This
reflects, more than anything, a wish list of the West in its war
against Russia.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard seems to have taken leave of the need to be fact - based.
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard seems to have taken leave of the need to be fact - based.
"Take
a breath everyone – yes the ruble is in chaos, but Russia isn’t.
The ruble has gone sideways because of the oil price – not due to
western sanctions. Russia has a very robust balance sheet. The
country has basically zero debt to western financial institutions.
This makes Russia very strong and resilient. Thus, Washington’s
leverage over Moscow amounts to zero. The downside is inflation is
rising in Russia. But keep in mind the country’s economic and
financial fundamentals are sound. There is nothing to cheer about if
you earn rubles and live in Russia. But at the same time there is no
reason for the doom and gloom western media gloat about.[...]
All
the idiots in the west cheering the ruble’s challenges should
remember Russia is the BIGGEST consumer market in Europe. Are those
laughing the loudest still laughing now? Wake up – everyone is
losing except the minority political class in the west. Stop being
the victim of media manipulation."
----Peter
Lavelle
Russian economy facing Soviet-style collapse
17
December, 2014
"The
situation is critical," said the central bank's vice-chairman,
Sergei Shvetsov.
"What is happening is a nightmare that we could not even have imagined a year ago."
"What is happening is a nightmare that we could not even have imagined a year ago."
The
currency crashed to 100 against the euro in the biggest one-day drop
since the default crisis in 1998 as capital flight gathered pace,
despite a drastic rise in interest rates to 17pc intended to crush
speculators and show resolve.
Yields
on two-year Russian bonds spiralled to 15.36pc, while credit default
swaps are pricing in a one-third chance of a sovereign default. The
shares of Russia's biggest lender, Sberbank, fell 18pc.
Neil
Shearing, from Capital Economics, said the spectacular failure of the
rate shock may bring matters to a head. "If a rise of 650 basis
points won't do the job, we are near the end. That means stringent
capital controls," he said.
Michal
Dybula, from BNP Paribas, said the rouble plunges risk setting off a
systemic bank run. "A large-scale run on deposits, once under
way, would make capital controls pretty much unavoidable," he
said, adding that the authorities may start by forcing
state-controlled companies to sell foreign assets and repatriate
funds.
Signs advertising currencies light next to the exchange office in Moscow. Photo / AP
In
Washington, the White House said it had no intention of easing
pressure on Russia to halt the freefall. "It is president
Vladimir Putin's decision to make. The aim is to sharpen the choice
that he faces," it said.
President
Barack Obama will not veto a law passed by Congress imposing a raft
of new sanctions against Russia, even though he warned previously
that it goes too far for European leaders and risks splitting the
trans-Atlantic front. The measures include $350bn of military
assistance to Ukraine, and authorize Mr Obama to impose curbs on
energy companies investing in Russia, as well as to prohibit credit
to Gazprom.
Sergei
Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister, said it is now clear that the US
aim is to topple Mr Putin through "regime change" but vowed
that the Russian people would rise in defiance. "We have been in
much worse situations in our history, and every time we have got out
of our fix much stronger," he said.
After
years of bluster and suggestions by Mr Putin that the US is a paper
tiger, the Kremlin is now coming face to face with the cataclysmic
consequences of what it has done by invading Ukraine and changing
Europe's borders by force. By the same token, Washington needs to
move with care since it would be a geostrategic miscalculation of the
first order to push a nuclear-armed Russia too far into a corner, or
to perpetuatue a cycle of grievance.
People walk past a sign advertising currency exchange rates in Moscow. Photo / AP
Anthony
Peters, from SwissInvest, said Russia's leaders had misled their own
people and have until now been in denial about the crisis engulfing
them. "Not since Soviet times have we seen such steadfast
refusal by the Kremlin to acknowledge the presence of severe
political and economic problems while sacrificing the people in the
name of orthodoxy. The Russian people are legendarily stoic in the
face of hardships but beware if, and when, their patience runs out,"
he said.
The
rouble crash has doubled the cost of servicing nearly $700bn of
external debt owed by Russian banks, companies and state bodies,
mostly in dollars. They must repay $30bn this month and a further
$100bn next year. Oil giant Rosneft has requested $49bn of state aid
to weather the crisis.
