It is likely that the Israel-Hamas conflict will worsen and poor corporate earnings will deepen.
This possibilities have sent investors scrambling for safety with few havens left.
Enter the Swiss franc, a longstanding safe haven asset that has just hit its highest level against the euro since 2015, standing tall as its traditional rivals lose appeal. It is kind of magical.
Disappointing financial updates from European food giant Nestle and U.S. bank Morgan Stanley have added to investors’ latest shaky mood.
As seen on the indexes, global shares are down 1.6% this week, while Wall Street stocks lost 2% in two sessions.
Experts claim that markets are caught between a rock and a hard place, with a surge in risk aversion where bonds provide no protection.
Other than U.S. dollar cash, only the Swiss franc and gold remained as options, some experts reveal lately.
The euro slide to 0.9419 francs on Friday. This is its lowest since the Swiss National Bank scrapped franc’s peg to the euro in January 2015, down about 2.4% against the currency so far in October 2023.
The dollar has weakened around 1% against the franc this week, and is set for its biggest weekly drop since July.