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Russia to Sell $7b to Prop Up Ruble

Russia to Sell $7b  to Prop Up Ruble
Russia to Sell $7b  to Prop Up Ruble

The balances of the Finance Ministry’s foreign currency funds, which can be sold on the market, amounts to $7 billion, the ministry said on Wednesday.

“This involves funds on the federal budget’s single account in the Federal Treasury. The balances of the account equal about $7 billion,” Itar Tass quoted the ministry as saying.

Russia’s Finance Ministry announced earlier on Wednesday it was starting to sell the remainder of its foreign currency funds on the market.

The move is part of the government’s new measures elaborated on Tuesday to stabilize the domestic foreign currency market and prop up the ruble.

“The Finance Ministry considers the ruble to be significantly undervalued and starts selling the balances of its foreign currency funds on the market,” the ministry said in a statement.

Fresh Decisions

Russia’s Central Bank took a decision at its extraordinary board meeting on Tuesday to hike the key rate determining the borrowing cost for commercial banks to 17% from 10.5% amid the rapidly depreciating national currency.

Simultaneously, the regulator increased the limits of foreign currency repo auctions for a term of 28 days to $5 billion from $1.5 billion. The regulator has also decided to hold similar auctions for a term of 12 months every week.

The Central Bank will provide loans against non-market assets for a term of 2 to 549 days at a floating rate comprising the key rate plus 1.75%.

The regulator said in a statement its decision to increase borrowing costs for commercial banks was prompted by the need to restrain devaluation and inflationary risks that had sharply increased lately.

The ruble briefly strengthened against the dollar and the euro on Tuesday after the rate hike decision but subsequently resumed its free fall.

Currency Fall

The US currency was seen to fall to 58.15 rubles and rise to 80.1 rubles on Tuesday and the single European currency to decrease to 72.45 rubles and climb to 100.74 rubles.

The ruble switched to growth on the Moscow Exchange on Wednesday after its further decrease at the start of trading.

As of 11:10 a.m. Moscow time (07:10 GMT), the euro fell by 7.26 rubles from Tuesday’s close to 77.89 while the dollar lost 5.24 rubles to 62.26 rubles.

The Russian currency went down by 5.2 rubles against the dollar at the start of a trading session on Wednesday to 72.7 rubles and by 7.04 rubles against the euro to 92.19.

Russia’s Central Bank may have to raise the key rate by another 500-800 basis points to 22-25%, the expert said.

 

Financialtribune.com