Markets have been rattled by the collapse of SVB and so far, efforts in the US and the UK to limit the fallout have had limited impact.
European stock markets are off session lows, but still sharply down on the day, as the SVB crisis continues to rattle markets despite efforts by officials to shore up confidence in the financial system. The US FDIC said over the weekend it will resolve SVB in a way that “fully protects all depositors” while the Fed announced a new “Bank Term Funding Program“.
In the UK the Treasury and the BoE brokered a deal that saw HSCB buying the U.K. arm of SVB. In the Eurozone, the head of the Eurogroup said the Eurozone had little exposure, but still said Eurozone Finance Ministers would discuss the issue. Eurozone Finance Ministers are meeting today and while current Eurogroup President Donohoe said “the exposure that the euro area has to the Silicon Valley Bank is very limited”, he added that the group “will discuss this today”. The problem of course is that the headlines suggesting that Finance Ministers will discuss developments seems to imply that there is a problem to discuss, which isn’t helping at the moment. GER40 and UK100 are still down -2.15 and -1.7% respectively, peripheral Eurozone markets underperforming and the MIB is posting a -3.4% loss, although all are off session lows.
Oil Action: Oil prices have corrected as the collapse of SVB reverberates through markets. Risk aversion spiked, global stock markets struggled, and rate hike bets were trimmed. The WTI contract is down 3% on the day and currently at $72.34 per barrel, Brent at $78.30 per barrel from $83.29. Looking ahead, confidence in a rebound of China demand has picked up again, which should help to limit the downside, if and when officials manage to calm SVB nerves.
Metal Action: Gold has benefited from the jitters in global stock markets and the correction in the dollar and the precious metal saw a session high of $1902 per ounce. Risk aversion has spiked and with markets adjusting rate bets, bullion is looking once again attractive as a store of value.
FX Action: The USDindex saw a session low of 103.32, as Treasuries yields plunged the most since 1980s!Markets scaled back expectations for the terminal rate and briefly priced out any further tightening in the US. EGBs also rallied, but while EURUSD and Cable are off session highs, they remain up on the day at currently 1.0712 and 1.2125 respectively. The Yen outperformed and strengthened across the board, as risk appetite spiked, leaving USDJPY at 132.27.
Fed funds futures have surged amid a massive safe haven bid and as the market prices out any further Fed action. Reflecting how quickly the world has changed, implied rates are now pointing to rare cuts through the year versus a 50 bps hike on March 22 and 25 bps in the subsequent May and and June meetings. The actions to provide liquidity via the “BTFP” and attempt to calm and stabilize sentiment have had only modest impact. The March implied rate has dropped to 4.633%, while May is priced at 4.580%, with June at 4.535% and July at 4.310%. December is trading at 3.905%. Goldman Sachs has dropped its projection for a rate hike. Concurrently, the 2-year Treasury yield has tumbled some 54 bps on the day to 4.04%. It tested and bounced off of 3.99% earlier, and was at 5.3% overnight. The 10-year rate is 26 bps richer at 3.44%. The curve steepening has seen the curve inversion unwind to -64.5 bps versus -82 bps overnight and -108 bps late last week.
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Andria Pichidi
Market Analyst
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