Stocks slump, oil rips past $100 as Russia invades Ukraine
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[February 24, 2022] By
Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil prices broke above
$100 a barrel for the first time since 2014, stock markets slumped and
the rouble hit a record low on Thursday after Russian President Vladimir
Putin launched an invasion of Ukraine.
Markets displayed all the predictable reactions. Europe's stock markets
tumbled nearly 4% in frenzied selling while top-rated government bonds,
the dollar, Swiss franc, Japanese yen and gold all rallied as traders
sought out safety. [/FRX][/GOL]
Putin said he had authorised what he called a special military operation
though Ukraine and Western governments labelled it a full-scale
invasion.
U.S. President Joe Biden said "severe sanctions" would be imposed on
Russia after the attacks, with Europe's leaders vowing to also freeze
assets and shut Russian banks out of their financial markets.
Russian and Ukraine markets went in freefall.
The rouble weakened nearly 7% to an unprecedented 86.98 per dollar,
there were record 30% falls on the Moscow stock exchange when it opened
after an initial suspension, while Ukraine was forced to suspend trading
in its currency as its bonds crashed violently.
"No one expected this and speculation of Putin's next step will be the
major focus of the coming days," said Hans Peterson, global head of
asset allocation at SEB investment management.
"But this does happen in a phase of the business cycle that is quite
strong," he added, saying how high energy and commodity prices now go is
also crucial.
The equities rout had started with a 2.6% dive for pan-Asian indexes.
Europe's STOXX 600 index then fell 3.9% - hitting its lowest since May
2021 and more than 10% away from a January record high.
The German DAX fell 4.7%, bearing the brunt of the selloff due to heavy
reliance on Russian energy supplies and the amounts its companies sell
to Russia.
The surge in oil prices helped limit losses on the UK's commodity-heavy
FTSE 100, although it still slumped 2.3% and futures markets pointed to
similar falls for Wall Street later. [.N]
S&P 500 e-minis were down over 2% and Nasdaq futures were 2.9% lower in
premarket trading, which if it is reflected after the market opens,
would confirm the tech-focused index has slumped into a so-called 'bear'
market.
"In the past when you have had geopolitical flareups you tend to have a
very volatile periods on markets then normalisation, but it's difficult
to assess when we will get that," said LGIM portfolio manager Justin
Onuekwusi.
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A trader works at the Frankfurt stock exchange in Frankfurt,
Germany, February 22, 2022. REUTERS/Timm Reichert
THE COST OF CONFLICT
In the major FX markets, the dollar was up 0.5% against a basket of other top
currencies. Almost every asset class has seen a sharp increase in volatility
amid the deepening crisis. The Cboe Volatility Index, known as Wall Street's
fear gauge, is up more than 55% over the past nine days.
Fears Russia will now squeeze global energy markets saw Brent futures jump more
than 8% past $100 a barrel for the first time since September 2014. Nearly 40%
of the European Union's natural gas and 26% of its crude oil comes from Russia.
[O/R]
With both Ukraine and Russia also big crop producers, wheat and corn prices
surged over 5%, while gold jumped more than 1.7% to its highest since early
January 2021. [GOL/]
That dive for safety also saw yields on Germany's AAA-rated government bonds
drop 10 basis points to 1.119%, the lowest in three weeks.. The benchmark U.S.
10-year yield was down sharply too, going as low as 1.85% from its U.S. close of
1.977%.
Investors have also been grappling with the prospect of imminent policy
tightening by the U.S. Federal Reserve aimed at combating surging inflation. The
question now is whether the conflict will give central bankers a reason to delay
those moves or whether the further rise in energy prices could spur them on.
While expectations of an aggressive 50-basis-point hike at the Fed's March
meeting have eased, Fed funds futures continue to point to at least six rate
hikes this year. [FEDWATCH]
"Markets are now more adequately pricing in the risk of something horrific
happening. That, combined with the uncertainty, is a horrible environment to be
in. No one wants risk exposure when that's floating around," said Rob Carnell,
head of Asia Pacific research at ING.
(Additional reporting by Sujata Rao in London and Andrew Galbraith in Shanghai,
Editing by Angus MacSwan and Bernadette Baum)
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