Morning News

SNB posts loss of 3 billion francs in 2023

By Peter Rosenstreich
Published on Mon, 08.Jan.2024

Topic of the day

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) has once again posted a loss. Specifically, according to provisional calculations, the SNB is reporting a loss of around CHF 3 billion for 2023 as a whole. According to a statement on Tuesday, there was a profit of around CHF 4 billion on foreign currency positions, a valuation gain of CHF 1.7 billion on gold holdings and a loss of CHF 8.5 billion on Swiss franc positions. After nine months, the SNB had posted a plus of 1.7 billion, which was followed by a minus of around 4.7 billion in the fourth quarter. Due to the renewed loss, the distribution to the Confederation and cantons will once again be discontinued, as the SNB also announced. No dividend will be paid to shareholders either.

Swiss stocks

After a flat start and a subsequent fall to lower levels, the Swiss market recovered on Monday, and despite staying a bit sluggish till around mid afternoon, managed to end the day's session on a firm note. The benchmark SMI ended up 44.50 points or 0.4% at 11,230.40, recovering from a low of 11,124.02. Sonova climbed about 2.6%. Logitech International gained nearly 2%, while Alcon, Lonza Group and Swiss Life Holding ended higher by 1.2 to 1.6%. ABB, Swiss Re, Richemont, Partners Group and Givaudan also ended on a firm note. Kuehne & Nagel drifted down 2%. Swisscom and Sika ended lower by 0.39% and 0.35%, respectively. Temeons Group, down 3.8%, was the top gainer in the Mid Price Index. Meyer Burger Tech, Tecan Group and ams OSRAM AG gained 2.7%, 2.3% and 2.2%, respectively. Flughafen Zurich gained nearly 2%, while Lindt & Spruengli, VAT Group, BKW, Avolta, Straumann Holdings, Georg Fischer and Swatch Group advanced 0.8 to 1.4%. SGS ended down 3.3%, and Barry Callebaut ended nearly 2% down. Baloise Holding and Clariant closed modestly lower. Data from the Federal Statistical Office showed Switzerland's consumer price inflation increased more-than-expected in December. The consumer price index, or CPI, climbed 1.7% year-over-year in December, after a 1.4% gain in November, the data said. Economists had expected inflation to rise slightly to 1.5%. However, inflation remained within the central bank's target range of 0-2%.

International markets

Europe
European stocks closed higher on Monday after a cautious session, with investors looking ahead to the data on U.S. consumer price and producer price inflation for further clarity about the Federal Reserve's interest rate path. Stocks struggled earlier in the session amid persisting concerns about the tensions in the Middle East. Israel struck Hamas and Hezbollah terror facilities in Khan Yunis and Lebanon in overnight strikes, the Israel Defense Forces said earlier today. The pan European Stoxx 600 gained 0.38%. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 edged up 0.06% and Germany's DAX climbed 0.74%, while France's CAC 40 and Switzerland's SMI both gained 0.4%. Among other markets in Europe, Belgium, Finland, Greece, Iceland, Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Spain, Sweden and Turkiye closed higher. Austria, Denmark, Norway and Portugal ended weak. In the UK market, Melrose Industries rallied 4%. B&M European Value Retail, Legal & General, Smith & Nephew, Prudential, Rolls-Royce Holdings and Taylor Wimpey gained 2.5 to 3.1%. Centrica, Marks & Spencer, IMI, Auto Trader Group, Howden Joinery, Ocado Group, Airtel Africa and Rightmove also moved up sharply. Royal Dutch Shell dropped about 3%. BP ended 2.6% down, while Glencore, Endeavour, United Utilties and Anglo American Plc ended lower by 1 to 1.6%. In Germany, Siemens Energy climbed more than 5%. Qiagen gained about 2.7%, while Infineon, Adidas, Siemens Healthineers, Continental, Mercedes-Benz, Zalando and HeidelbergCement advanced 1.3 to 2%. Fresenius and Covestro both drifted down nearly 1.5%. RWE, Merck and Daimler Truck Holding also closed weak. In the French market, Airbus Group climbed 2.5%.

