Home / Daily Market Update / Bank run spreads to Credit Suisse, ASX falls, materials, energy in focus

Bank run spreads to Credit Suisse, ASX falls, materials, energy in focus

Daily Market Update

Another day, another recapitalisation of bailout of a major bank. It was all about global giant Credit Suisse (SWX:CSGN), the company that had been in the news in recent weeks due to a run of poor quarters and growing outflows from the bank. The Swiss National Bank was forced to offer as much as $81 billion in liquidity to the bank to avoid the issues faced by the Silicon Valley Bank in the US. Naturally, this sent markets lower, albeit not to the level that many would predict from the headlines, the S&P/ASX200 fell just 1.5 per cent. The hardest hit sectors were energy, down 4.8 per cent, and materials, down 3.2 per cent on concerns of a slowing global economy. BHP (ASX:BHP) shares fell 4.8 per cent after the company announced it would continue to fight UK court action against the Samarco disaster. Liontown (ASX:LTR) topped the market gaining 4.5 per cent.

Healthcare, quality shines, IPH sinks double figures, unemployment falls

Shares in Intellectual Property Holdings (ASX:IPH) fell by more than 10 per cent after the company exited a trading halt. The group confirmed it had been subject to a cyberattack on two of it’s member firms, which could impact on profitability. Interestingly, Fletcher Building (ASX:FBU) and Computershare (ASX:CPU) fell by more than 7 per cent each, suggesting a material change in their valuation, despite any specific economic news. On the positive side, 64,500 jobs were added to the economy, sending the unemployment rate down to 3.5 per cent and stoking predictions of further rate hikes. This despite growing weakness in the economy. Kelsian (ASX:KLS), the former Sealink travel group entered a trading halt after the company confirmed it would be acquiring All Aboard America$ for close to $500 million. Quality once again shone during the volatility with healthcare outperforming, up 1.5 per cent, behind CSL (ASX:CSL), and Cochlear (ASX:COH). 

  • Markets surge on continued bank support, Adobe beats expectations, jobless claims slow

    All three US benchmarks rallied strongly overnight, benefitting from news that Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) and JP Morgan (NYSE:JPM) would consider stepping in to recapitalise First Republic Bank, the latest bank to suffer significant risk of a bank run. The result was a 1.2 per cent gain in the Dow Jones, 1.8 in the S&P500 and 2.5 per cent in the Nasdaq. Shares in First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRB) were up more than double figures, which followed news overnight that Credit Suisse had received an $81 billion bailout of its own. Treasury Secretary Yellen also sought to calm account holders by reiterating the strength of the banking system. The news came as the ECB raised rates by another 50 basis points. Shares in Adobe (NYSE:ADBE) were among the top performers, gaining more than 5 per cent after the company reported flat quarterly profits but a significant increase in earnings expectations.

    Drew Meredith

    Drew is publisher of the Inside Network's mastheads and a principal adviser at Wattle Partners.




    Print Article

    Related
    Iron-ore prices push higher, bolstering Australian miners

    The S&P/ASX 200 Index rose by 0.5 per cent, driven by the increase in iron ore price. This surge propelled Rio Tinto up by 1.7 per cent, while Fortescue advanced by 0.4 per cent, and BHP increased by 1.5 per cent. The materials sector led gains, adding 1 per cent, followed closely by the technology…

    James Dunn | 19th Apr 2024 | More
    AI boom supports ASX, Block Payments profit jumps, Next DC hits all-time high

    The Australian sharemarket posted a positive finish to the week, gaining 0.4 per cent, but with the S&P/ASX200 still managing to lose 0.2 per cent across the five days. The technology sector was buoyed by NVIDIA’s massive result overnight, with data centre operator Next DC (ASX:NXT) adding 1.9 per cent and hitting another all-time high…

    Drew Meredith | 26th Feb 2024 | More
    ASX weakness on earnings, Woolies CEO to step down, CSR in European takeover bid

    Both Australian benchmarks fell 0.7 per cent on Wednesday, as weakness in the consumer staples sector, which fell 4.3 per cent, offset gains in technology, which added 2.2 per cent. Woolworths (ASX:WOW) fell 6.6 per cent after the company announced the departure of long time CEO Brad Banducci after a TV outburst, with the company…

    Drew Meredith | 22nd Feb 2024 | More
    Popular
  • Popular posts: