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Russia Defends Ruble With Biggest Rate Rise Since 1998

Edison Chen

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Russia took its biggest step yet to shore up the ruble and defuse the currency crisis threatening its stricken economy.

In a surprise announcement just before 1 a.m. in Moscow, the Russian central bank said it would raise its key interest rate to 17 percent from 10.5 percent, effective today. The move was the largest single increase since 1998, when Russian rates soared past 100 percent and the government defaulted on debt.

The news prompted an immediate gain in the ruble, with one-month ruble forwards up 1.6 percent in Asian trading.

Yet the announcement, as well as its timing, underscored the financial straits in which Russia now finds itself. If sustained, the new higher rates would squeeze an economy that is already being hurt by sanctions led by the U.S. and European Union, and by a collapse in oil prices. Some analysts said they doubted the economy could withstand such high rates for long.

“This move symbolizes the surrender of economic growth for the sake of preserving the financial system,” said Ian Hague, founding partner at New York-based Firebird Management LLC, which oversees about $1.1 billion, including Russian stocks. “It’s the right move to make, and it wasn’t easy to make it.”

So far this year, Russia has spent $80 billion of its foreign-exchange reserves in an unsuccessful attempt to prop up the ruble, which tumbled past 64 against the dollar for the first time yesterday. The currency’s collapse has evoked the turmoil of the 1998 Russian crisis, an event that reverberated through financial markets around the world.

Emergency Gathering
The Russian central bank announced the increase -- the sixth this year -- after policy makers gathered for an unscheduled meeting.

“This decision is aimed at limiting substantially increased ruble depreciation risks and inflation risks,” the central bank said in the statement. President Vladimir Putin, whose incursion into Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula in March prompted the U.S. and its allies to strike back with sanctions, this month called for “harsh” measures to deter currency speculators.

“While such drastic tightening measures will inflict more pain on the economy, we have been arguing for a while that it is not about preventing recession, but full-scale financial turmoil caused by the precipitous ruble fall,” said Piotr Matys, a currency strategist at Rabobank International inLondon.

Losing Value
The ruble lost 9.7 percent to 64.4455 per dollar yesterday, extending its plunge this year to 49 percent. Brent, the grade of oil traders look at for pricing Russia’s main export blend, slipped 79 cents, or 1.3 percent, to end the session at $61.06 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Russia derives about 50 percent of its budget revenue from oil and natural gas taxes. As much as a quarter of gross domestic product is linked to the energy industry, Moody’s Investors Service estimated in a Dec. 9 report.

The economy may shrink 4.5 percent to 4.7 percent next year, the most since 2009, if oil averages $60 a barrel under a “stress scenario,” the central bank said yesterday. Net capital outflow may reach $134 billion this year, more than double last year’s total.

“There is a feeling that this rate hike is unfortunately not going to be enough,” Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy in London. “Russia’s central bank has tried every trick in the book with exception of full-blown capital controls.”

Others were more optimistic, saying the action was big enough to arrest the ruble’s record decline. “The central bank is trying to stop the avalanche, and such a massive hike may be sufficient,” said Slava Breusov, an analyst at Alliance Bernstein in New York. “No one seems to be thinking what it will do to the economy, as the priority is to stop the ruble plunge.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Olga Tanas in Moscow at otanas@bloomberg.net; Anna Andrianova in Moscow at aandrianova@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Balazs Penz at bpenz@bloomberg.net David Gillen, Christopher Anstey
Russia Defends Ruble With Biggest Rate Rise Since 1998 - Bloomberg
 
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Usual article by Bloomberg-everything in countries not bowing to the West is bad/they have problems/their economies are in recession/they are set to explode etc.And everything in the West is fine.Russian rouble is not the only one national currency loosing value,but Bloomberg will not start posting same kind articles for canadian dollar or norway krone.Also EU itself has huge huge capital outflows but of course western MSM not posting article after article about it...wonder why.
Ruble attacks are done by West financial institutions.Look who are biggest players in FX market.Reuters did run recently article openly cheering their actions against Russia.Remember what that criminal Soros did with british pound or Asian currenciens in late 90-ies ?Similar tactic is being use againts rouble now.So interest rate rise is unlikely to stop their attacks.
Also Russia budget is IN rubles not USD.Everyone is free to do the math how much is the cost a barrel of oil now and before in rubles.Manifacturing actually is up in Russia,agriculture is doing fine(thank you sanctions),after initial hike by speculators prices of the food is slowly going down...Yes there are problems but things are not so bad despite big pressure from the West.Also despite the pressure Russia still has budget surplus in 21 billion USD.Not bad for "ïsolated" in minds of USA and vassals country eh?
 
