Russian stocks plummeted on Thursday and the country’s currency sank against the dollar to its lowest level on record, prompting Russia’s central bank to announce emergency support measures, as news of the long-anticipated Russian military action against Ukraine hit headlines.
In a televised address, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “special military operation” in Ukraine that he claimed was meant to protect civilians and demilitarize Ukraine, but which Western leaders denounced as a baseless act of aggression.
President Joe Biden late Wednesday issued a statement saying that Putin “has chosen a premeditated war that will bring a catastrophic loss of life and human suffering.”
“The prayers of the entire world are with the people of Ukraine tonight as they suffer an unprovoked and unjustified attack by Russian military forces,” Biden said.
Following Putin’s announcement, there were reports that Russian forces fired missiles at several Ukrainian cities, landed troops on its south coast, and that tanks and other military vehicles rolled into Ukraine from Russia-aligned Belarus.
The Russian Defense Ministry said it had struck Ukrainian military assets with precision strikes and wasn’t targeting populated areas, claiming that “there is no threat to civilian population.”
Markets reacted forcefully to the military action, battering Russian assets.
Russia’s banks, metals exporters, and large commodities firms all saw sharp selloffs.
Sberbank led the declines, down 45.9 percent by 5:47 a.m. New York time, followed by EN+ Group International PJSC, an aluminum and power producer, which was down 40.5 percent. Russian gas giant Gazprom was down 34.4 percent.
The selloffs prompted the MOEX exchange to announce a halt to trading, which was resumed several hours later.
Russia’s central bank announced an emergency support package, boosting liquidity to markets and acting with foreign currency market interventions.
It added that it was poised to deploy “all necessary tools” to maintain business continuity and guard against financial instability.
News of the invasion sparked a hunt for safe havens, with investors around the world dumping equities in favor of gold and U.S. government securities.