Traders
in Moscow expressed fury at the central bank's refusal to deploy its
$416bn of foreign reserves to "turbo-charge" the defence of
the rouble, though the authorities may have intervened in late
trading. The currency clawed back some ground - to 69 against the
dollar - after one of the wildest days of the modern era. Eugene
Kogan, from Moscow Partners, said the Russian stock market faces
"slow death" over the next six months as liquidity
vanishes.
It
is clear that the authorities are guarding their reserves jealously
after burning through $100bn this year to little avail. BNP's Tatiana
Tchembarova said what remains no longer covers external debt, unlike
2008 when there was still ample cover. "In addition to being
twice as levered, Russia is entering this crisis with lower
reserves," she said.
The
government has already committed $143bn in foreign reserve spending
for next year. "We think that more will be required to support
Russia's banking system," she said. The Kremlin had to spend
$170bn rescuing the banks in the 2008-2009 crisis.
Lubomir
Mitov, from the Institute of International Finance, said any fall in
reserves below $330bn could prove dangerous, given the scale of
foreign debt and a confluence of pressures. "It is a perfect
storm. Each $10 fall in the price of oil reduces export revenues by
some 2pc of GDP. A decline of this magnitude could shift the current
account to a 3.5pc deficit," he said. The total "financing
gap" could soon reach 10pc of GDP due to the combined effects of
capital flight and sanctions.
The
central bank knows that Russia's seemingly large reserves are a
Maginot Line. Yet its attempt to defend the rouble only by raising
rates is itself lethal. Even before the latest move it warned that
the economy could contract by 4.7pc next year in a scenario of $60
oil prices.
The
slump may now be far worse as a violent monetary squeeze sends
tremors through the banking system and sets off a wave of corporate
bankruptcies. BNP Paribas said each 100-point rise in rates cuts
0.8pc off GDP a year later. Rates have risen 750 points in a week.
Lars
Christensen, from Danske Bank, said the Kremlin's actions have led to
the "absolutely worst possible outcome" since the botched
move is enough to do grave damage, without solving anything. "They
should have let the currency go rather than killing the economy.
Investment is in freefall, and I fear this shock is going to be even
bigger than in 2008-2009. Nothing suggests that oil is going to
rebound quickly this time," he said.
Growth
has held up over recent months but this may be an illusion of the
crisis itself as people scramble to rid themselves of roubles to buy
homes, cars, washing machines or anything that keeps its value. Ikea
has seen a surge of orders for new kitchens. This is a one-off
effect, and creates a cliff-edge from the economy next year.
The
rouble trauma came as premier Dmitry Medvedev held an emergency
meeting with economic planners, and rumours swirled of a sweeping
purge at the top of Kremlin. Officials denied there were any plans
for capital controls after the meeting.
There
is no sign yet of relief from the oil markets. Brent crude fell below
$59 a barrel on Tuesday for the first time since the depths of the
Great Recession in 2009. The fallout from the crisis is already
hitting banks linked to Russia and Ukraine. The share price of
Austria's Raiffeisen fell 8pc in Vienna. More than 240pc of its
tangible equity is exposed to the region. The biggest external lender
is France's Societe Generale, with €25bn of exposure, or 62pc of
tangible equity.
Contagion
is spreading across the emerging market nexus, hitting countries such
as Turkey and India that should be beneficiaries of lower oil prices.
"There is absolutely no liquidity anywhere. The system is
stressed and we have a crunch all over the place," said one
hedge fund trader.
There
are signs that the sell-off is becoming self-feeding as investors
withdraw money from emerging market bond funds, forcing the funds to
liquidate holdings into the downturn. In some cases managers are
acting tactically, selling "proxies" such as Turkish debt
given the difficulty of exiting Russian positions.
The
rouble has now fallen 56pc against the dollar over the past year.
Russian GDP has shrunk to $1.1 trillion, smaller than the economy of
Texas, and half the size of Italy's. The effect has been to double
Russia's external debt to at least 70pc of GDP, a high-risk level for
rating agencies.
"A
Russian downgrade to junk is only a matter or time," said Tim
Ash, from Standard Bank.
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