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Russian Invasion Of Ukraine To Trigger Stagflation, Expert Warns

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Feb 20, 2022
  • 2 min read

President Joe Biden and US officials including Secretary of State Antony Blinken are sounding the alarm on a potential impending Russian invasion of Ukraine. That’s adding to pressure on equity markets, as one prominent economist warns of the stagflationary risks if there is, indeed, military conflict, Julie Hyman reported for Yahoo Finance.


Photo Insert: US President Joe Biden and his top officials are all but convinced that Russia will invade Ukraine.



“If it were to get worse — which is a big if — a very strong stagflationary wind would blow through the global economy,” Mohamed El-Erian, president of Queens College at Cambridge University, told Yahoo Finance.


“The marketplace now is pricing somewhere between we get a good diplomatic resolution, or we stay in this uncomfortable no war and no peace. We’re not really pricing in the possibility that this may be an armed conflict.” Stagflation occurs when economic growth slows sharply and inflation rises.



The possibility of Russia invading Ukraine has already triggered an uptick in volatility in global equity, commodity, and currency markets as investors try to game out the effect on food and energy supplies, plus the impact on European politics.


Contradictory headlines about the positioning of Russian troops have only complicated efforts to analyze the potential economic fallout.


All the news: Business man in suit and tie smiling and reading a newspaper near the financial district.

El-Erian, who’s also chief economic advisor to insurance giant Allianz, highlighted the potential for costs to continue to rise on a host of commodities if a Russia-Ukraine war materializes.


Russia is a big exporter, producing 45.6% of the world’s palladium, 15.1% of its platinum, 9.2% of its gold, and 8.4% of its oil, according to JPMorgan. “So the first element, simply a big cost-push,” El-Erian said.

Market & economy: Market economist in suit and tie reading reports and analysing charts in the office located in the financial district.

“Second, you would have a significant blow to sentiment, confidence, and a further blow to globalization.”


Exacerbating market volatility, according to El-Erian, is the fact that the Federal Reserve, and other major central banks, are in a tightening cycle: “For a long time, this market had the anchor of a very accommodating liquidity regime. Inflation changes all that. We can no longer depend and rely and predict massive injections by the Federal Reserve.”





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