EUR Shorts Want Action No Talk From ECB

 | Apr 14, 2014 07:09AM ET

The status quo in the Ukraine was never going to hold, something had to give and it seem the match has been lit over the weekend. Spread of violence to more towns with the uptick of skirmishes between local law enforcement and pro-Russian separatist forces have now taken lives, further magnifying tensions in the global financial markets.

This fresh escalation of tension has added to the pressures of last week's equity technology sell off. Euro bourses are starting this school holiday week on the back foot, especially Germany's DAX index - it's particularly sensitive to events in the Ukraine due to Germany and Russia's close trade ties. Investors should expect any Ukraine event risk tension to be playing a major part in containing "risk-taking" in this new-week. Obviously not helping either liquidity or prices will be the Easter holiday. Already this morning the market has seen the commodities sector benefiting, with the "yellow metal" and "black gold" in demand from a flight to safety assets (up +0.8% to $1,327.20 and Brent $108.08 +0.7% respectively). However, overall event risk continues to remain relatively contained, just look at the movement in USD/JPY. Usually when an asset classes come under stress, historically it is the Yen that get bought the most often. Currently, dollar-yen is relatively unchanged against the "mighty" buck (¥101.67).