Russian invasion unleashes turbulence on world markets
World market

Share prices tumbled and key commodity prices surged as the financial markets reacted to the news on Thursday that Russia had launched a full-scale attack on Ukraine.

Germany’s DAX index had plummeted by just below 4 per cent at close of play, falling to 14,052.10 points.

At the end of trading, the MDax, the index for medium-sized companies, had slipped by 3.84 per cent to 30,663.58 points.

Britain’s FTSE 100 index saw its biggest one-day fall since June 2020.

By the end of trading on Thursday, £77 billion ($103 billion) had been wiped from the value of the Britain’s 100 biggest listed companies, the Press Association (PA) news agency reported.

This was equivalent to a drop of 3.9 per cent.

“Our worst fears have been realised,” said portfolio manager Thomas Altmann from QC Partners in Frankfurt. “There is war raging in Europe.”

The U.S. markets followed the European slide. The benchmark Dow Jones and Nasdaq both opened over 2.5 per cent down on the previous day’s close.

The rout was started in Asia, where stock markets showed heavy losses as news of the invasion broke in the early hours.

In Tokyo, the Nikkei 225 benchmark index ended the day down 1.81 per cent, at 25,970.82 points.

The CSI 300 index of the 300 most important companies from mainland China lost 2.03 per cent, to end the day at 4,529.32 points.

The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong was down 3.6 per cent, at 22,802.23 points.

In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 index closed 2.98 per cent lower, at 6,990.63 points.

In Russia itself, the benchmark RTS-Index at one point dropped by nearly half to 610. It then partly recovered to be some 35 per cent down compared to the previous day’s close.

Shares in gas giant Gazprom lost about a third of their value.

The Russian rouble meanwhile fell at one point to a record low against the U.S. dollar, losing 6 per cent of its value.

The Russian central bank announced it would intervene in the market to prevent any further decrease in the rouble’s price.

The euro also lost ground against the dollar, falling 1.4 per cent to 1.114.

Key commodities such as oil and wheat on the other hand saw sharp price increases during the day.

A barrel (159 litres) of North Sea Brent cost more than $100 for the first time since 2014.

It initially jumped to more than $103, about 6 per cent higher than at the start of the morning’s trading.

This brings the increase in the Brent price this year to around 30 per cent, after the price doubled last year.

The price of American West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil jumped by a similar amount, hitting nearly $100 in trading on Thursday.

The price for a bushel of wheat, meanwhile, rose by more than 5 per cent to just under 935 U.S. cents on Thursday, the highest level since 2012.

Russia is one of the most important producers of wheat worldwide.

The price on the Chicago Commodity Exchange (COBT) had risen by the maximum possible amount of 50 U.S. cents during the morning’s trading, said commodities expert Carsten Fritsch from Commerzbank.

The conflict puts double the pressure on wheat, however, as Ukraine is also one of the world’s big wheat producers. Together, the two countries account for about a quarter of global trade.

Aluminium prices also surged early on Thursday.

On the London Stock Exchange, the price of one ton of the metal rose by 2.9 per cent to $3,388, passing the previous high reached during the economic crisis of 2008.

Natural gas – of which Russia is a major global supplier – is needed for aluminium production.

Gold – regarded as a safe haven investment in uncertain times – saw its price rise towards the $2,000 mark on the London Stock Exchange.

One troy ounce (31.1 grams) was trading at up to $1,974 on Thursday, its highest level since September 2020.

 
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