World shares sank further overnight, along with the British pound, as investors repositioned themselves amid deepening uncertainty related to the UK's choice to leave the European Union
Europe's bank stocks plummeted another day, and relief might not be in sight. Shares of Barclays plunged 17 per cent, while those of Royal Bank of Scotland sank 15 per cent.
"Banking stocks will continue to struggle," Michael Hewson, a market analyst at CMC Markets in London, told Bloomberg. "There is still a wider concern about the stability of the European banking sector. The [European Central Bank] will reiterate it remains prepared to act given any circumstances, as will central banks around the world."
Jefferies said Brexit "changes everything" about how investors should view Barclays, and downgraded its 2016 earnings estimate for the bank by 76 percent, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Meanwhile Standard & Poor's downgraded the UK's credit rating, cutting its AAA-rating by two notches to AA. It was the first time it slashed a AAA-rated sovereign credit rating by two notches at once.