Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2015 06:51 -0400
- EURO STOXX 50 FUTURES FALL 7% AT MARKET OPEN
- DAX FUTURES DOWN 5%. CAC DOWN -5.3%
- GERMAN BONDS SURGE AT OPEN, 10-YEAR YIELD FALLS 20 BPS TO 0.72%
- ITALIAN BONDS DECLINE WITH 10-YEAR YIELD RISING 57 BPS TO 2.72%
- SPANISH 10-YEAR BONDS DECLINE WITH YIELD RISING 43 BPS TO 2.54%
- JORDAN: SNB INTERVENED IN FRANC OVER NIGHT
- JORDAN: SITUATION OVER WEEKEND MADE INTERVENTION NECESSARY
In summary: European shares fall, though are off intraday lows, with the autos and banks sectors underperforming and basic resources, health care outperforming. Stoxx 600 falls as much as 3.2%, most since Oct. 15 Greece imposes capital controls, Athens stock exchange trading suspended until bank holiday over. Germany’s bonds surge most since 2011, Greek yields rise. China’s stocks fall 22% from this year’s June peak, entering bear market. The Spanish and Italian markets are the worst-performing larger bourses, the U.K. the best. The euro is weaker against the dollar. Commodities decline, with nickel, Brent crude underperforming and copper outperforming. U.S. Dallas Fed index, pending home sales due later.
Market Wrap:
- S&P 500 futures down 1% to 2075
- Stoxx 600 down 2.1% to 388.5
- US 10Yr yield down 13bps to 2.34%
- German 10Yr yield down 13bps to 0.79%
- MSCI Asia Pacific down 2% to 144.9
- Gold spot up 0.2% to $1177.4/oz
- All 19 Stoxx 600 sectors drop; basic resources, oil & gas outperform, autos, banks underperform
- Asian stocks fall with the Kospi outperforming and the Shanghai Composite underperforming; MSCI Asia Pacific down 2% to 144.9
- Nikkei 225 down 2.9%, Hang Seng down 2.6%, Kospi down 1.4%, Shanghai Composite down 3.3%, ASX down 2.2%, Sensex 0.6%
- Euro down 0.6% to $1.11
- Dollar Index up 0.24% to 95.7
- Italian 10Yr yield up 14bps to 2.29%
- Spanish 10Yr yield up 14bps to 2.25%
- French 10Yr yield down 9bps to 1.21%
- Greek 10Yr yield up 377bps to 14.62%
- S&P GSCI Index down 1.3% to 429.9
- Brent Futures down 2.3% to $61.8/bbl, WTI Futures down 2.1% to $58.4/bbl
- LME 3m Copper up 0.3% to $5773/MT
- LME 3m Nickel down 4.7% to $11870/MT
- Wheat futures down 0.1% to 567.3 USd/bu
- Markets react to latest Greek developments with PM Tsipras calling for a referendum & week long bank holiday seeing weakness in EUR & equities, while PBoC cut rates for the 4th time in 7 months
- Greek referendum announcement sees European equities trade firmly in the red with EUR also weaker, while periphery bonds have not suffered as much as expected due to limited contagion
- PBoC cut interest rates for a 4th time in 7 months by 25bps with the lending rate lowered to 4.85% and the deposit rate lowered to 2.00%, while it also cut the RRR rate by 50bps for banks which lend to agricultural and small and medium sized businesses and by 300bps
- Today US Pending Home Sales and German CPI, with comments also expected from EU’S Juncker at 1145BST/0545BST.
- Treasuries surge, led by 7Y and 10Y, as Greece shut its banks and imposed capital controls in an announcement designed to avert the collapse of its financial system, heightening the risk it will be forced out of the euro.
- History suggests capital controls hardly ever work; while dozens of countries have imposed such measures since World War I, the IMF found that only those few with sound economies and strong institutions succeeded in slowing capital flight
- The Greek government plans to ask voters on July 5 whether they accept the latest proposal by creditors on implementing budget cuts in return for more financial aid, and advocates a “no” vote
- Markit iTraxx Europe CDS index surged by as much as 20%, the most since Lehman in Sept. 2008, to 80bps
- Morgan Stanley sees Greek EUR exit now as base case, with odds at 60%; RBS sees 40% odds of Greece leaving EUR
- Chinese stocks tumbled, sending the benchmark index into a bear market, as signs of an exodus by leveraged investors overshadowed the central bank’s effort to revive confidence with an interest-rate cut
- Chinese regulators are considering suspending IPOs to stabilize the country’s tumbling stock markets, people familiar with the matter said
- With two days left in Puerto Rico’s fiscal year, the cash- strapped commonwealth is struggling to pass a budget that would allow it to make payments on a $72b debt load that the island’s governor said is unsustainable
- Sovereign 10Y bond yields lower with the exception of peripheral EU; Greece 10Y +379bps, Italy, Spain and Portugal yields also higher. Asian, European stocks plunge, U.S. equity-index futures decline. Crude oil lower, copper and gold slightly higher
- 10:00am: Pending Home Sales m/m, May, est. 1.5% (prior 3.4%)
- Pending Home Sales y/y, May (prior 13.4%)
- 10:30am: Dallas Fed Mfg Activity, June, est. -16.9 (prior -20.8)
Well, well. What a week we have ahead. If the drama around the upcoming Greek referendum and the weekend Chinese rate cut are not enough then we have the confusion of an extra second being added to world time at midnight GMT tomorrow – the first time this has been done during international trading hours. The variability of the earth’s rotation will play second fiddle to the
Source:
https://stillnessinthestorm.com/2015/06/central-banks-scramble-to-stabilize/
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