Finance

Morning Bid: A new kind of curtain

A look at the day ahead in markets from Dhara Ranasinghe.

When McDonald’s opened in central Moscow’s Pushkin Square in 1990, it became a symbol of thriving American capitalism as the Soviet Union fell.

Now, news that McDonald’s, together with PepsiCo, Coca-Cola and Starbucks, have stopped sales in Russia, is a further sign of a new dividing line being drawn between East and West following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine read more .

Russia, meanwhile, warned on Wednesday it was working on a broad response to sanctions that would be swift and felt in the West’s most sensitive areas. read more

For some, the move by companies such as McDonald’s is overdue – after all a slew of major corporations had already cut ties with Russia as the West ramped up sanctions. Others argue such action can harm public opinion among Russians, suffering from the economic pain unleashed by the conflict.

After days of selling, some respite appears on the cards for world stock markets. European and U.S. stock futures are trading in positive territory and MSCI’s world stock index (.MIWD00000PUS) is steady near one-year lows.

Perhaps, the bad news is priced in for now?

Oil prices remain one to watch, having risen again following a new U.S. ban on Russian oil. Britain also announced it will phase out imports of Russian oil and oil products by end-2022.

Brent crude is above $131 a barrel , taking its gains since the Feb 24 Russian invasion of Ukraine to almost 35%.

That surge is already being felt by consumers via rocketing fuel prices at the pump.

Prices for aluminium a key Russian export, jumped 5% on Wednesday, a day after the London Metal Exchange suspended nickel trading following a doubling of prices that was blamed on short-covering by a top producer.

As one analyst noted last week (before the risk of Western bans on Russian energy rose), “this is going to hurt.”

Oil and inflation expectations

Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Wednesday:

– China Feb factory inflation eases, spotlight on global commodities read more

– Fitch cuts Russia’s rating further into junk, says debt default imminent read more

– South Korea holds Presidential election.

– German budget

– U.S. JOLTS job openings

– U.S. 10-year note auction

Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe; editing by Sujata Rao

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

GAIP InsureTek India 2026

The GAIP InsureTek India 2026 (12th Edition), scheduled for 26th August 2026 in Mumbai, brings together key players…

2 days ago

GAIP InsureTek Armenia 2026

The GAIP InsureTek Armenia 2026 (11th Edition), taking place on 4th June 2026 in Yerevan, marks the expansion…

2 days ago

How does the UAE deal with AI mishaps?

UAE has introduced an UAE AI Act 2026 effective from March 2026 AI is more…

7 days ago

Al Barari luxury villa leased for record AED14 million over two years

fäm Properties deal sets new benchmark in one of Dubai’s most exclusive communities Dubai, UAE,…

1 week ago

CYSEC Africa 2026: Turning Cyber Threats into Africa’s Cyber Strength

The 19th Global Edition of CYSEC Africa brought together over 250 senior cybersecurity professionals —…

1 week ago

Landmark FIA report highlights major achievements in Sustainability, Diversity & Inclusion

FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem says Federation will continue to innovate, strengthen frameworks, and raise…

1 week ago