Global markets fall and gold hits record high

Global markets fall and gold hits record high

2025-11-13Business
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Elon
Good morning Norris, I'm Elon, and this is Goose Pod for you. Today is Thursday, November 13th.
Morgan Freedman
And I'm Morgan Freedman. We are here to discuss a tremor in the financial world: global markets are falling as gold hits a record high.
Elon
It's a classic flight to safety, or as I see it, a flight from progress. Two U.S. regional banks, Western Alliance and Zions, admitted to exposure to millions in bad loans and alleged fraud. Suddenly, everyone thinks it’s 2023 all over again.
Morgan Freedman
Memory is a powerful force. The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank is a fresh wound, and this news feels like salt in it. Investors are not waiting to see if it’s a phantom, they are running to the perceived safety of gold, pushing it to record highs.
Elon
The reaction is fundamentally illogical. We’re talking about isolated issues at two mid-sized banks, not a systemic failure. Yet the fear of contagion is driving decisions, causing markets from the FTSE to the Nikkei to tumble. It’s a herd mentality, plain and simple.
Morgan Freedman
I've often found that the herd is simply a collection of individuals trying to protect themselves. This isn't just about numbers; it's about the stability of the entire system, and right now, that stability is being seriously questioned by the people who power it.
Morgan Freedman
To understand today's reaction, we must look back to March of 2023. Silicon Valley Bank, a lender fueled by a tech boom, found itself in trouble. It had invested its massive deposit base in long-term bonds, a strategy that seemed safe at the time.
Elon
Safe until it wasn't. The Federal Reserve aggressively hiked interest rates to fight inflation, and the value of those bonds plummeted. SVB announced a massive loss, and what followed was the fastest bank run in history, supercharged by social media. It was a spectacular failure.
Morgan Freedman
Indeed. Within 48 hours, the FDIC had to step in and take control. Two days later, Signature Bank in New York also failed. It sent a shockwave through the system, with depositors everywhere wondering if their money was truly safe, regardless of the institution.
Elon
The government had to take extraordinary steps, guaranteeing all deposits at both banks, even beyond the 250,000 dollar FDIC limit. It was a necessary, but massive, intervention to prevent a full-blown domino effect across the entire regional banking sector. An expensive patch on a broken system.
Morgan Freedman
That intervention stopped the immediate bleeding, but it did not erase the memory. It created the very sensitivity we are witnessing today, where even a hint of trouble at a regional bank is treated as a potential harbinger of a much larger storm. The ghost of SVB haunts the market.
Elon
And that brings us to the core conflict. Are these new loan issues a genuine sign of widespread rot, or is this a massive overreaction? Investors are yanking billions from higher-risk debt funds, the biggest outflow in six months. They’re not asking questions, they’re just selling.
Morgan Freedman
But one could argue their actions are the question. They are challenging the narrative that the system is sound. They see Zions taking a $50 million loss and Western Alliance alleging fraud, and they recall that the 2023 crisis started with similar, seemingly contained, problems.
Elon
It's a failure of nerve. The KBW Regional Banking Index dropped over 6%. This isn't rational analysis; it's fear triggering a feedback loop. The fear of a crisis is creating the conditions for one. We should be focused on building, not cowering.
Morgan Freedman
Perhaps. Or perhaps it is the market's way of forcing a conversation about whether the underlying vulnerabilities were ever truly addressed. A fever, after all, is not the sickness, but a sign that the body is fighting one. And right now, the market has a fever.
Morgan Freedman
The most immediate impact is this 'flight to quality.' But the deeper worry is the risk of a credit crunch. When banks get nervous, they stop lending. That can choke off the flow of capital to businesses, both large and small, turning a financial problem into an economic one.
Elon
Exactly. Innovation doesn't happen without risk and capital. A credit crunch freezes progress. It's a self-inflicted wound caused by a lack of confidence. The irony is that the rush to 'safe' assets like gold does nothing to build the future; it’s a bet on fear.
Morgan Freedman
And that fear is contagious. The problem is no longer confined to the US; we see financial stocks falling globally. It demonstrates how interconnected our modern world is, how a tremor in Utah can be felt as a jolt in Tokyo and Frankfurt almost instantly.
Elon
The consensus for 2024 was a so-called 'soft landing.' That narrative is now in jeopardy. The market is clearly skeptical about the long-term health of the banking sector, and frankly, it should be. The current infrastructure is archaic and ripe for fundamental disruption.
Morgan Freedman
Ultimately, the path forward is one of vigilance. The coming weeks will reveal if corporate balance sheets are as resilient as some believe. It is a test of the system's strength and, more importantly, of its ability to maintain trust when shaken.
Elon
That's the end of today's discussion. Thank you for listening to Goose Pod.
Morgan Freedman
See you tomorrow.

