Overnight,the Asian markets reflected anxiety over the Ukraine crisis as shares dropped in Japan and Hong Kong,along with US stock futures,and gold crested to a six month high.Oil rose as well.Now the vote for Crimea's annexation by Russia-totally dismissed by the West as a charade-has gone Moscow's way,unresolved issues both within Crimea itself and in Eastern Ukraine could rivet the attention of global markets in the days ahead.
The Crimean vote went 95% for seceding from Ukraine and joining Russia in an atmosphere of haste and armed intimidation by Russian troops,who were posted in armoured personnel carriers outside polling places.Anti-Putin activists and even some journalists were harassed,beaten and branded as traitors in the days leading up to the election.It was only safe for peaceful protestors on the outskirts of town,fearful of club-wielding toughs inspired by the Kremlin.
Largely unreported on TV news,the tension between Ukraine and Russia over Eastern and Southern Ukraine could make Crimea look like a picnic,with concentrations of troops on both sides mobilising in recent days.In Southern Ukraine,80 Russian troops occupied a village with a natural gas station over the weekend.The Eastern cities of Donetsk,Kharkiv and Lugansk are also potential flashpoints,threatening to become the biggest challenge to market sentiment since the dark days of the Eurozone crisis,as Nicholas Spiro of Spiro Sovereign Strategists put it.
A Russian invasion of Eastern Ukraine could raise geopolitical strife to a new high and ripple strongly through the global markets.
With worries around certain emerging markets,notably China and Ukraine at present-2014 is already shaping up as a more volatile year for shares,said Shane Oliver,head of investment strategy and chief economist at AMP Capital.
Investors may be looking over their shoulders at these exogenous events for the foreseeable future.
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Showing posts with label Cold War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cold War. Show all posts
Monday, March 17, 2014
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Special Access:The National Intelligence Director
President Barack Obama has planned to retire Cold War era military assets in order to save money.In consequence,National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair says we face some tough decisions about electro-optical systems from that era.Today's enemy is hard to find,easy to kill;the Cold War enemy was easy to find,hard to kill.Today's enemy requires a different kind of intelligence system.As well,we have to get the National Security Agency involved in protecting the larger body-in cyber defense,Mr.Blair remarked to the House Intelligence Committee.As DNI,Mr.Blair oversees all 18 U.S. intelligence agencies.The post was created after the 9-11 attacks.John Negroponte,the first DNI,was his predecessor.Mr.Blair has expressed concern that economic developments pose a threat to national security that even exceeds that of terrorism at the present time.
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