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This is an archive article published on June 24, 2016

EU Referendum: Sterling, stocks hammered as UK on brink of Brexit

With 171 of 382 counting areas declared, the Leave camp was put at 51.3 percent against 48.7 percent for "Remain"

Yen, Sterling, Brexit, EU referendum, Britain vote, world markets, yen, Sterling, world currencies, world news, business news, latest news Votes are sorted into remain, leave and doubtful trays as ballots are counted during the EU Referendum count for Westminster and the City of London at the Lindley Hall in London. (Source: AP)

“Sterling is getting smackadoodled,” said Tim Kelleher, Head of FX Institutional Sales New Zealand for ASB Bank in Auckland. “While we thought it was all going to be “Remain”, it’s quite clearly not going to be as clear cut as that.”

Early official results showed the margins were nail-bitingly tight but pointing to a “Leave”. Betting firm BetFair estimated the probability of leaving as high as 74 percent.

Traders were particularly spooked by returns from Sunderland showing a large majority for the “Leave” camp and just a narrow win for “Remain” in Newcastle.

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With 171 of 382 counting areas declared, the Leave camp was put at 51.3 percent against 48.7 percent for “Remain”, according to Reuters calculations.

The tremors shook all asset classes and regions.

The safe-haven yen sprang higher to stand at 103.47 per dollar, having been as low as 106.81. That dragged the Nikkei down 3 percent and prompted warnings from Japanese officials that excessive forex moves were undesirable.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slid 2 percent while Shanghai stocks lost 0.5 percent.

UK bank shares listed in Hong Kong tumbled on the prospect of a destabilising exit. HSBC fell 4 percent while Standard Chartered fell 6 percent.

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Financial markets have been racked for months by worries about what Brexit, or a British exit from the European Union, would mean for Europe’s stability.

Early opinion polls had favoured the “Remain” camp and perhaps led to a false sense of complacency in markets. An Ipsos MORI poll put the lead at 8 points while a YouGov poll out just after polls closed found 52 percent of respondents said they voted to remain in the EU while 48 percent voted to leave.

Safe-haven bonds came back into favour as exits bets, with U.S. 10-year Treasury futures jumping 1.18 points. Yields on the cash note fell 16 basis points to 1.58 percent.

Investors also priced in even less chance of another hike in U.S. interest rates <0#FF:> given the Federal Reserve had cited a British exit from the EU as one reason to be cautious on tightening.

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“It adds weight to the camp that the Fed would be on hold. A July (hike) is definitely off the table,” Mike Baele, managing director with the private client reserve group at U.S. Bank in Portland, Oregon.

Commodities likewise swung lower as a Brexit would be seen as a major threat to global growth. U.S. crude shed $1.64 to $48.47 a barrel in erratic trade while Brent fell $1.63 to $49.28.

Copper slipped but gold galloped higher thanks to its perceived safe haven status.

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