November 8, 2024

Live updates: Asian markets down amid unease; Credit Suisse to tap up to $53.7B in loans

Credit Suisse #CreditSuisse

A man passes an electronic stock board last year displaying Chinese and Japanese stock index figures. © Noriko Hayashi/Bloomberg News A man passes an electronic stock board last year displaying Chinese and Japanese stock index figures.

Credit Suisse said early Thursday that it would borrow up to $53.7 billion from Switzerland’s central bank to support its business, as market contagion from the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank deepens and global authorities look to avoid a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis. The troubled Swiss bank is much larger and more enmeshed in the global financial system than SVB and Signature Bank of New York.

Asian equities sold off, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index and Japan’s bank-heavy Topix down 1.55 and 1.29 percent, respectively, as of about noon local time. Investors flocked to safe-haven assets such as gold and government bonds. The Credit Suisse announcement helped limit a possible rout.

  • Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen is set to testify on Capitol Hill on Thursday. Her testimony, starting 10 a.m. Eastern time, was scheduled before the ongoing turmoil and was intended to discuss President Biden’s 2024 budget. However, lawmakers are likely to grill her on the fallout and any risks to the U.S. financial system.
  • Market traders still expect the European Central Bank to hike official interest rates on Thursday, although they have pared their bets on the size of the increase. Traders are betting on a less than 20 percent chance of a 0.5 percentage-point hike in interest rates, according to Reuters, with a 0.25 percentage-point increase seen as more probable.
  • The Bank of England has been in contact with its international counterparts and Credit Suisse and is monitoring the situation for any signs of a deepening crisis.
  • 1:03 AM: First Republic Bank reportedly considering sale after rating downgrade

    A First Republic Bank branch in Manhattan. © Mike Segar/Reuters A First Republic Bank branch in Manhattan.

    First Republic Bank is considering a sale after the midsize Bay Area lender was rattled by the reverberations of the Silicon Valley Bank collapse, according to Bloomberg.

    The reported deliberations come as the San Francisco-based bank’s credit rating was downgraded to junk Wednesday by the S&P and Fitch rating agencies. A spokesman for First Republic declined to comment on Bloomberg’s reporting, which cited anonymous sources.

    Fitch said First Republic’s “funding and liquidity profile has changed and represents a ‘weakest link.’”

    Shares in First Republic were down more than 21 percent at market close on Wednesday.

    By: Bryan Pietsch

    12:48 AM: Silicon Valley Bank failure renews focus on a 2018 deregulation law

    What to know about the SVB collapse, rescue plan

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    The collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank over the weekend have renewed interest in a 2018 bill that rolled back several banking regulations that were put in place after the 2008 financial crisis.

    The bill, led by Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho), scaled down requirements imposed under the 2010 Dodd-Frank law and reclassified the size of banks that would have to undergo increased regulatory scrutiny, raising that threshold for some from $50 billion in assets to $250 billion in assets. Since Silicon Valley Bank had roughly $209 billion in assets, it was exempt from those more stringent regulations.

    But lawmakers who voted for the regulatory easing of capital requirements and other measures in 2018 are standing by their position even as it threatens to resurface a major divide between liberal and more moderate Democrats. And with a Republican-led House and disagreement among Democrats over the law’s impact on SVB’s collapse, there is little desire to revisit the rule to reinstate more stringent provisions for small and midsize banks.

    Read the full story

    By: Camila DeChalus and Leigh Ann Caldwell

    12:29 AM: Analysis from Kelly Kasulis Cho, Breaking News Reporter/Editor

    New Zealand’s economy shrank by 0.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2022, raising the specter of a future recession.

    The Pacific country’s central bank had forecast an expansion of 0.7 percent. It hiked rates by 0.5 percentage points in February, but future sharp increases are now seen as less likely.

    12:16 AM: Asian equities slip midday amid Credit Suisse jitters

    People cross the street near a large screen showing the latest stock exchange data, in Shanghai on Wednesday. © Alex Plavevski/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock People cross the street near a large screen showing the latest stock exchange data, in Shanghai on Wednesday.

    Asian markets were down at midday local time Thursday, with shares in many mega banks sharply selling off as jitters from Credit Suisse’s struggle spread to Asia.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index was down 1.6 percent and Tokyo’s Nikkei fell just shy of 1 percent, with the more bank-heavy Topix dropping 1.3 percent. The Kospi in Seoul shed 0.2 percent, and China’s SSE Index fell half a percent.

    Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group was down 3.84 percent and Hana Financial Group in South Korea fell 2.25 percent. But China’s banks — more insulated from the global tumult — were up slightly: The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China was up 1.57 percent and China Construction Bank was up 1.34 percent.

    By: Bryan Pietsch

    12:15 AM: Credit Suisse to borrow up to $53.7 billion from Swiss central bank

    Credit Suisse crisis grips world markets

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    Fears for the stability of the global financial system rose Wednesday after Credit Suisse disclosed problems in its financial reporting and said it would tap up to $53.7 billion in aid from Switzerland’s central bank, raising turmoil in the markets in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse.

    The Swiss bank announced it would borrow from the Swiss National Bank late Wednesday, after its shares plunged on its disclosure that it had uncovered “material weaknesses” relating to its financial reporting. The Dow Jones industrial average fell by almost 1 percent Wednesday and European banking stocks tumbled, contributing to a 3 percent fall in the Pan-European Stoxx 600 index.

    Compounding Credit Suisse’s problems, the bank’s largest investor, Saudi National Bank, signaled on Wednesday that it would not be rushing in with more cash to help buttress the firm.

    Credit Suisse has struggled with a host of problems for years, and its latest troubles differ from those that brought down SVB. But the Swiss bank is much larger and more integrated with the global financial system, and its problems come amid growing worries about bank stability globally.

    Read the full story here

    By: Jeanne Whalen, Rachel Lerman and Steven Mufson

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