Business

Morning Bid: War in Europe

A look at the day ahead in markets from Sujata Rao

This is it. Putin has invaded Ukraine.

Markets are displaying all the predictable reactions, selling stocks and buying safe-havens. Treasury yields are down 10 basis points, while the Swiss franc and Japanese yen are up as is the dollar index. Gold has surged 2% and oil has jumped over $100 a barrel.

So what next? Economic recession? Central banks forced to stay their hand with interest rate rises? Market bets on a 50 basis-point Federal Reserve rate rise for March are fading and at least one ECB policymaker has already urging the bank to maintain its stimulus programme until year-end at least.

The obvious question that arises from the oil price effect is how much this aggravates inflation. And whether in that situation bonds will really prove the best safe-havens. Watch those central banks.

It will also test the view that geopolitics are a buying opportunity. Will that hold true even as a situation described as the worst since the Cuban missile crisis unfolds?

In the meantime, anyone who dismissed Western sanctions as toothless should glance at Russian asset prices. A country with a $640 billion warchest and debt ratios around 20% now carries a 5 percentage point yield premium on its dollar bonds relative to U.S. Treasuries.

That’s more than what’s demanded of countries such as Iraq and Bolivia.

But it’s less about the sanctions that have been announced and more about the ones that may now rain down, including cutting Moscow off from international payment systems and banning holding any of its bonds. A firesale of Russian assets has accelerated and the rouble has slumped more than 7% against the dollar.

All this of course will inflict pain on those doing the sanctioning too, above all, Europe where the euro has slipped to one-month lows. And don’t forget the country under attack, Ukraine, whose dollar bonds now price a default on debt.

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

-EU to launch new sanctions against Russia read more

– South Korea’s central bank kept interest rates steady read more

-ECB board member Isabel Schnabel speaks

-Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic

-U.S. second estimate Q4 GDP/new home sales

-U.S. 7-year note sale

-U.S. earnings: Newmont, Papa John’s, Occidental

Russian bonds

Reporting by Sujata Rao; editing by

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

DIFC’s Landmark 2025 Performance: Dubai’s Financial Powerhouse Surpasses Expectations with $580m Revenue

The Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) today unveiled exceptional annual results for 2025, posting record-breaking…

3 days ago

First sales, cash buyers dominate as Dubai real estate maintains strong start to year

 Market accelerates well beyond levels seen in first two months of record-breaking 2025   Dubai, UAE, 4th…

3 days ago

Luxury Dubai apartment sold for AED422M

Sale hailed as major sign of confidence in city’s real estate market and security in UAE …

3 days ago

Record Indian Inflows Fuel Dubai Property Boom: Why the Emirate Has Become the Top Global Real Estate Magnet for Indian Investors

India’s real estate capital is no longer Mumbai, London, or Singapore — it’s Dubai. The…

4 days ago

UAE and Austria Forge Deeper Economic Partnership to Expand Trade and Investment Horizons

In a strategic leap forward for Gulf-European economic relations, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and…

5 days ago

Blue Zones The Inspiration For Green Living In Dubai

New development taking its cue from the world's longest-lived communities  Dubai, UAE, 24th February 2026:…

2 weeks ago