Monday, March 18, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: GLOBAL MARKETS-Cyprus deal shock sends euro, shares tumbling

Reuters: US Dollar Report
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GLOBAL MARKETS-Cyprus deal shock sends euro, shares tumbling
Mar 18th 2013, 08:30

Mon Mar 18, 2013 4:30am EDT

  * European shares open sharply lower      * The euro and euro zone periphery bonds fall heavily      * Safe havens gold and German government bonds rise        By Marc Jones      LONDON, March 18 (Reuters) - The surprise decision by euro  zone leaders to part-fund a rescue of Cyprus by taxing bank  deposits sent shockwaves through financial markets on Monday,  with shares, the euro and the   bonds of its southern members  all tumbling.      The euro zone struck a deal on Saturday to hand Cyprus a  bailout worth 10 billion euros ($13 billion), but defied  warnings - including from the European Central Bank - and  imposed a levy that will see those with cash in the island's  banks lose between 6.75 and 9.9 percent of their money.         Parliament in Cyprus was due to vote on the measure later on  Monday and the government was looking at ways to reduce the  impact on small savers.      Without the rescue Cyprus would have be unable to avoid a  default. That would have undermined the promise that Greece's  writedown last year was a one-off, but the unprecedented move to  hit depositors adds a radical new dimension to the crisis.      The response of investors was unambiguous as European  markets re-opened for first time since the deal was announced.      Stock markets across the region lurched lower, the euro fell  to a three-month low, while safe-haven assets such as gold   and German government bonds jumped.      Economists were taken aback by the move but some took the  view that safety measures in place at the ECB should contain the  fallout.       "Clearly this is a negative development for European assets  but in the terms of contagion we think it is quite limited,"  said Guillermo Felices, head euro asset allocation at Barclays  in London.      "There are tools such as the ECB's OMT (bond buying  programme) and the option of more 3-year LTRO's that can provide  liquidity if needed, that the market will feel comfortable about  when assessing the longer-term implications."      Equity markets were underscoring the more immediate worries,  however and ay 0810 GMT the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300   was down 1.2 percent after Asia indexes had also  slumped.      London's FTSE 100, Frankfurt's DAX and  Paris's CAC-40 were down 1.4, 1.6 and 2 percent  respectively as traders' screens showed a sea of red.      The ECB's pledge to buy euro zone government bonds in  unlimited amounts if needed has calmed the beleaguered currency  bloc. But if investors fear the Cypriot template could be  repeated in any future rescues, that calm could be shattered.      In the currency market, the euro was down more than 1  percent at $1.2941 versus the dollar, having dropped as low as  $1.2882 in the Asian session. The dollar itself, which  investors often head for when tensions in Europe rise, rose 0.6  percent.      Italian and Spanish bonds also  dropped sharply in a frenzied opening spell of trading. The two  countries remain the central concern of the euro zone's crisis  due to the size of their economies which some economists warn  would be too big to rescue.      The widespread anxiety drove German government bonds, the  traditional favourite of risk-adverse European investors,  higher. Bund futures were up 80 ticks at 144.16, while      Gold, another safe-haven asset, saw its biggest rise in a  month as it jumped over 1 percent to $1,604 an ounce.       Meanwhile Crude and Brent oil both tumbled 1.1 percent to  $92.46 a barrel and to $108.62 respectively.         "It's a Cyprus shock. The euro fell, and crude followed that  lower," said Ken Hasegawa, a commodity sales manager at Newedge  in Tokyo. "We don't know what's going to happen, and it's  becoming an uncertain factor."  
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