CENTRAL
BANKS
Russia central bank more than doubles key
interest rate to 20% to boost sinking ruble
PUBLISHED
MON, FEB 28 20222:11 AM ESTUPDATED 3 HOURS AGO
Natasha Turak
@NATASHATURAK
KEY POINTS
The bank also said it would be freeing 733 billion
rubles ($8.78 billion) in local bank reserves to boost liquidity.
Russia’s stock and derivatives markets will stay shut
on Monday, the central bank said.
The dramatic developments underline fears of a run on
Russia’s banks.
Russia’s
central bank on Monday more than doubled the country’s key interest rate from
9.5% to 20% as its currency, the ruble, hit a record low against the dollar on
the back of a slew of new sanctions and penalties imposed on Russia by Europe
and the U.S. for its invasion of Ukraine.
The rate
hike, the central bank said, “is designed to offset increased risk of ruble
depreciation and inflation.”
This
follows the central bank’s order to halt foreigners’ bids to sell Russian
securities in an effort to contain the market fallout. The ruble fell as far as
119.50 per dollar, down a whopping 30% from Friday’s close. It later pared some
of its losses, trading at 93.04 per dollar by 3:30 p.m. in Moscow, still down
roughly 20% against the dollar in the last year.
Russia’s
stock and derivatives markets will stay shut on Monday, the central bank said.
The bank
also said it would be freeing 733 billion rubles ($8.78 billion) in local bank
reserves to boost liquidity. Russian Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina
will hold a briefing at 1 p.m. London time Monday.
The
dramatic developments underline fears of a run on Russia’s banks. Already, long
lines to withdraw cash have been seen at ATMs in Russian cities. Sberbank
Europe, which is owned by Russia’s state-run Sberbank, says it has experienced
“significant outflows of deposits in a very short time.”
In a
statement Monday, the Russian finance ministry and the central bank announced
plans to order domestic exporters to sell their foreign exchange revenues
starting on Feb. 28. The move will order exporters to sell 80% of all their
forex revenues received under export contracts.
Over the
weekend, the U.S., European allies and Canada agreed to cut off key Russian
banks from the interbank messaging system, SWIFT, which connects more than
11,000 banks and financial institutions in over 200 countries and territories.
The EU also announced Sunday it was shutting its airspace to Russian aircraft.
The
volatility in Russian markets “does show that the freezing of the Russian
central banks assets, which was decided over the weekend by the EU as well as
the other western countries led by the U.S. — it shows what a significant move
that is,” David Marsh, chairman of economic policy think tank OMFIF, told
CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday.
“That is
actually much more significant than the SWIFT action, which was breaking a
taboo by Germany when it joined in on that over the weekend,” he said,
referring to sanctions that cut several Russian banks out of the global SWIFT
payments system.
“It does
mean that there is going to be this enormous scramble for dollars in Russia —
we’ve seen the queues outside the banks and so on.”
Russia over
the past several years has amassed a war chest of some $630 billion in foreign
reserves, its highest level ever, which analysts say will help it withstand
sanctions and losses in export revenue. But if some of those assets are frozen,
that changes the calculus for Russia.
“We will
paralyze the assets of Russia’s central bank,” EU Commission President Ursula
von der Leyen said in a statement Sunday. “This will freeze its transactions.
And it will make it impossible for the Central Bank to liquidate its assets.”
“The fact
that the Russians cannot deploy a good part of this $600 billion worth of
foreign currency reserves that the Russian central bank has been carefully
building up does mean that we are onto an emergency war economy,” Marsh said.
“And the idea of isolating Russia, which just a few days ago would have been
thought of as unthinkable, it now is a reality.”
The ramp-up
in punitive measures against Russia — the strongest that the EU has ever
deployed against it — come as Russian forces deployed by President Vladimir
Putin carry out offensives all over Ukraine. It follows several days of heavy
shelling and missile strikes in major urban centers including Ukraine’s two
largest cities, its capital Kyiv and Kharkiv, which together have a population
of nearly 5 million people.
Ukrainian
forces have so far managed to hold back the Russian advances and remain in
control of the two cities, Ukraine’s defense ministry said on Sunday.
Correction:
This story has been updated to show that Russia’s rate rise was a more than
doubling of its original rate.
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