’ said co-head of portfolio investments of London-based currency specialist Millennium Global Richard Benson.
‘The market is pricing interest rate cuts from the big central banks and we assume there will be a global liquidity add from them,’ he added.
That message was being broadcast loud and clear. The Bank of England, European Central Bank and the People’s Bank of China all said they were ready to provide liquidity if needed to ensure global market stability.
The shockwaves affected all asset classes and regions.
The safe-haven yen sprang higher to stand at 102.15 per dollar, having been as low as 106.81 at one stage. The dollar’s peak decline of 4 per cent was the largest since 1998.
That prompted warnings from Japanese officials that excessive forex moves were undesirable. Traders said they were wary of being caught with exposed positions if the global central banks chose to step in to calm the volatility.
Emerging market currencies across Asia and eastern Europe and South Africa’s rand all buckled on fears that investors could pull out. Poland, home of eastern European immigrants to Britain, saw its zloty slump 5 per cent.
Europe’s natural safety play, the 10-year German government bond, surged to send its yields tumbling back into negative territory and a new record low.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slid almost 5 per cent, while Shanghai stocks lost 1.1 per cent.
Financial markets have been gripped for months by worries about what a British exit from the EU would mean for Europe’s stability.
‘Obviously, there will be a large spill-over effects across all global economies … Not only will the UK go into recession, Europe will follow suit,’ predicted Matt Sherwood, head of investment strategy at fund manager Perpetual in Sydney.
Investors stampeded into low risk sovereign bonds, with US 10-year Treasury futures jumping over 2 points in Asian hours, an unusually large move. Yields on the cash note fell 25 basis points to 1.48 per cent, the steepest one-day drop since 2009 and the lowest yield since 2012.
The rally even extended to UK bonds, despite a warning from ratings agency Standard & Poor’s that it was likely to downgrade Britain’s triple-A credit rating if it left the EU. Yields on benchmark 10-year gilts fell 27 basis points to 1.108 pct.
Across the Atlantic, investors were pricing in less chance of another hike in US interest rates given the Federal Reserve had cited a British exit from the EU as one reason to be cautious on tightening.
‘It adds weight to the camp that the Fed would be on hold. A July (hike) is definitely off the table,’ said Mike Baele, managing director with the private client reserve group at US Bank in Portland,
Oregon.
Fed funds futures were even toying with the chance that the next move could be a cut in US rates.
Commodities swung lower as Brexit is seen as a major threat to global growth. US crude shed $3.00 to $47.11 a barrel in erratic trade while Brent fell as much as 6 per cent to $47.83 before clawing back to $48.18.
Industrial metal copper sank 3 per cent but gold galloped more than 6 per cent higher thanks to its perceived safe haven
status.

Source: New Age

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