Howe's facet tour to Stamford Bridge on Sunday to stand Chelsea, who might be gambling their second game because the Russian billionaire's UK belongings had been frozen following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Chelsea are not allowed to signal new gamers, renew contracts or sell healthy tickets beneath the stringent new guidelines imposed on Thursday.
The sanctions have raised fears over the membership's future but Thomas Tuchel's group showed no signs and symptoms of being distracted of their three-1 win at Norwich just hours after the government's assertion.
Howe, who become named February's Premier League manager of the month on Friday, expects third-placed Chelsea to hold to block out the turmoil after they face Newcastle.
"I don't think it'll have any relating Chelsea and the way they play," stated the Newcastle boss, whose side prolonged their unbeaten league run to nine video games with a 2-1 victory at Southampton on Thursday.
"For us, you can not trade our instruction in any manner. I'll be looking Chelsea historically and seeking to construct a game plan to attempt to go there and win.
"I don't count on some thing at the pitch, really, to be any distinct."
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp backed the authorities's decision to sanction Abramovich, while admitting it became tough on Chelsea.
"It's now not a situation all the personnel at Chelsea are responsible for. One man is and that is (Vladimir) Putin," he said.
"I do not know approximately Roman Abramovich's role in all this however you can say he is near. I assume what the authorities did is right."