United States
U.S. stocks posted solid gains Monday, easing investor anxieties after the market’s rough start to 2024 last week. Both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite logged their best days since November, climbing 1.4% and 2.2%, respectively. Large technology companies were at the forefront of the rally, just as they were the major driver of last week’s declines and 2023’s gains. All of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks climbed more than 1%, with chip maker Nvidia jumping 6.4%. In an otherwise encouraging day, Boeing shares were an exception, falling 8% after a 737 MAX jet was forced to make an emergency landing Friday when a piece of the plane ripped off in midair. That decline weighed on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which rose 0.6%, or roughly 217 points. The S&P 500 fell 1.5% last week, prompting some mild concerns given how often the first week of January has set the tone for the rest of the year. Since 1950, the first five trading days of the year have predicted the direction of the S&P 500’s full-year return nearly 70% of the time, including in eight out of the past 12 years. Stocks and bonds have both been lifted in recent months by a substantial decline in inflation, which has led to bets that the Federal Reserve could cut interest rates by at least 1 percentage point this year. Bets on rate cuts could be tested later this week, when the Labor Department releases consumer-price-index data on Thursday and producer-price data on Friday. “A hotter than expected [CPI] number will be a very bad day for the bulls” because it could cause investors to question the outlook for rate cuts, said Matthew Tuttle, chief executive of Tuttle Capital Management.

Asia
The stock markets in East Asia only partially followed Wall Street's gains on Tuesday. In Tokyo, the Nikkei index rose by 1.1 per cent to 33,733 points after the holiday break at the start of the week. The index had already been quite a bit higher earlier in the week. The yen, which rose compared to the same time the previous day, had a slightly dampening effect. The latest price data shows that inflation in Japan remains unchanged at 2.1 per cent, just above the Japanese central bank's target. The Chinese stock markets are more subdued, with the trend remaining stable.

Bonds
U.S. bonds also rallied, driving the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note down to 4.001% from 4.041% Friday. Bond yields fall when prices rise.

Analysis
UBS raises Carl Zeiss to Buy (Hold) – 125 (89) EUR
Morgan Stanley raises Sonova to Overweight
Citi raises Nordex target to EUR 15.50 (15) – Buy

Produced by MBI Martin Brückner Infosource GmbH & Co. KG on behalf of Swissquote. All news is acquired with journalistic accuracy. No liability is assumed for delays or errors.

關注我們

贊助商
UEFA Europa LeagueUEFA Women’s EURO 2025Genève ServetteZSC Lions

小心風險

在外匯交易平台上交易槓桿產品,例如外匯,現貨金屬和差價合約,都會因槓桿效應而面臨重大的虧損風險,因而並不適合所有投資者。在開立瑞訊之交易帳戶前,請考慮個人經驗水平、投資目標、資產、收入和可承擔之風險水平。理論上,虧損是可以無上限,如果帳戶餘額低於所需保證金水平,您有可能被追加資金,因此您不應該以自己無法承受虧損的資金進行交易,即您不應借入資金或以個人或家庭生活所急需或必要的資金進行投機、投資或對沖。過去12 個月,76.32%的零售投資者在交易差價合約時出現虧損、在平倉時損失全部保證金或平倉後帳戶出現負值。您必須清楚了解外匯交易中所有相關風險,如果有任何疑問時,應及時向獨立財務顧問尋求建議。如需更多資料,包括槓桿的影響、保證金交易的操作以及交易對手和市場風險,請參閱我們的外匯和差價合約風險披揭露。本網頁之內容包含市場推廣訊息,內容並沒有提交亦沒有得到相關監管機構之批核。

AI 生成的內容

我們網站上的一些視覺內容是使用人工智慧 (AI) 應用程式產生和/或增強的。但是,所有內容都經過徹底的人工審查和核准,以確保其準確性、相關性,並符合我們使用者和客戶的需求。