The
American and EU economies are in great shape?! Ho hum!
Russia Admits Its Economy Is In Crisis
19
March, 2014
MOSCOW
(Reuters) - Russia's government acknowledged for the first time on
Monday that the economy was in crisis, undermining earlier attempts
by officials to suggest albeit weakening growth it could weather
sanctions over Ukraine.
Moscow
markets wait to see the full scale of western measures over the
seizure of Ukraine's Crimea and support of its referendum to join
Russia, after losing billions of dollars in recent weeks in state and
corporate money.
For
weeks, Russian officials have said the confrontation between Moscow
and the West over Ukraine that threatens economic sanctions and asset
freezes would "weigh on the economy".
Although
not speaking directly about the impact from the conflict, Deputy
Economy Minister Sergei Belyakov said on Monday the economy was in
trouble.
"The
economic situation shows clear signs of a crisis," Belyakov told
a local business conference.
European
officials have said they are determined to hit Russia for its actions
in Crimea, imposing sanctions including travel bans and asset freezes
on those responsible. The United States is expected to take similar
steps on Monday.
"People
are most afraid of sanctions. Their volume and .. what sanctions
there will be and how this will be reflected on the Russian financial
system, the economy, the markets and the largest companies,"
said Konstantin Chernyshev, head of research at Uralsib in Moscow.
Many
economists expect Russia to enter recession and most have rushed to
slash their growth forecasts as a result of the worst showdown
between Russia and the West since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
"Domestic
demand is set to halt on the uncertainty shock and tighter financial
conditions, likely dipping the economy into a recession over second
and third quarter of 2014," Vladimir Kolychev and Daria Isakova,
economists are VTB Capital wrote in a note on Monday.
"We
are lowering our full-year growth outlook to 0.0 percent, and see
downside risks if uncertainty remains elevated for a protracted
period and/or severe sanctions are imposed."
The
Economy Ministry's most recent estimates, issued before the
escalation of the Ukrainian crisis, envisage the economy expanding by
around 2 percent this year.
HEFTY
PRICE FOR POLITICAL WHIMS
Economist
have warned ever since President Vladimir Putin declared on March 3 a
right to invade Ukraine to defend the Russian-speaking population
that the price Moscow will pay for its decisions will be hefty.
The
ruble-denominated MICEX index has lost more than $66 billion in
market capitalization and the central bank has spent more than $16
billion of its reserves to defend the ruble. Only last week, MICEX
lost 7.6 percent and the dollar-denominated RTS more than 8 percent.
In
a matter of a few weeks Russia has gone from being perceived as one
of the more resilient emerging markets to the withdrawal of the
United States monetary stimulus to one of the most vulnerable
developing countries, analysts said.
"Russia's
economy was struggling even before the recent rise in geopolitical
tensions surrounding Ukraine and some softer economic data from
China," said Alexander Morozov, chief Russia economist at HSBC
in Moscow. "Possible economic and financial sanctions on Russia
add to the uncertainties."
President
Vladimir Putin has said Russia will respect the decision of the
peninsula's people and the country's two houses of parliament said
they would work as quickly as possible to pass legislation for its
accession.
Putin
is due to address the parliament on Tuesday in what is broadly
expected to be an official recognition of Crimea's appeal to include
the region into Russian territory.
Capital
has been fleeing Russia in billions since the start of the year.
Former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin and a series of economists see
capital flight at $50 billion in the first quarter, compared to $63
billion seen in the whole of 2013.
The
ruble is down 11 percent against the dollar this year, continuously
breaking through all-time lows.
The
Russian central bank vowed on Friday to provide for financial
stability after the standoff with the West over Crimea, after
unexpectedly raising key rates by 150 basis points in early March to
stem capital flight.
The
bank, in possession of the world's third-largest stash of gold and
foreign reserves, which stand at $494 billion, has some room for
maneuver. But if the tensions in Ukraine escalate, the bank may burn
through the reserves quickly.
"It
has become patently clear over the last several days that the Crimean
peninsula is the prelude to wider and much more dangerous
geo-political tensions over the fate of the Ukrainian mainland,"
Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy in
London said in a note.
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