Business

FTSE 100 sees £53bn slump as Russia crisis adds to cocktail of anxieties for global markets

Wholesale gas costs have risen sharply while Bitcoin and stock market values have plunged further as tensions over Russia’s intentions concerning Ukraine add to the cocktail of concerns being juggled by global investors.

The market volatility builds on heavy sell-offs that saw the US Nasdaq index come under particular pressure and endure its worst week of trading since March 2020 last week.

That was largely down to fears of inflated market values and an accelerated pace of rate rises ahead as the Federal Reserve comes under growing pressure to cool surging inflation by raising interest rates at its meeting this week.

The start of the new trading week saw a sell-off in Europe gather pace – building on losses on Friday linked to the US rate and tech rout.

The flight from risk also saw Bitcoin fall more than 6% to below $34,000 for the first time since July last year.

The pound came under pressure too and was six tenths of a cent down on the dollar as the so-called safe haven US currency found support.

The FTSE 100 was 99 points – or 1.3% lower – in late morning deals, led by miners.

More from Business

That built on the losses of 1.2% witnessed on Friday.

Percentage falls in France, Germany and Italy on Monday were even sharper with the MIB in Milan off by more than 2.5%.

Articles You May Like

Prosecutors ask judge to drop charges against Donald Trump over 2020 election interference
Ørsted’s largest solar farm in the world is now online in Texas
Father rescues son from sinking car as Storm Bert wreaks havoc
Rapper Slowthai raped two women at after-show party, court hears
Hubble Telescope Finds Unexpectedly Hot Accretion Disk in FU Orionis