"Perhaps after reading Pepe Escobar and listening to Stephen Cohen you are ready to read this delusory peace from the Telegraph.
What is it that makes otherwise seemingly intelligent people take leave of their senses when it comes to Russia??
If you really want the original graphs go to the original article.
If you really want the original graphs go to the original article.
The
week the dam broke in Russia and ended Putin's dreams
“It’s
going to be worse than the default crisis in 1998. This time you have
a situation where the West is against them,” said Mr Browder from
Hermitage
Ambrose
Evans Pritchard
20
December, 2014
Gallows
humour is back in Moscow. Asked what he would do to stop the rouble
spiralling out of control, the former governor of Russia’s central
bank replied: “I would pick up a pistol and shoot myself.”
This
was the week when the country’s long-festering crisis turned
virulent. A last-ditch attempt to defend the exchange rate by raising
interest rates to 17pc failed within hours, yet the shock is surely
enough to set off a chain of corporate failures and push banks over
the edge.
Traders
in the City watched open-mouthed as the dam broke on Black Tuesday.
The event exposed the awful reality that the Kremlin does not have
the infinite foreign reserves that many had supposed. “What is
happening is a nightmare that we could not even have imagined a year
ago,” says the central bank’s deputy chief, Sergei Shvetsov.
The
currency has since stabilised at 60 to the dollar. But it has lost
half its value in a year. Russia’s $2.1 trillion (£1.3 trillion)
economy has shrunk to $1.1 trillion, half the GDP of California.
The
external debt of Russian banks and companies has by mathematical
effect ballooned to 70pc of total output. “A Russian downgrade to
junk is only a matter or time,” says Tim Ash, from Standard Bank.
“The
crisis is suddenly filtering into people’s daily lives,” says
Bill Browder from Hermitage. “55pc of consumer goods in Russia are
imported and these are doubling in price. People are buying anything
they can that keeps its value.”
Vedomisti
reports that there is a de facto run on banks as depositors pull what
they can from ATM machines, fearing the guillotine at any moment.
Soviet queues are appearing again.
Crowds
have descended on Ikea stores, converging in pick-up trucks to buy
hard goods before it is too late. The company suspended sales of
kitchens on Thursday, saying it cannot meet demand.
Those
scrambling to buy cars may have missed their chance. Jaguar Land
Rover has halted sales to Russia. So has General Motors, citing
“rouble volatility”. The big three dealerships -
Transtekhservice, Major Auto, and Avilon - have frozen sales.
As
the buying frenzy subsides, the eerie stillness of depression may
instead take hold. The central bank says the economy could contract
by 4.7pc next year if oil prices settle at $60 a barrel, but that was
before the rate shock. BNP Paribas says each 100-basis point rise
cuts 0.8pc off GDP a year later. Rates have risen 750 points in a
week.
It
was also before President Vladimir Putin disclosed his second line of
defence. “We must squeeze rouble liquidity to stabilise the
currency. We mustn’t waste our foreign exchange reserves
thoughtlessly,” he says. This means driving the MosPrime (Libor)
rates to 30pc. Those borrowing to “short” the rouble are crushed,
but so are Russian banks.
“It’s
going to be worse than the default crisis in 1998. This time you have
a situation where the West is against them,” says Browder. “Russian
companies are shut out of the global capital markets. The country
can’t turn to the IMF because Washington will block it. There is no
lender of last resort.”
Western
sanctions are still escalating. With wicked timing, President Barack
Obama this week chose not to veto a law passed by the US Congress
that tightens the noose further, even though he warned previously
that it may irk European leaders and erode Atlantic unity. The law
implies fresh curbs on the Russian energy sector, and may limit
credit to Gazprom. It stiffens Ukraine with $350m of military aid, a
high-risk move. The White House says Putin can reverse the process at
any time by implementing the Minsk ceasefire deal agreed three months
ago. “The aim is to sharpen the choice that he faces,” it says.
Putin
lashed out defiantly on Thursday, accusing the West of trying to
“chain the Russian” bear and tear out its claws. “The issue is
not Crimea. We are protecting our sovereignty and our right to
exist,” he says.
It
was vintage Putin, a three-hour tirade, with a strong hint that the
oil price crash is due to a plot by the US and Saudi Arabia to
cripple Russia. It contained a warning to his enemies at home that
there is no safe line between opposition and “Fifth Columnists”.
Putin
invoked the cause of Mother Russia, calling on his people to brace
for two years of hardship, yet he is clearly on thin ice. “Putin’s
sales pitch has always been that he brought the country back to
stability after the craziness of the Yeltsin years,” says Browder.
“He could get away with it because the oil boom created enough
money for everybody, but now the money has run out. People are
getting very angry. If oil all stays at $60 for a year, he risks a
palace coup from his own ‘Siloviki’ (former KGB) circle.”
There
was a frisson of this at Putin’s press conference, though he
deflected a blunt question by saying “there can’t be a palace
coup in Russia, because there are no palaces”.