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Economy has been fake since gold and silver standard was abolished. I said before, I'll say again, anything infinite has no value whatsoever. Bring back gold and silver.
 
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Usual article by Bloomberg-everything in countries not bowing to the West is bad/they have problems/their economies are in recession/they are set to explode etc.And everything in the West is fine.Russian rouble is not the only one national currency loosing value,but Bloomberg will not start posting same kind articles for canadian dollar or norway krone.Also EU itself has huge huge capital outflows but of course western MSM not posting article after article about it...wonder why.
Ruble attacks are done by West financial institutions.Look who are biggest players in FX market.Reuters did run recently article openly cheering their actions against Russia.Remember what that criminal Soros did with british pound or Asian currenciens in late 90-ies ?Similar tactic is being use againts rouble now.So interest rate rise is unlikely to stop their attacks.
Also Russia budget is IN rubles not USD.Everyone is free to do the math how much is the cost a barrel of oil now and before in rubles.Manifacturing actually is up in Russia,agriculture is doing fine(thank you sanctions),after initial hike by speculators prices of the food is slowly going down...Yes there are problems but things are not so bad despite big pressure from the West.Also despite the pressure Russia still has budget surplus in 21 billion USD.Not bad for "ïsolated" in minds of USA and vassals country eh?

All they can do is to lower the living standard of the Russian citizens, but to collapse the Russian economy is practically impossible.

Just look at Iran, it is still there despite after over 30 years of western sanctions.
 
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The low oil prices are also hurting the shale producers。

If the prices stay low for a considerate period of time,the trillions of USDs ploughed into shale development will be written off as pieces of toilet paper。
 
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The low oil prices are also hurting the shale producers。

If the prices stay low for a considerate period of time,the trillions of USDs ploughed into shale development will be written off as pieces of toilet paper。

It has already started. Although this is an Australian company, it drills shale rock onshore in the United States, producing oil and gas.

Oil price collapse claims WA's Red Fork Energy, shale gas company in receivership - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)


"By the middle of 2015, we're going to see oil production plateau and if this oil price stays where it is for another 12 months after that, oil production in the United States will fall by about 500 barrels of oil a day," he said.

"So the Saudis will have had their way, they would have slowed down the whole shale gale and they will be able to assert some authority over the market."
 
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The low oil prices are also hurting the shale producers。

If the prices stay low for a considerate period of time,the trillions of USDs ploughed into shale development will be written off as pieces of toilet paper。

Sunk cost - they've already been written off. The investment still has value, just not enough to cover the loans, perhaps. It means the investment gets sold off to a new owner at a hugely reduced price, not that the investment is worthless. It is highly likely that oil prices will rebound eventually, and those wells will be back online making the new owner money.

In any case, the US as a whole benefits - the loss on those investments is more than offset by the benefit of lower energy prices.
 
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The low oil prices are also hurting the shale producers。

If the prices stay low for a considerate period of time,the trillions of USDs ploughed into shale development will be written off as pieces of toilet paper。

This time around it is different. If prices go up then it will also mean shale oil once again becoming factor. Remember shale oil tech is improving and costs reducing every year. This is great news for oil importing countries, which mean most of the world.
 
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Ruble down close to another 20% even after the bank intervention but has risen a little since the low

@0.014 dollars now
 
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So what happens if 1,000 rubles = 1 dollar? Nothing. A number is a number. God's creations, including numbers, are infinite.
 
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The low oil prices are also hurting the shale producers。

If the prices stay low for a considerate period of time,the trillions of USDs ploughed into shale development will be written off as pieces of toilet paper。
From what I heard 95% of those fracking and shale oil is profitable at USD40 dollars.
 
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Weren't there risks bound with fracking like groundwater and surface pollution. I mean if this is gona be a worldwide trend, I wouldn't be surprised if drinking water would be a resource to be fought for in the near future
 
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Weren't there risks bound with fracking like groundwater and surface pollution. I mean if this is gona be a worldwide trend, I wouldn't be surprised if drinking water would be a resource to be fought for in the near future


Fracking uses toxic chemicals and kills water supply. Look at the lakes. Full of dead fish. This is why Europe, Russia, China, Canada banned fracking. Only in the US is fracking allowed because of corruption.
 
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