• The escalation of the conflict between Russia and the Ukraine is likely to have important economic and financial consequences through three main transmission channels — energy, trade, and the financial sector — depending how current and future sanctions will play out. Note that Russia is in a stronger position than it was in 2014 economically speaking.
  • As the world reopens from Covid-19 with higher inflation, disrupted energy and supply chains, and sensitive financial markets, our scenario “Conflict escalation” highlight impacts on Europe’s inflation (+100bps), growth (-0.5pp), equity markets (-10%), sovereign and corporate spreads (+20-60bps), and policy outlook (dovish pivot, fiscal support reloaded to offset impact). Severity of sanctions is a clear gradient for economic and financial markets outcomes.
  • In an extreme “Black-out” scenario in which Russia turns off Europe’s gas supply, the natural gas price would rise to an average of 140 EUR/MW, because alternative suppliers are limited. This would add up to +2.5pp to our current Eurozone inflation forecast of 3.8% this year. As for the headwinds to economic growth, a recession will be all but certain.

125 results

Mar 11, 2022 | Press & Media

The (energy) price of war for European households

You will find here our analyse on the impact of Russia-Ukraine crisis on European households. Read the article.

Mar 09, 2022 | Press & Media

Can Europe do without Russian gas?

You will find here our analyse on the impact of Russian gas to Europe being cut off. What else can we do except for counting on warmer weather?

Mar 01, 2022 | Press & Media

Russia-Ukraine crisis: Conflict escalation

You will find here our first take on the current situation of the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

125 results