The pound collapsed to a
31-year low and there was pandemonium on currency, equity and oil markets
Friday as Britain voted to leave the European Union, fueling a wave of global
uncertainty.
Sterling crashed 10 percent
to $1.3229 at one point, its weakest level since 1985, while the greenback
itself slumped below 100 yen for the first time in two-and-a-half years as
traders fled to safety.
In the weeks leading up to
Thursday’s historic vote, there had been widespread warnings that a “Brexit”
would cause a rout across global markets that would wipe trillions off
valuations, just months after a painful China-fuelled sell-off.
The doomsday scenario
appeared to be playing out as markets suffered one of their worst days since
the 2008 financial crisis after final results confirmed one of the EU’s big
three economies would leave the bloc after four decades.
Fears are also growing that
other EU members will push for referendums, posing the biggest threat to the
future of grouping since its inception almost 60 years ago.
The pound had earlier topped
$1.50 following predictions the “remain” group would win, but as the Brexit
camp posted early victories around the country, traders stampeded to put in
sell orders. In Asian afternoon trade it was at $1.3690.
“Leave’s victory has
delivered one of the biggest market shocks of all time,” said Joe Rundle, head
of trading at ETX Capital. “The reverberations of the vote will be felt around
the world.
“The extent of the damage on
asset prices is hard to gauge but it’s likely to be bigger than anything since
Lehmans at the very least,” he added, referring to the Wall Street bank whose
collapsed precipitated the global financial crisis.
The dollar slumped briefly
to 99.02 yen, the first time it has gone below 100 yen since November 2013,
before edging back up above 102 yen. The Japanese unit is considered a safe bet
in times of uncertainty and turmoil.
The Bank of Japan said
Friday it was ready to work with other central banks to pump cash into
financial markets to combat wild swings, while the Bank of England said it
would take “all necessary steps” to avert a full-blown crisis.
Earlier Japan’s Finance
Minister Taro Aso vowed a “firm response” to volatility if necessary.
– ‘Independence day’ –
A flight to safety also saw
higher-yielding and emerging market currencies slump, with the Australian
dollar down 3.4 percent, South Korea’s won diving 2.4 percent and the
Indonesian rupiah shedding 1.7 percent.
Malaysia’s ringgit was down
2.7 percent, one of its worst days since 1998.
There were also heavy losses
for India’s rupee, the Canadian dollar and the Singapore dollar.
Gold, another safe
investment asset, surged six percent to sit at a two-year high.
As the shock results rolled
in, equity markets went into meltdown, wiping hundreds of billions of dollars
off shares.
Tokyo plunged nearly eight
percent, Sydney shed 3.2 percent and Seoul was 3.1 percent off. Mumbai lost 3.8
percent and Shanghai sank 1.3 percent, while Taipei, Wellington, Manila and
Jakarta all saw sharp losses.
Hong Kong tumbled 4.4
percent — having lost more than five percent at one point — in the afternoon
with British banking giants HSBC and Standard Chartered both losing about nine
percent. In Pakistan, which relies on exports the Britain, the stock exchanged
dived more than three percent.
In early European trade
London dived eight percent, with banking shares losing 30 percent. Frankfurt
plunged 10 percent and Paris lost eight percent.
And the yields on German
bonds, considered ultra-safe, turned into negative territory, while British
bond yields also tumbled.
“It’s scary, and I’ve never
seen anything like it,” James Butterfill, head of research and investments at ETF
Securities, said in London. “A lot of people were caught out, and many
investors will lose a lot of money,” he told Bloomberg News.
Before the result was
called, in the early hours in Britain Nigel Farage, leader of the anti-Europe
UK Independence Party, declared victory, saying it was the country’s
“independence day”.
The prospect of a severe hit
to the global economy also hammered oil prices, with both main contracts
slumping more than six percent.
“We are seeing oil swept up
in the general market nervousness to the vote,” said Ric Spooner, a chief
analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.
Credit:Bloomberg,Guardian
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