(Updates prices, comments, adds details)
By Jason Hovet
PRAGUE, Oct 10 (Reuters) - The global asset selloff swept through central Europe on Friday, pummelling stocks and currencies as fears that the mounting financial crisis would spill over into the region rattled investors.
Poland's zloty hit its lowest since January, and Hungary's forint touched a two-year low before rebounding strongly, while bourses in Prague, Budapest and Warsaw dropped more than 10 percent to hit multi-year troughs.
Investors shunned the region's bond markets, which virtually ground to a halt as spreads widened.
In Slovakia, a scramble for cash hit the normally quiet crown currency <EURSKK=>, set to disappear next year when the country swaps it for euros. Further east, the Romanian central bank intervened, selling euros to prop up the battered leu.
The regional sell-off followed a steep drop in Hungary's forint late on Thursday as concerns grew over the country's financing and banking system amid the global financial crisis and as the government said it would redraft the 2009 budget.
Hungary's government and central bank announced several measures on Friday to shore up the country's financial markets [
], while assuring on the country's fundamentals.Market watchers mainly chalked the falls up to a reaction to steep slides in developed global markets, but with a local mix.
"It's really contagion from what's going on globally. Equity markets are struggling everywhere," said Lucy Bethell, a currency strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland.
The prospects of a sharp slowdown in growth and bank lending, along with less demand for assets in the region have strong implications for central and easetern Europe, she said.
"People are just cutting back their positions," she said.
The forint <EURHUF=> clawed its way back from a loss of around 2 percent to trade 0.3 percent down at 259.35 against the euro, while the Polish zloty <EURPLN=> recovered some earlier losses to be 2.8 percent down at 3.578 per euro by 1401 GMT.
The falls prompted assurances from respective central banks and governments that the weakening was not due to fundamentals.
"Foreigners were heavy (euro) buyers in the morning but that evaporated towards the end of the day," a Budapest dealer said.
Currencies have swung widely in the past month, with the forint dropping 9.9 since Sept. 12, the last trading day before U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy protection, kicking the year-old credit crunch to a new level.
Romania's leu is off 6.2 percent in that time, while the zloty has shed 7.4 percent and the Czech crown 3.4 percent.
Central Europe's banking system has stayed mostly insulated from the financial crisis that has intensified in Europe and forced Iceland to take control of its largest lenders.
On Friday, Austria's Erste Bank <ERST.VI>, a major investor in the region, said it had 300 million euros in exposure to Icelandic banks [
].
SELLERS ONLY
In eastern Europe investors have mainly flashed red flags around Hungary and Romania, which are more exposed to foreign credit than most of their ex-communist European Union peers and have higher loan-to-deposit ratios.
Markets are getting hit by a "combination of extreme global stress with increased market focus on local vulnerabilities in that environment," said Martin Blum, head of emerging markets economics and forex strategy at UniCredit in Vienna.
Hungary's largest bank OTP <OTPB.BU> rejected a government offer to guarantee all of its interbank loans. Financial regulators were also investigating possible market manipulation after OTP shares plunged 14 percent in late Thursday trade. [
] [ ].In Romania, where the bourse was shut for a second time this week, the leu currency <EURRON=> fell more than 2 percent, before cutting losses to 3.799 per euro to trade 0.2 percent up. The central bank sold 40 million euros at midday in a move it said was aimed at testing the market [
].The Czech crown <EURCZK=> hit a four-month low above 25 per euro before a rebound to 24.96, down 0.6 percent.
Slovakia's crown <EURSKK=> sunk to 19-week lows, trading 1.2 percent down from Thursday morning at 30.73 per euro. The crown's euro adoption conversion rate is 30.126 per euro.
Dealers said the crown's slide was beyond levels justified by an interest rate differential that opened up this week when the European Central Bank cut its rates by 50 basis points but the Slovaks -- which had been at the same level as the ECB -- did not follow.
Investors with crown positions opened before the conversion rate was set were willing to sell those holding at smaller profits, they added.
"Of course it's nonsense, but with the banks in the West seeking euro liquidity, they are closing positions anywhere they can," said Laco Benedek, a dealer at VUB Bank in Slovakia.
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today in 2008 Czech crown <EURCZK=> 24.912 24.767 -0.59% +5.98% Polish zloty <EURPLN=> 3.578 3.482 -2.76% +0.62% Hungarian forint <EURHUF=> 259.350 258.750 -0.23% -2.57% Croatian kuna <EURHRK=> 7.135 7.130 -0.07% +2.61% Romanian leu <EURRON=> 3.799 3.806 +0.18% -6.11% Serbian dinar <EURRSD=> 80.459 79.618 -1.06% -2.16% Yield Spreads Czech treasury bonds <0#CZBMK=> 3-yr T-bond CZ3YT=RR +20 basis points to 60bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond CZ5YT=RR -5 basis points to +57bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond CZ9YT=RR -13 basis points to +46bps over bmk* Polish treasury bonds <0#PLBMK=> 2-yr T-bond PL2YT=RR +40 basis points to +337bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond PL5YT=RR +21 basis points to +268bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond PL10YT=RR +10 basis points to +217bps over bmk* Hungarian treasury bonds <0#HUBMK=> 3-yr T-bond HU3YT=RR +5 basis points to +704bps over bmk* 5-yr T-bond HU5YT=RR -2 basis points to +668bps over bmk* 10-yr T-bond HU10YT=RR -5 basis points to +501bps over bmk* *Benchmark is German bond equivalent. All currency data taken from Reuters at 1601 CET. All bond data taken from Reuters at 1256 CET. Currency percent change calculated from the daily domestic close at 1500 GMT. For related news and prices, click on the codes in brackets: All emerging market news [
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