Chart Of The Day: Euro Facing Considerable Downside Risk

 | Mar 16, 2022 14:28

There are plenty of geopolitical headwinds roiling global markets right now. Unfortunately for the EU, the eurozone appears to be at the vortex of many of them. And the euro, the region's single currency, appears to be bearing the brunt of much of the current risk.

As Russia's incursion into Ukraine grinds on, the refugee crisis it's created will burden an economy already struggling to maintain growth. Sven Jari Stehn, Chief European Economist at Goldman Sachs warns that if Russian President Vladimir Putin were to shut off the natural gas supply Russia is currently sending to European countries, rising gas prices would reduce GDP growth in the euro area by 0.6%. He cautions it could go as high as 0.9% in Germany, Europe's economic engine.

If Germany's economy were to flag, it would be difficult to ignore the likely additional repercussions to the EU economy as a whole.

Moreover, rising gas prices will further inflate already spiking inflation. Still, it's difficult to believe that Russia would take such a drastic step since it would hurt the country's already reeling economy even more. But Putin's ambition, and ego, should never be underestimated.

Whatever happens, the eurozone has already been pummeled by the blowback of war and the European Central Bank's hawkish shift. The double whammy has sent European stocks and the EUR/USD into a selloff.