Asian markets tumble on eurozone turmoil

Posted by BankInfo on Sat, May 19 2012 07:02 am

Asian markets slumped and the euro fell further on Friday as the eurozone debt crisis was stoked by a ratings downgrade for Greece and 16 Spanish banks, while weak US data added to the pessimism.

Tokyo tumbled 2.99 per cent, or 265.28 points, to 8,611.31, while Seoul plummeted 3.40 per cent, or 62.78 points, to 1,782.46 and Sydney dived 2.67 per cent, or 110.9 points, to 4,046.5, its biggest fall in eight months.
Hong Kong fell 1.30 per cent, or 249.08 points, to 18,951.85 and Shanghai was 1.44 per cent lower, shedding 34.37 points, to 2,344.52.

Moody’s slashed the ratings of 16 banks in Spain by between one and three notches, citing “renewed recession (in Spain), the ongoing real-estate crisis and persistent high levels of unemployment”. It also blamed the reduced credit-worthiness of the government.

Top bank Santander and number two BBVA were both hit with three-notch downgrades to A3, while two other large banks, Banesto and CaixaBank, were also cut to the same level.

The move came just over a week after the government intervened to prop up the fourth-largest bank Bankia by taking a 45 per cent stake.

Bankia on Thursday had to bat away rumours it had been hit with a run on deposits, as nervousness around the eurozone grew over the entire Spanish banking sector.

Also Thursday, Fitch downgraded Greece’s credit a notch, to CCC from B-, saying it was vulnerable to default amid political uncertainty over Athens’ commitment to a crucial bailout plan and its possible exit from the eurozone.
“The downgrade of Greece’s sovereign ratings reflects the heightened risk that Greece may not be able to sustain its membership of Economic and Monetary Union (EMU),” it said in a statement.

A strong showing by anti-austerity parties in May 6 elections and the failure of officials afterwards to form a government “underscores the lack of public and political support for the EU-IMF 173-billion-euro ($220 billion) programme”, it said.

A caretaker government of technocrats took office in Athens Thursday to prepare fresh elections to be held mid-June amid rising popularity of political parties that oppose the bailout and its tough austerity measures.

The agency warned that if a new government did not support the bailout, Greece would likely leave the euro bloc and default on its debt, potentially hurting the ratings of other eurozone member countries.

The single currency tumbled in early European trade as low as $1.2642 to reach a level last seen on January 16. It later stood at $1.2687, compared with $1.2693 in New York, and well down from $1.2744 in Tokyo Thursday.

It also stood at 100.55 yen—its weakest level since February—from 100.65 yen, and sharply lower than 102.35 yen seen in Thursday in Tokyo.

The dollar stood at 79.27 yen compared with 79.28 yen in New York. The US currency bought 80.32 yen Thursday in Tokyo.

On Wall Street, trade was subdued amid fears that a deep crisis in the eurozone may spread across the Atlantic and knock the tentative US recovery off course.

The Dow fell 1.24 per cent, the S&P 500 dropped 1.51 per cent and the Nasdaq plummeted 2.10 per cent.
Discouraging US indicators on regional manufacturing and the economic outlook added to investor woes. Oil was lower.
New York’s main contract, West Texas Intermediate crude for delivery in June, was down 25 cents to $92.31 per barrel while Brent North Sea crude for July shed 66 cents to $106.83 in late afternoon trade.

Gold was at $1,589.90 an ounce at 1100 GMT, compared with $1,547.20 late Thursday.
In other markets:
Singapore slipped 1.54 per cent, or 43.51 points, to 2,779.10.
DBS Bank fell 1.99 per cent to Sg$13.27 while real estate developer CapitaLand was down 3.48 per cent at Sg$2.50.

Taipei fell 2.79 per cent, or 205.58 points, to 7,151.19.
TSMC shed 3.88 per cent to Tw$81.8 while Chunghwa Telecom was 0.77 per cent lower at Tw$90.3. 

The Independent/ Bangladesh/ 19th May 2012

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