GLOBAL MARKETS-New Russia sanctions rattle markets, rouble tumbles

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 17 Juli 2014 | 18.12

Thu Jul 17, 2014 6:30am EDT

  * Russia assets fall as U.S., EU impose more sanctions      * European shares sag after strongest day in three months      * Safe-haven assets get lift; yen, gold, bunds all higher        By Marc Jones      LONDON, July 17 (Reuters) - A tightening of Western  sanctions on Russia rattled world markets on Thursday, sending  Moscow stocks and the rouble tumbling and lifting traditional  safe-haven currencies and bonds.      The new U.S. sanctions announced late on Wednesday  effectively shut off longer-term dollar funding for companies  close to President Vladimir Putin. The EU also expanded its  punishments for certain firms and said it would ask two of its  development banks to halt lending in Russia.          Moscow's MICEX stock market dropped 2.7 percent in  morning deals, its dollar-traded cousin, the RTS index,  fell 4.4 percent and the rouble dropped more than 1  percent against both the dollar and the euro.       "From the West's perspective they could not have chosen a  better time to intensify sanctions," said Societe Generale  strategist Regis Chatellier. "Until a few weeks back Russia was  in a position of relative strength because there was massive  pressure on oil, but that is not the case any more."      Safe-haven assets were given a broad lift, with concerns now  that Moscow - which provides much of Europe's gas - could hit  back with retaliatory measures.       The Japanese yen, Swiss franc, gold and  German government bonds were all higher as the  selling of riskier assets accelerated.      The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 extended early  falls to be down 0.5 percent by 1030 GMT as some mixed earnings  and Wednesday's gains - the biggest in three months - also bred  caution among investors                      SAFETY FIRST      Asian equities had dipped overnight too, led by Chinese  shares. That came despite a fresh record high for Wall Street's  Dow Jones Industrial index.       Mid-year earnings are now in full swing. Later in the day  internet giant Google reports its results, topping a heavy slate  of big hitters which also includes Morgan Stanley.       "U.S. earnings have been pretty good so far," said IG Index  strategist Alastair McCaig. "It's early doors, but at the moment  the ratio is seven-to-one beating expectations."       In the currency market, the Russia tensions helped the  safe-haven yen inch up to 101.50 yen to the dollar. It  also hit a five-month high against the euro as the recent  downward trend in the euro zone's shared currency continued.      "There seems to be a bit more of a safe-haven bid for the  yen here because of what is going on with Russia," said Jane  Foley, a foreign exchange strategist at Rabobank in London.      "Remember earlier in the week we also had (Federal Reserve  chief) Janet Yellen warning about some stocks being a bit  overvalued... so there is anxiety not too far below the surface  about some asset prices."      Data suggesting a shaky start for Germany in the new quarter  and wariness about banking problems in Portugal have hobbled the  euro this week. Newly revised euro zone June inflation data also  bolstered the case for record-low ECB interest rates.      Inflation remained at 0.5 percent, year-on-year figures on  Thursday showed, deep in what ECB chief Mario Draghi has termed  the sub-1 percent "danger zone."      By contrast, Britain is expected to raise rates later this  year. Consequently, the euro hovered near the 78.88 pence   it touched on Wednesday, a low not seen since  September 2012.           OIL, GOLD CLIMB       Although the Russia/West tensions were rumbling in the  background, commodities markets appeared less directly impacted  by the concerns.      U.S. crude oil extended gains after rising more than $1 the  previous day, after government data showed U.S. stockpiles  dropped last week. U.S. crude was up 0.25 percent at  $101.45 a barrel with Brent fetching 107.66.      Aluminium held steady after touching a 16-month high in  light of upbeat data from top consumer China, while Shanghai  copper fell to its lowest in a fortnight on worries about a  possible bond default in China's construction sector.      Gold ticked higher to trade above $1,302 an ounce, though it  remained near a four-week low as investors weighed the  possibility U.S. interest rates would rise sooner than expected.         Gold has been under pressure since tensions in Iraq have  calmed, and Yellen said on Tuesday the U.S. central bank could  raise rates earlier or faster if hiring and wages take off in an  unexpected way.      (Additional reporting by Sujata Rao in London; Editing by Mark  Trevelyan)  
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