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Markets wrong in hoping worst of geopolitical

crisis is over: Chris Wood


In its recent GREED & fear note Wood said, in the base case, it expects the Russia-Ukraine
conflict to continue in the months leading US presidential election in November.

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Chris Wood
Puneet Wadhwa New Delhi
4 min read Last Updated : Apr 26 2024 | 10:14 AM IST
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Global financial markets are wrong in hoping that the worst of the geopolitical flare ups such
as the Iran – Israel conflict, and the Russia – Ukraine war is over, wrote Christopher Wood,
global head of equity strategy at Jefferies in his recent note to investors GREED & fear.
While most investors and media are focused on Fed policy and the 'endless chatter' of US Fed
governors, Wood believes the news flow in the financial sphere pales into complete
insignificance compared with the tectonic shifts going on in geopolitics.

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“GREED & fear gets the sense that markets are currently hoping that tensions in the Middle
East/West Asia have peaked with Israel’s almost formalist kabuki-like response last weekend
to Iran’s attack on Israel the previous weekend. While it is natural for markets to have such
hopes, that is certainly not GREED & fear’s view. Rather the base case is that in both the
Ukraine-Russia conflict and in the Middle East tensions are likely to continue to escalate,”
Wood wrote in the latest note.

If the base case, he said, is that the Russia-Ukraine conflict will continue in the months
leading up to the November 2024 presidential election in the US, the concern for the Joe
Biden administration remains renewed Middle East tensions triggering a further rally in the
oil price at a time when the inflation issue is not yet fully dealt with.

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“GREED & fear would be astonished if the world has witnessed the last of Israel’s actions
against Iran following last week’s formalised response, though Israel can clearly bide its time
in terms of when to implement a more telling response, with the obvious high beta play an
Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities,” Wood wrote.

Such a move before the US Presidential election in November this year, Wood believes,
would be extremely provocative, given the likely impact on oil prices and related financial
markets.
Brent crude oil prices, meanwhile, continue to trade firm around the $90 a barrel mark. This
far in calendar year 2024 (CY24), Brent crude oil has risen around 17 per cent from nearly
$79 a barrel as at the end of December 2023. A large part of this rise has been on account of
geopolitical issues, besides OPEC+ moves to restrain supply.

Investment strategy

Going ahead, if geopolitical tensions between Iran and Israel escalate significantly, analysts
at UBS warn that there will be a risk of panic selling and increased volatility across global
stock markets. Moreover, the markets, especially the Indian stock market, will be keeping a
close eye on the fluctuations in crude oil prices, as geopolitical events such as the Iran –
Israel conflict frequently impact them.

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That said, analysts at UBS suggest investors do not panic and sell stocks or exit the stock
markets even if tensions due to the geopolitical events such as Iran – Israel conflict escalate.
While stock market experts caution against the volatility in the global stock markets in this
backdrop, they expect such choppy movement to be short-lived.

“We would caution against exiting markets in response to flare-ups in international conflicts.
Barring a serious disruption to oil supplies or trade routes, which remains a risk, the effects of
such episodes has tended to be short-lived,” wrote Mark Haefele, global wealth management
chief investment officer at UBS in a recent coauthored note.

Since the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the UBS note said, the S&P 500 index has been
higher two-thirds of the time 12 months after the start of a crisis. Half the time, markets have
only taken a month to recover, according to UBS’ analysis.

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