Markets Rebound After Bordering On The Disorderly, But Rally Remains Susceptible To Reversal

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Markets Rebound After Bordering On Disorderly, But Reversal Risks HighFinancial markets have taken a hiatus after being whiplashed in recent
days on the news flow tracking the Russia-Ukraine conflict, with the threats from Western countries through sanctions and the counter
Wall Street's gains in the previous session, with the S-P 500 posting its biggest one-day percentage gain since June 2020 and the Nasdaq
tallying its most significant rise since March 2021 as oil prices posted their deepest plunge since the early pandemic days nearly two years
ago.While oil prices regained some footing, having fallen more than 12 per cent on Wednesday as the market weighed whether major producers
would boost supply to help plug the gap in output from Russia due to sanctions for its invasion of Ukraine.That even as 'flight to safety'
bets have eased and the appetite for a general rush into risky assets has jumped.But analysts warned the rally remains susceptible to
reversal as risks from the Russia-Ukraine conflict remain, primarily from higher oil prices on inflation and economic growth."Markets seem
to have latched on to a couple of slightly less dismal clues as to an excuse to rally hard in the last 24 hours
There are talks between Russia and Ukraine today in Turkey - that was already known, and Ukraine President Zelenskyy has also suggested that
he is prepared to compromise on issues such as Ukraine's neutrality to end the war - dropping NATO membership was also was in the markets
before yesterday," said Robert Carnell, Regional Head of Research for Asia-Pacific at ING."So far, (Mr) Zelenskyy says that he is not
prepared to cede territory
Yesterday, a potentially new market element was the UAE suggesting that the OPEC+ group should do more to quell oil price increases
However, there has already been some back-pedalling on that, so this feels unlikely to deliver a lasting impact on oil and maybe undermines
all the other market moves
Thin markets and short-covering probably helps explain a good chunk of the last 24 hour's market moves, which have seen oil swing from
Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba for the first meeting between the two since Russia invaded Ukraine two weeks ago.Mansoor Mohi-uddin, a
chief economist at the Bank of Singapore, told Reuters that financial markets rallied, hoping that Ukraine and Russia may start to negotiate
more seriously on their differences."The reaction, however, is unlikely to prove sustainable as the two countries have major differences
still and the military conflict looks set to intensify with Russia aiming to capture Ukraine's key cities."Indeed, Indian equity bourses
started the day on a high, while the rupee recovered for the second straight session after hitting fresh record lows repeatedly in recent
days
The FX markets have borne the brunt of volatility."As can be said for many other financial instruments, developments in FX are bordering on
the disorderly
With commodity markets now taking another leg higher on speculation over embargoes on Russian exports, fears of stagflation in Europe will
continue to build