Over six months since Russia invaded Ukraine in what Moscow calls its "special military operation" thousands have been killed, millions made homeless and the world has seen the worst East-West tensions since the Cold War.
It has also thrown global financial markets into severe turmoil as the charts below show.
1/RECESSION FEARS
Recessions now look almost certain in Europe as prices of gas, critical for households and industry, more than trebled since June alone on fears Russia will cut off its supplies, possibly leading to energy rationing in some economies.
Yet the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and other central banks are determined to crush the inflation spiralling energy costs are fuelling, even if higher interest rates are bound to further squeeze households and companies struggling with rising costs.
GRAPHIC - Recession bound?
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2/GROWING PAINS
Agricultural markets whipsawed after the invasion but have proved remarkably flexible since. Wheat and corn - Ukraine and Russia's key exports - have swooped right back down after an initial price surge, while Moscow's main source of income, oil, is now fetching less than when the invasion started.
GRAPHIC - Six months of the Ukraine war
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3/INFLATION PALPITATIONS
The surge in energy and food prices, in combination with post-pandemic supply chain strains, have driven inflation rates around the world to levels last seen in the 1970s. This has had widespread ramifications for bond markets especially where borrowing costs have ballooned and default worries deepened.
GRAPHIC - CEE currencies crushed by crisis
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Graphic - German, Italian and CEE indexes underperform
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7/CHEMICALS AND CAR PARTS
Shares of chemical companies have suffered some of the biggest declines since the invasion, since natural gas plays a key role in their manufacturing process. Car parts makers have also been hit hard, partly because Russia was a major market for firms such as VW and Mercedes and partly because Ukraine and Russia have also been suppliers.
"European Chemical companies have had a bit of a torrid time," said Mirabaud equity analyst William Mileham. "There have been production stoppages, and discussions around potential gas rationing have hit their share prices hard recently."
Ukraine has defaulted as the war has wrecked its economy and finances. Sanctions have also pushed Russia into its first sovereign debt default in decades and left over $25 billion of the country's corporate debt unpaid.
"Russian corporates have shown a very strong willingness to keep paying foreign creditors, even with the obstacles that sanctions have placed upon them," Jeff Grills at Aegon Asset Management added, though.
GRAPHIC - Credit rating moves linked to Russia-Ukraine war fallout
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10/CORPORATE EXODUS
Big brands from Nike and Coca-Cola to IKEA and Apple are among over 1,000 global firms that have exited Russia or made public plans to scale back their activities there, according to a list https://som.yale.edu/story/2022/over-1000-companies-have-curtailed-operations-russia-some-remain?company=shell&country= compiled by researchers at Yale.
It adds up to billions of dollars worth of assets. But others have either stayed or maintained https://moralratingagency.org what they have described as essential or unsellable parts of their businesses in Russia.
"We have never seen anything of this magnitude in economic history," said Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Senior Associate Dean for Leadership Studies at Yale, who has led the project.
GRAPHIC - Companies pulling out of Russia
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By Marc Jones
(Additional reporting by Noah Browning and Nina Chestney in London, Danilo Masoni in Milan and Nerijus Adomaitis in Oslo; Editing by Tomasz Janowski)