By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - A persistent sell-off in bond markets left financial market confidence in short supply on Thursday, with stocks lower globally and not even traditional safe havens like gold and the Swiss franc providing much of a refuge
German 10-year Bund yields
Currency traders watched the euro
That took the euro's surge over the last two days past 3 percent and with 10-year Bund yields testing 1 percent, market players had Wednesday's remarks from European Central Bank head Mario Draghi that volatility was here to stay, ringing in their ears.
"Clearly these are very aggressive moves," said Patrick O?Donnell, an investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management in London
"Momentum is clearly with the (bond market) bears at the moment and there was nothing said by ... Draghi yesterday that would stop this rout."
After a 4 percent jump on Wednesday, Greek shares <.ATG> fell 2.5 percent as uncertainty clouded the country's hopes of clinching an aid deal with euro zone creditors in the coming days.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras left talks with senior EU officials in Brussels on Wednesday saying a deal was "within sight" and that Athens would make a payment due to the IMF on Friday.
But Deputy Shipping Minister Thodoris Dritsas said on Thursday saying it would not "surrender" to the demands of its creditors. "What appears to have been ...proposed (by the EU executive)... is beneath expectations in every way," he said.
EMERGING STRAINS
With global risk appetite waning, emerging markets were back under pressure.
Indonesia's central bank said it was ready to intervene to support the rupiah
China's high-flying CSI300 <.CSI300> and Shanghai Composite Indexes <.SSEC> staged impressive late recoveries to end 0.7 percent higher having been as much as 3.5 percent in the red at one point.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> ended 1 percent lower though as Australian shares lost 1.3 percent in a fourth straight day of losses, while Japan's Nikkei <.N225> ended flat.
U.S. Treasury yields rose in tandem with their European counterparts and the dollar's fresh slip against the euro left it also flat against other majors like the yen, sterling and the Swiss franc.
In commodities, crude oil struggled after sliding overnight on concerns generated by a big build-up in distillates and with OPEC expected to reject output cuts at its meeting on Friday.
Brent crude
(Reporting by Marc Jones; editing by John Stonestreet)