Russian
Ruble Crisis Spreads Across US, Emerging Markets And BRIC Nations
17
December, 2014
The
ruble soared 10 percent Wednesday, boosted by the Russian central
bank’s announcement that it is prepared to pump money into banks in
2015 and adopt a series of measures to “maintain the stability of
the Russian financial sector.” But even as the currency appeared to
rebound after a sharp decline earlier in the week, the ripple
effects of crisis in the world’s sixth-largest economy
will be felt far and wide.
“The
currency has collapsed, and it’s possible that the economy could
also collapse. They’ve become a wild card at this point, it’s a
very dangerous situation,” said Stephen Guilfoyle, chief economist
at Sarge986.com.
Russia’s
$3.5 trillion economy depends heavily on exports, and oil accounts
for roughly half of government revenue. As a result, the country is
reeling from the combination of trade sanctions resulting from its
invasion of Ukraine and Crimea, and the precipitous recent drop in
global oil prices. And the meltdown will be a “headache” for the
U.S., according to Ariel Cohen, director of the Center for Energy,
National Resources and Geopolitics at the Institute for the Analysis
of Global Security in Washington, D.C.
“We
do not know and cannot predict the political ramifications of this
economic crisis,” said Cohen. “Russian leaders didn’t realize
how fragile the economy was and what the macroeconomic implications
from the conflict in Ukraine would be.”
The
ruble had previously tumbled over 20 percent against the dollar to 58
rubles per dollar on Tuesday, a record low. That came after Russia
made a surprise move and hiked interest rates to 17 percent from 10
percent. In afternoon trading Wednesday, the ruble jumped over 10
percent to 62.04 rubles per dollar.
Meanwhile,
the U.S. is benefiting from the 40 percent drop in global oil prices
in the last six months. The country is also enjoying a stronger
dollar compared to other major currencies. At the same time, global
investors—especially Russians seeking a safe haven to park
assets—are channeling funds into U.S. treasuries.
U.S.
Fallout
Continued
strength in the dollar could hurt U.S. multinational companies.
“Between 40 percent to 50 percent of S&P 500 revenues are now
overseas. So you’ll probably start to see companies pre-announce a
negative impact in earnings from a stronger dollar in early January,”
said Charlie Bilello, director of research at Pension Partners, LLC.
As
global crude oil prices have fallen, it’s turned into a stimulus
for the U.S. consumer, but it will begin to affect U.S. credit
markets “because roughly 13 to 15 percent of the high-yield
market is energy related and the credit spreads there have really
widened,” Bilello said. Meaning, as global crude oil prices
continue to plummet, contagion fears have risen as oil prices are
hurting high-yield corporate bonds, which are now posing broader
risks.
For
a while, investors thought the spread would be contained in the
energy sector, but in the last week it has spilled over to other
sectors. “You’re seeing high-yield spreads in the U.S. really
start to widen out at their highest level since 2012,” Bilello
said.
That
will also affect companies’ ability to raise more debt to buy back
stocks. “To the extent that companies have higher borrowing costs,
obviously with very slow top-line growth, any marginal increase in
that borrowing cost is difficult to stomach,” Bilello said.
Global
Fallout
Economists
expect the Russian economy to contract 5 percent next year, according
to Neil Shearing, chief emerging markets economist at Capital
Economics.
“Russia
is most likely headed for a prolonged recession. In conjunction, all
of the BRICS [Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa] are
looking quite poor, and the potential for boost from the emerging
markets is looking quite poor,” Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist
at Oxford Economics, said.
How
wide might the contagion spread? “You’re really seeing the
emerging markets getting hit,” said Bilello. The global economy is
already seeing spillover effects in commodity-centric countries such
as Venezuela and Brazil.
In
addition, economists are watching Iran, West African nations such as
Angola and Nigeria and the so-called BRICS nations.
Many
countries can ill afford the contagion. Brazil went through a
recessionary environment with almost no growth this year along with
little growth expected next year. China is slowing, and its growth
outlook is expected to fall below its 7 percent target next year,
Daco said.
“It’s
still highly inflationary for Russia and these other emerging
countries. It’s much harder situation for them to pay back their
denominated debts. That’s the real big issue,” Bilello said.
Meaning, it’s going to put pressure on these countries, as well as
the companies within those countries, to pay back debt and issue new
debt.
In
the midst of the Russian Central Bank trying to calm contagion fears,
other economies around the world are also showing signs of weakness,
as Japan unexpectedly fell into recession last quarter while China is
experiencing its slowest growth since 2009. Meanwhile, Europe is
teetering on a triple dip recession.
“We
haven’t seen this in a long time where oil prices have fallen
without a global recession,” Bilello said. “The U.S. is really
the strong hand here, but global growth issues are also part of the
decline, and people can’t totally dismiss that.”
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