Archive - Mar 4, 2014
Watch As Russian Troops Fire Warning Shoots Against Ukrainian Soldiers In The Crimea
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 08:22 -0500
Amicable resolution between Russia and the Ukraine as the market seems to be suggesting, or not? Watch this clip of what happened just hours earlier at the Belbek air force base, in which Russian troops fired warning shots aat approaching Ukrainian soldiers and you decide.
Market Reaction: Not Everyone's Buying Putin's Shift
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 08:21 -0500
Of course, US equities are large and in charge in the flight-from-safety as marginal money pushes S&P futures back up within a smidge of record highs (hey, why not, Ukraine is 'fixed' right?) but away from stocks, even USDJPY (that pillar of equity confidence inspiration) is not rising as fast. Treasuries and gold are being sold but again not back to levels pre-Ukraine-esclation from Friday. European stocks are surging but not as ebulient as US stocks. Russia's MICEX has bounced, recovering aroung half its losses and Ukraine bonds are rallying (as is the Hyrvnia).
Kerry Lands In Kiev, Sanctions Against Russia "In Matter Of Days", US Prepares $1 Billion Loan For Ukraine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 08:10 -0500
While the world digests the recent Putin press conference in which he appeared to superficially soften his stance on the Ukraine, US SecState John Kerry lands in Kiev while the state department announced that sanctions against Russia are "coming in a matter of days", and as the US announces it is preparing a $1 billion aid package for the Ukraine, which despite the toned down rhetoric by Putin just lost the Gazprom discount for natgas due to non-payment meaning its reserves will be depleted even faster, suggesting a far greater urgency to providing funding for the Ukraine in what some have said is now a fight between Putin and the IMF, as the latter tries to drain what little funds remain in the nation, while the former urgently seeks to keep it afloat.
Frontrunning: March 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 07:56 -0500- Bank of England
- Borrowing Costs
- Carlyle
- China
- Chrysler
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- Conference Board
- Corruption
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- Dendreon
- Department of Justice
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- Fitch
- Ford
- General Motors
- Hong Kong
- Housing Market
- Iceland
- India
- Japan
- Keefe
- Lennar
- Mexico
- Middle East
- Morgan Stanley
- Obama Administration
- Reuters
- Rosenberg
- Standard Chartered
- Starwood
- Starwood Hotels
- Time Warner
- Toyota
- Ukraine
- Viacom
- Vladimir Putin
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- No need to use military force in Ukraine for now: Putin (Reuters)
- Russia Orders Drill Troops Back to Bases (WSJ)
- Ukraine premier agrees to reforms for aid package (FT)
- Japan Base Wages Rise for First Time in Nearly Two Years (WSJ)
- Only the algos are trading: Citigroup Joins JPMorgan in Seeing Trading-Revenue Drop (BBG)
- Vietnam sends blogger to prison for critical posts (AP)
- At White House, Israel's Netanyahu pushes back against Obama diplomacy (Reuters)
- Obama to offer new tax breaks for workers in election year budget pitch (Reuters)
- China Banks Show Too-Connected-to-Fail Link to Shadow Loans (BBG)
- Ex-BOK Deputy Lee Named to Head South Korea Central Bank (BBG)
- No mortgage origination problem in the UK: Mortgage approvals climb to six year high (Telegraph)
Global Market Rollercoaster: Full Overnight Event Summary
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 07:21 -0500Since Ukraine is the only wildcard variable in the news these past few days, it was to be expected that following i) the end of the large Russian military drill begun two weeks ago and ii) a press conference by Putin in which he toned down the war rhetoric, even if he did not actually say anything indicating Russia will difuse the tension, futures have soared and have retraced all their losses from yesterday. And not only in the US - European equity indices gapped higher at the open this morning in reaction to reports that Russian President Putin has ordered troops engaged in military exercises to return to their bases. Consequent broad based reduction in risk premia built up over the past few sessions meant that in spite of looming risk events (ECB, BoE policy meetings and NFP release this Friday), Bund also failed to close the opening gap lower. At the same time, USD/JPY and EUR/CHF benefited as the recent flight to quality sentiment was reversed, with energy and precious metal prices also coming off overnight highs.
Futures Soar, Near Record As Putin Speaks, Softens Russian Stance On Ukraine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 06:51 -0500
Futures are soaring and are just shy of their record high first following news that the Russian military drill has ended, even if Russian troops stationed in the Crimea remain, but more importantly driven by a just completed press conference by Vladimir Putin in his residence outside of Moscow, in which the Russian leader appears to have softened his stance on Crimean aggression, saying he does not consider adding Crimea to its territory. What the market is focusing on is the repeat of Putin's stance that he will not be sending troops to the Crimea yet (even though they are there already), and that he suddenly appears concerned about the impact on markets and the fallout from sanctions.
It Begins: Gazprom Warns European Gas "Supply Disruptions" Possible
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 00:03 -0500
We had previously warned that Putin's "trump card" had yet to be played and with Obama (and a quickly dropping list of allies) preparing economic sanctions (given their limited escalation options otherwise), it was only a matter of time before the pressure was once again applied from the Russian side. As ITAR-TASS reports, Russia's Gazprom warned that not only could it cancel its "supply discount" as Ukraine's overdue payments reached $1.5 billion but that "simmering political tensions in Ukraine, that are aggravated by inadequate economic conditions, may cause disruptions of gas supplies to Europe." And with that one sentence, Europe will awaken to grave concerns over Russia's next steps should sanctions be applied.
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