Oil leads commodities charge as shares and euro dumped
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[March 07, 2022] By
Lawrence White
LONDON (Reuters) - Oil and other
commodities prices soared while shares sank in frantic trading on Monday
as the risk of a U.S. and European ban on Russian crude imports
threatened stretched supply chains and heaped further inflationary
pressure on economies worldwide.
The euro extended its slide, hitting parity against the safe-haven Swiss
franc, on rising fears of a stagflationary shock that might lead the
European Central Bank to maintain its ultra-easy policy.
Euro zone inflation-linked government bond yields fell sharply, with
that of Germany's 10-year linker down 10 basis points to a record low of
-2.453%, as inflation expectations surged. [DE10YIL=RR]
Gold prices hit $2,000 for the first time in 1-1/2 years, with investors
rushing to the safe-haven metal while palladium hit an all-time high, as
the Russia-Ukraine crisis continued and Western governments considered
further sanctions. [XAU=] [XPD=]
"If the West cuts off most of Russia's energy exports it would be a
major shock to global markets," said BofA chief economist Ethan Harris.
Russia calls the campaign it launched on Feb. 24 a "special military
operation", saying it has no plans to occupy Ukraine.
Having surged 18% in wild early action, Brent was last quoted 6.25%
higher on the day at $125.44, while U.S. crude rose $7.19 to $122.78.
[O/R]
That jump - which follows a 21% surge in Brent crude last week - will be
costly for consumers and leave them with less money to spend on other
things, a threat to global economic growth.
Worries about growth saw S&P 500 stock futures drop 1.75%, while Nasdaq
futures shed 1.7%. U.S. 10-year bond yields also dropped to their lowest
since early January.
Europe's benchmark STOXX index fell 2.55% to a one-year low, as
Germany's DAX looked set to confirm a bear market after suffering a 20%
decline since its January high..
Asian markets earlier set the tone for a grim day in equities. Japan's
Nikkei sank 3.4% to a 15-month low, while MSCI's broadest index of
Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost 2.77%. Chinese blue chips shed
3.19%.
HIKES IN DOUBT
BofA's Harris estimates the loss of Russia's 5 million barrels could see
crude prices double to $200 a barrel.
It is not just oil, with commodity prices having their strongest start
to any year since 1915. London nickel prices soared as much as 30.7%,
their biggest daily percentage gain on record, as supply disruption
fears gripped markets.
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A worker collects a crude oil sample at an oil well operated by
Venezuela's state oil company PDVSA in Morichal, Venezuela, July 28,
2011. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins
That will only add to the global trend towards higher inflation. Data this week
is expected to show annual U.S. consumer price growth at a stratospheric 7.9%,
and the core measure at 6.4%.
The Russia-Ukraine conflict also weighed on talks aimed at reviving Iran's
nuclear deal with major powers, after Tehran accused Russia of "interference".
All of which complicates the policy picture for the European Central Bank when
it meets this week, as the soaring cost of oil threatened an economic condition
known as stagflation, where prices soar even as growth flatlines.
"Given the potential for stagflation is very real, the ECB is likely to maintain
maximum flexibility with its asset purchase programme at 20 billion euros
through Q2 and potentially beyond, thus effectively pushing out the timing of
rate hikes," said Tapas Strickland, an economist at NAB.
EURO OVERWHELMED
With the outlook for European growth darkening, the single currency took a
further beating down to $1.0829 and was in danger of testing its 2020 trough
around $1.0635.
The euro also tumbled against the Swiss franc, breaking under 1.0000 for the
first time since early 2015. That prompted a rare verbal intervention by the
Swiss central bank, which repeated its pledge to intervene in the currency
markets to curb franc strength if necessary.
The dollar was firmer, supported in part by a strong payrolls report that only
reaffirmed market expectations for a Fed hike this month. The dollar index was
last at 99.253 having climbed 2.3% last week.
"Events in the Ukraine are increasingly overwhelming the euro," said Richard
Franulovich, head of FX strategy at Westpac.
"With safe-haven flows likely to continue for sometime yet and Fed officials
eager to press on with their policy normalisation plans, 100+ for (the dollar
index) is just a matter of time."
(Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney; Editing by Sam Holmes and
Catherine Evans)
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