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Monday’s market mayhem, from oil to credit - Charts

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Whether trader or investor, analyst or observer, Monday in markets looks like one to tell the grandchildren about.

An oil price war has broken out in the middle of a worsening global virus outbreak, and it has triggered asset moves around the world that in some cases have never been seen before. Crude itself at one point dropped by a third. Treasury yields fell to unprecedented levels across the curve. U.S. stocks dropped so hard trading was halted.

On a historic day, here’s a look in more detail at some of the biggest moves:

The oil crash

The all-out price-war among the world’s biggest producers crashed oil markets by about a third earlier. They pared declines, but were still down about 17% as of 12:14 p.m. in New York. Crude futures suffered the second-largest decline on record in the opening seconds of trading in Asia, behind only the plunge during the Gulf War in 1991. Brent for May settlement tumbled as much as $14.25 a barrel to $31.02. West Texas Intermediate crude for April slumped as much as 34% to $27.34 a barrel.

crude metric

Stocks frozen

The severe rout in US stocks triggered trading curbs that the New York Stock Exchange put in place after the 1987 Black Monday crash. A 15-minute trading halt took hold after the S&P 500 Index fell 7% to 2,764.21 as of 9:34 a.m. in New York, triggering the breaker for the first time since December 2008 at the depths of the financial crisis.

Stops

Credit crumbles

The cost to protect US investment-grade debt against default surged by the most since Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy in the height of the 2008 global financial crisis. Dozens of energy bonds plunged by double digits, the latest hit in a grim few weeks for junk-rated companies in the industry.

distressed spreads

Bombed-out bond yields

US Treasury yields plunged, with the rate on 30-year bonds diving as much as 59 basis points, as rising expectations the Federal Reserve will cut policy rates to 0% in the coming months drove investors to reach to longer maturities for yield.

Haven blitz

Bear market dominoes

Monday’s plunge in equities has pushed a number of major European stock benchmarks into bear market territory, with losses exceeding 20%. Italy’s FTSE MIB has been the most hit, down more than 25% from a high reached last month.

falling together

Commodity currencies roiled

Currencies of energy exporters were quickest to react to the oil plunge. The Norwegian krone fell to its lowest since at least 1985 versus the dollar and the Mexican peso dropped to a more than three-year low.

Slippery

Safety surge

The yen jumped to its strongest level against the dollar since 2016 as investors sought shelter. As of Sunday, about half of the world’s countries have cases of Covid-19 and Italy’s virus deaths rose by 57%. Japan’s currency was up almost 3% against the greenback.

Haven once again

Volatility ratchets up

The Cboe Volatility Index surged to the highest since 2008 on Monday as a plunge in oil prices frazzled traders already on edge over the coronavirus. The VIX, which measures the 30-day implied volatility of the S&P 500 based on out-of-the-money options prices, jumped as high as 62, its highest level since December 2008 on an intraday basis.

Fear here

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