Investment Strategies
UBS Lays Out Three Scenarios On Russia/Ukraine Crisis

The global economic and markets impact of the current crisis affecting Ukraine should be relatively limited, although the exact impact and severity of any fallout depends on a number of possible outcomes, UBS Wealth Management.
The global economic and markets impact of the current crisis
affecting Ukraine should be relatively limited, although the
exact impact and severity of any fallout depends on a number of
possible outcomes, UBS Wealth Management says.
With events moving so fast as to make specific forecasts
difficult, the Swiss banking firm has set out three scenarios,
with varying levels of probability. It set out ideas in a
research note requested by this publication.
In the first scenario, which UBS says carries a 50 per cent
probability, Russian troops stay in the Crimea, the International
Monetary Fund provides emergency financing and elections take
place in May. In this case, Russian actions have two primary
objectives: first, to ensure the Crimea region, where Russia has
naval bases and strong popular support, does not fall under
control of the interim government in Kiev, and second, to send a
message to the Ukrainian coalition being formed ahead of the
upcoming elections in May, to take Russian interests
seriously.
UBS reckons that in this situation, “we do not foresee further
escalation of hostilities and no interruption of the flow of gas
from Russia to Europe through the Ukrainian pipelines. A
disorderly default of Ukrainian debt is avoided, but the IMF will
likely require moderate private sector burden sharing”.
In the second scenario, to which the bank attaches a 40 per cent
probability, Russian troops stay in the Crimea but an interim
Ukrainian government is unable to successfully hold elections.
The situation in the run-up to May 25 deteriorates as the
legitimacy of the interim government is challenged, secessionist
movements grow. Meanwhile, elections are postponed or cancelled.
Russia's military remains alert and threatens Crimea military
bases, but doesn't enter further into the Ukraine or clash with
opposition forces. IMF negotiations fail and the country has to
restructure its debt. Gas supply from Russia to Western Europe
gets temporarily interrupted.
In the second scenario, Ukraine’s economy goes through a sharp
recession and its currency falls, while the central banks runs
out of dollars; there is a limited effect on the European Union.
In this case, Ukraine defaults on Eurobonds; other payments are
missed too. Debt restructuring with significant private sector
burden sharing and oversight from the IMF takes place.
Third scenario
Under the third scenario, to which UBS gives a 10 per cent chance
of happening, Russian troops advance to the interior of the
Ukraine and a broad-based conflict unravels. Russian military is
brought in to regain Kremlin control. Violence escalates as do
tensions between Russia and the West. Secessionist movements in
the Crimea grow, adding to theses tensions and increasing the
risk of a country break-up. IMF negotiations fail and the country
defaults on payments in June. Gas supply from Russia to Western
Europe gets interrupted.
UBS said its base case is that Russian troops stay in the Crimea,
the IMF provides emergency financing to Ukraine and elections
take place in May. As a result, it expects Russian equities to
recover from the sell-off of last week. In terms of sovereign
bonds, it sees Russia remaining a solid sovereign with strong
credit fundamentals.
As a result of its analysis, UBS said it is “comfortable” with
Russian sovereign credit and see corrections as a buying
opportunity.
“We would expect volatility in Russian corporate bonds to be
elevated on the back of negative headline noise. We remain
comfortable with holding bonds of the Russian majority
state-owned banks and Gazprom to maturity, given the high
probability of state support to be provided in case of need. We
expect the Russian rouble to remain under pressure and trade
largely in a range of 35.5 to 37.0 against the US dollar,” it
said.
The bank points out that from an emerging markets viewpoint, the
impact on emerging market investments as a whole is small.
Ukraine's equities are not part of the benchmark EM equity index
nor is its currency part of the EM foreign exchange index
(ELMI+). The country’s government bonds represent 2.3 per cent of
the EMBIG index and its corporate bonds account for just 0.45 per
cent of that reference index.