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Ukraine
This Week in AsiaEconomics

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine: Asia braces as oil prices go ‘berserk’

  • Energy-importing Asian countries outside China should brace for steep rises in crude oil bills and energy costs, expert warns
  • Households and companies could bear the brunt, with India, Thailand, South Korea and Vietnam likely to be hit hardest

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Oil prices hit their highest since 2008 on Monday at about US$123 a barrel. Photo: AP
Su-Lin Tan
Energy-importing Asian economies outside China should brace for steep rises in crude oil bills and energy costs as prices go “berserk” over the Russia-Ukraine conflict, investment bank Natixis said.
Much of the impact could be borne by households and companies especially in countries like India and Thailand, Natixis said.
While direct trade with Russia is limited for most Asian economies, it is the wider repercussions of high oil prices that will indirectly hurt Asian economies, Natixis emerging Asia economist Trinh Nguyen said during an online panel on Monday.
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“The markets focused on oil because the oil [price] has gone basically berserk,” Nguyen said.

“What is really important is not direct imports and exports but the whole of the Russia and Ukraine play on the commodity market.”

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Oil prices have been rising since the coronavirus pandemic started as supply chain disruptions slow supply and delivery and force up freight costs.
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