The
grumbling is getting louder. “We all cheered when we took back our
Crimea. Now we are reaping the fruits of our conquest,” says the
governor of Krasnodar, Alexander Tkachyov. “We thought that nothing
would happen. Now we face the payback, because there are no miracles.
It has become clear that Russia is facing a real economic war, and
there should be no illusions.”
Bloomberg
reports that Putin asked his key advisers at a secret meeting in
February whether Russia had sufficient foreign reserves to withstand
a showdown with the West if it annexed Crimea. They assured him that
Russia could weather the storm.
Putin
took a huge gamble. Deutsche Bank and other lenders were already
forecasting an oil glut in 2014 as the US flooded the markets with
shale oil. Nor did the Kremlin team seem to fully grasp that Russia
is far more vulnerable to sanctions now that it depends on foreign
capital and is tied into global finance. For the last decade, an
elite cell at the US Treasury has been sharpening the tools of
economic war, crafting ways to bring countries to their knees without
firing a shot.
The
strategy relies on hegemonic control over the global banking system,
buttressed by a network of allies. Iran has felt its grim effects.
“It is a new kind of war, like a creeping financial insurgency,
intended to constrict our enemies’ financial lifeblood,
unprecedented in its reach,” says Juan Zarate, who once led the
team.
Putin
can retaliate in other ways. “He is going to escalate. The huge
prize for him is to test the credibility of Nato while Obama is still
in office,” says Browder. That worry is shared by many, especially
in the Baltic states with Russian minorities. Four fifths of
Estonia’s fortress town of Narva are ethnic Russians, and they live
within sight of the border. An incident could flare up at any time.
“The
nightmare scenario is if ‘little green men’ appear in one of the
Baltics, and it then invokes Nato’s Article V [mutual defence
clause],” says Ian Bond, the former British ambassador to Latvia
and now at the Centre for European Reform. Any dispute may be murky.
Yet if Nato ever fails to uphold an Article V plea, the alliance
withers.
Russia
was sliding into decline before the storm hit this year. Its trend
growth rate had collapsed. It was near recession when crude was
trading at $110 a barrel, a remarkable indictment of Putin’s
15-year reign. The country has become reliant on the commodity
supercycle. Oil, gas, and metals together make up 73pc of exports and
half the budget. The economy is a patronage machine built on
commodity rents, a textbook case of the “Dutch Disease”.
The
IMF says the effect has been to smother everything else, hollowing
out the industrial core. Non-oil exports fell from 21pc to 8pc of
GDP.
The
economy is a tangle of bottlenecks. Russia ranks 136 for road
quality, 126 for the ability of firms to absorb technology, 124 for
availability of the latest technology, 120 for the burden of
government regulation, and 105 for product sophistication, in the
World Economic Forum’s index of competitiveness.
Critics
say Russia squandered its chance to build a modern, diversified
economy at the end of the Cold War. It now faces a bleak future as an
ageing crisis hits and the workforce shrinks by 1m a year. Lubomir
Mitov, from the Institute of International Finance, says Russia is
weaker than it was in the Soviet era of the 1980s, when it still made
things and brimmed with engineers. “They have lost their
technology,” he says.
Mitov
says it will be lucky merely to repeat the stagnation of the Brezhnev
era. Every $10 fall in the price of oil cuts export revenues by 2pc
of GDP. The “financing gap” will soon be 10pc of GDP. “It is a
perfect storm,” he says.
Russia
still has $414bn of reserves but this is below the country’s $700bn
external debt, in stark contrast to 2008.
“In
addition to being twice as levered, Russia is entering this crisis
with lower reserves,” says Tatiana Tchembarova from BNP Paribas.
She says the Kremlin has already committed $143bn of reserves for
next year, and “more will be required to support Russia’s banking
system”. The bank rescue cost $170bn five years ago.
Russia
firms must repay $120bn of hard-currency debt over the next year.
They cannot roll over the loans. Eric Chaney from AXA warns clients
to brace for a wave of defaults by “non-strategic” companies.
The
Kremlin will prop up national champions but this bleeds their
reserves. Browder says Putin is trying every trick to put off the
inevitable, but capital controls are coming. “They won’t announce
it: they will just starting doing it quietly by forcing companies to
convert dollars into roubles,” he says.
The
Nordic bank SEB says the central bank faces a horrible choice between
ferociously high interest rates – perhaps 100pc – or exchange
controls. “We think it will reluctantly opt for the latter,” it
says. SEB expects the Kremlin to freeze dividends and force companies
to repatriate earnings. Isolation and Stalinist autarky lie ahead.
What
is remarkable is that Russia’s leaders so quickly forgot the lesson
of the mid-1980s when collapsing oil prices broke the back of the
Soviet Union. Former premier Yegor Gaidar dated the moment to
September 1985, when Saudi Arabia flooded the crude market. The
Kremlin sold its gold, down to its pre-1917 imperial bars, until it
ran out of cash for food imports. “The collapse of the USSR should
serve as a lesson to those who construct policy based on the
assumption that oil prices will remain perpetually high. A seemingly
stable superpower disintegrated,” he said.
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