Morning Report: April 11, 2012

 | Apr 11, 2012 06:27AM ET

The European debt crisis once again dominated headlines as the Spanish Economy Minister Luis de Guindos declined to exclude the possibility of a rescue for his nation and the Governor of the Bank of Spain indicated that the nation's bank may need more capital if the economy continues to worsen. Spanish 10 year bond yields raced towards 6% for the first time this year while Italian yields surged almost 25 basis points.

At the same time, yields on two and five-year German notes fell to all time record lows at 0.091% and 0.617% respectively. The surprise announcement by Prime Minister Rajoy of a further EUR 10 billion in budget cuts in education and health, only two weeks after unveiling the latest budget, failed to impress investors. The EUR opens this morning at 1.3080.

The Chinese economy continues to show signs of weakness as import growth came in at below forecasts as the nation reported an unexpected trade surplus. There is once again speculation that the central government may take measures to boost the economy amid increasing signs of a slowdown.

The yen surged on the back of a rise in risk-aversion that has coincided with an 8-day rise in the VIX index of volatility. USD/JPY fell more than 1% to as low 80.64 in trade overnight with the yen gaining against all of its major trading counter-parts. Yen crosses were smashed and the Australian dollar opens the morning looking susceptible to further falls sitting just above 1.0250.

US share markets fell for the fifth consecutive day as European bond yields surged. The S&P 500 has now dropped almost 4.5% in five days with Friday's disappointing jobs report still weighing on the markets. All 10 industry groups in the index have fallen as the it closes down 1.71% at 1,359. Stock markets across Europe were slammed with blood on the bourses as the IBEX and CAC lost 3% and the DAX fell 2.5%. Italian banks such as UniCredit and Intesa Sanpaolo lost more than 6.5%. Markets in Australia will reopen today to significant falls after having been closed for the Easter holidays.

Commodity prices apart from precious metals have recorded significant falls overnight with the CRB index losing more than 1% to 300.45. WTI crude has dropped another 1.1% to $101.30 on speculation of rising supplies in the US. Precious metals have bucked the trend and risen as other asset classes recorded significant falls in a sign that gold's safe haven status is once again coming to the fore. Gold rose 1.02% to $1,661 while silver gained 0.7% to $31.70. Soft commodities were broadly lower with cocoa, corn and wheat all slumping more than 2%. Copper is down 1.7%