Global markets are plummeting as investors flee to gold, which has hit record highs. This "flight to safety" is driven by renewed fears in the banking sector, reminiscent of the 2023 Silicon Valley Bank crisis. Despite isolated issues at two regional banks, market panic and herd mentality are causing widespread declines.

Global markets fall and gold hits record high

Read original at The Guardian

Global stock markets fell sharply and gold hit a record high after two US regional banks said they had been left exposed to millions of dollars of bad loans and alleged fraud.Signs of credit stress rattled markets across Europe and Asia. In London the FTSE 100 fell 1.5%, Germany’s Dax fell 2%, the Ibex in Spain was off 0.

8% and France’s Cac 40 dropped 1.5%, before recovering some ground.Concerns over credit stress in the network of loans to businesses across the world’s largest economy fuelled heavy losses on Wall Street on Thursday, followed by Asian markets, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 falling 1.6% and the Hang Seng in Hong Kong dropping 2%.

US markets are expected to open down later on Friday.Jittery investors turned to safe haven assets, with gold hitting a new record of $4,378 (£3,262) an ounce, a weekly gain of almost 8.5%, its biggest since the 2008 financial crisis.US banking stocks plunged on Thursday after Zions Bancorporation, a Utah-based lender, said it would write off $50m on two loans, and Phoenix-headquartered Western Alliance said it had started legal proceedings over a bad loan said to be worth $100m.

Shares in Zion plunged by more than 10%, while Western Alliance Bancorp dropped more than 9%.“While this was an ostensibly isolated story at two banks each with less than a $10bn market cap, the event drew inevitable comparisons to the regional bank stress that followed the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in 2023,” said Jim Reid, an analyst at Deutsche Bank.

“[That] raised broader questions over potential credit quality issues after a lengthy period of elevated rates and expansion in private credit.”He added that markets were especially wary of a domino effect as the issues faced by the two banks followed the bankruptcy of the sub-prime automotive lender Tricolor last month.

The US regional banking industry has been under scrutiny after First Brands, an auto parts supplier, filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy in late September over creditor concerns.In its bankruptcy filing, First Brands disclosed that it had at least $10bn to $50bn in liabilities against $1bn to $10bn in assets, the product of what appeared to be risky off-balance-sheet financing.

skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionRichard Hunter, the head of markets at Interactive Investor, said: “There are increasing signs of storm clouds gathering over markets, with little relief from the building wall of worry.“Already grappling with stretched stock valuations in the AI space, an unresolved government shutdown and a deteriorating relationship between Beijing and Washington, investors were exposed to a new source of concern in the form of lending practices and bad loans for US regional banks.

”Derren Nathan, the head of equity research at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “Despite growing hopes of further rate cuts this year, attention is turning to the underlying health of the economy, as emerging credit losses among America’s regional banks raised further questions about lending practices.”On the FTSE 100, nearly every stock fell in early trading.

Banks were among the top fallers, with Barclays down 4.7%, Standard Chartered losing 4.3% and NatWest off 3.1%. The asset manager ICG has lost 5%.

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