U.S. Opening Bell: Stocks, Futures Plunge On Russian Bank Sanctions; Oil, Gold Up

 | Feb 28, 2022 07:44

  • SWIFT sanctions target Russian assets
  • Global companies distance from Russian businesses
  • Treasuries waver
  • US dollar advances
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    On Monday, as trading opened for the week, investors immediately sold off US futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, along with European stocks and even bonds, in response to SWIFT sanctions targeting Russian financial institutions.

    Gold traded higher but slipped from session highs.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Markets have been roiled by the escalating conflict in Ukraine and additional, more severe sanctions from the West. The ongoing hostilities are putting essential commodity supplies, including grain, energy, and metals at risk, which could worsen the pandemic-era inflation levels that were already weighing on the global economy.

    This development could impact the US Federal Reserve's plans for a series of interest rate hikes which many believe will start in March. Investors have repositioned bets on aggressive hikes and are now anticipating just under six in 2022.

    This morning, all four major US equity contracts were over 1% in the red while European stocks fell after the EU, US, UK, and Canada announced additional sanctions against Russia.

    The STOXX 600 index opened 0.6% lower. There were only sellers and the drop extended to 1.55% as of the time of writing. While geopolitics has been the apparent driver of price activity, technicals are also playing their part.