Traders work at Frankfurt's stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, February 6, 2018. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski
While the Kremlin complains about “daily” Western predictions of a Russian invasion of Ukraine, investors for their part have had no choice but to adjust to each day’s unique sabre rattling noise and assess the probability of a conflict hitting global financial markets. read more
Today’s news that U.S. President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin have agreed in principle to a summit over Ukraine read more has lifted U.S. and European stocks futures and helped Asian shares pare some losses.
But as much as a swift diplomatic breakthrough to reset Europe’s security framework appears unlikely for now, so does a full-fledged confrontation between the West and Russia.
What analysts are struggling to do, is pricing how the various scenarios in between will impact a vast range of asset classes, from energy to wheat, gold, stocks, bonds and currencies to name a few. read more
At the moment, the prospect of de-escalation is moving capital away from safe havens with the euro jumping 0.4% to $1.1367 and the dollar retreating 0.36% against its rivals.
This morning also sees oil prices ease on the hope of summit over Ukraine and news of a possible nuclear deal between Iran and world powers. Still at about $93 a barrel, oil remains close to the symbolic $100 bar for the liking of many countries.
A flurry of data from France, Germany and the UK this morning will shed some light on how much of a toll inflation, tighter monetary policy and this winter’s COVID-19 Omicron wave have taken on the economic recovery.
And while European companies hoping to fund deals via bond markets are facing a sudden jump in borrowing costs, business goes on unabated with French payments company Worldline entering exclusive talks to sell its TSS terminals business to Apollo Funds (APO.N) in a deal potentially worth around 2.3 billion euros.
Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Monday:
-Arab oil producers say OPEC+ should stick to current output agreement read more
– China’s new home prices perk up read more
– Japan’s manufacturing activity expanded at the slowest pace in five months read more
– Thai economy returns to growth in Q4 read more
– Flash PMIs for France, Germany, EU, UK
Reporting by Julien Ponthus
Nationwide transformation drive positions the country as a regional leader in smart government Qatar is…
Labour laws offer strong safeguards, but companies weigh cost pressures and restructuring options As geopolitical…
Market registers 36,658 residential tenancy contracts worth AED3.16 billion as rents show YoY increases Dubai,…
fäm Properties analysis shows city’s 4-year pipeline 71.45% committed, as absorption rate leaves major global…
FIA President H.E. Mohammed Ben Sulayem highlights key challenges and opportunities shaping motorsport and mobility…
Basra officials say output can rebound within days as Hormuz disruption continues to weigh on…