Markets brace for heavy falls as Russia-Ukraine crisis escalates

Markets brace for heavy falls as Russia-Ukraine crisis escalates

by Joseph Anthony
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Investors were bracing for a torrid day for Russian, Ukrainian and wider global markets when they reopen on Tuesday, after Vladimir Putin upped the ante in a crisis the West fears could unleash a major war.

In a lengthy televised address, the Russian president recognised two breakaway regions Donetsk and Luhansk in eastern Ukraine as independent entities and described Ukraine as an integral part of Russiaโ€™s history.
Tensions have already rattled global markets this year and wiped tens of billions of dollars off the value of Russian and Ukraine assets, but Mondayโ€™s escalation is expected to cause much worse.
โ€œIt is probably an understatement to say that it will be an ugly day (on the markets) tomorrow,โ€ said Viktor Szabo, an emerging market portfolio manager at abrdn in London.
โ€œI was hoping we werenโ€™t going to get here, but this is a significant step.โ€
Russian markets were still open when Putin announced his decision live on television following phone calls to the leaders of Germany and France.
The rouble losses reached 3.3 per cent, while Moscowโ€™s stock markets plunged to their lowest level in over a year as the dollar-denominated RTS index (.IRTS) finished the day 13.2 per cent lower and the rouble-based MOEX Russian index (.IMOEX) lost 10.5 per cent.
Analysts at Commonwealth Bank of Australia warned traders ahead of the start of Tuesdayโ€™s Asian open that Putinโ€™s decision to recognise the separatist-held areas of Ukraine would clearly exacerbate already high tensions
โ€œFinancial market participants now wait for a response from the United States and Europe,โ€ they added.
That response is expected to come in the shape of tough new sanctions.
Although other steps might come first, some of the most severe measures would be to cut Russiaโ€™s banks off from the SWIFT banking system and order a complete ban on EU, UK and US investment funds holding Russian government bonds.
At the end of last year, foreigners held just over $43 billion of OFZs, as Russiaโ€™s rouble-denominated bonds are known.
โ€œWe agreed (Britain) and (the EU) will coordinate to deliver swift sanctions against Putinโ€™s regime, and stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine,โ€ British Foreign Minister Liz Truss said on Twitter following a call with European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.
FUTURES SLUMP
Yields on Russiaโ€™s 10-year OFZs were expected to surge further having hit a high of 10.6 per cent on Monday. Russia has one of the biggest stockpiles of international FX reserves in the world at $630 billion, but the cost of insuring its sovereign debt against default has also soared to its highest since early 2016.
Analysts were also warning of the wider impact on global market confidence, which along with the pressures of fast-rising global borrowing costs this year, has already been hit by the tensions.
Futures markets were pointing to a 1.8 per cent fall on the S&P 500 on Wall Street later, a 2.2 per cent drop on Japanโ€™s Nikkei, a 2.5 per cent drop on the Nasdaq (.NQc1) and a 3.7 per cent slump on Germanyโ€™s DAX in Europe. Demand for traditional safe assets also saw US Treasuries rally.
โ€œThis step clearly increases uncertainty and thus creates further downside risk for global risk assets,โ€ said Manik Narain, head of emerging market strategy at UBS.
โ€œWe are going to see a negative reaction,โ€ added Ken Polcari, managing partner at Kace Capital Advisors in Florida. โ€œWe are going to test the Jan. 24 lows which was 4,220 on the S&P 500โ€.
REUTERS

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