The Moscow Times
The ruble collapsed by 10 percent against the U.S. dollar Monday
earning the Russian currency the dubious laurels of the world’s
worst-performing currency this year.
The Russian currency has now fallen 49.3 percent against the
greenback since January, according to data from the Moscow Exchange. The
drop takes it below the Ukrainian hryvna, which has weakened 47.9
percent in 2014.
Monday’s plunge was the largest single-day fall for the ruble since
the financial crisis of 1998 when Russia was forced to default on its
debt after exhausting its reserves in a fruitless bid to prop up the
currency.
In evening trading Monday the ruble was worth 64.4 against the dollar
and 78.8 versus the euro. The currency earlier dropped past 100 rubles
to the British pound.
Russian stocks followed the ruble downward with analysts at Bank of
America Merrill Lynch labeling the 10 percent decline for some shares
“local capitulation.”
The dollar-denominated RTS Index, particularly vulnerable to ruble
weakness, fell 10.12 percent Monday to 718.32 points, its largest drop
since March when Russia moved to annex Ukraine’s southern Crimean
Peninsula.
The ruble’s depreciation has gathered pace in recent days with the
currency shedding 15 percent versus the dollar in the last three days of
trading alone.
The ruble has been under heightened pressure from falling oil prices —
with Brent crude now trading at almost $60 a barrel down from a June
high of $115 — but appeared Monday to decouple from its traditional link
to the oil price. Oil initially strengthened Monday, before reversing
gains after stock markets closed in Moscow.
“The ruble today became detached from oil fundamentals,” Tom
Levinson, currency strategist at Sberbank CIB in Moscow, said in written
comments.
“The problem is that there is no obvious 'end game' for investors to
grab hold of when it comes to a possible turnaround. Markets are pushing
at an open door,” he said.
The Ghanian cedi and the Argentinian peso occupy the places above the
hryvna and the ruble at the bottom of the table of this year's
worst-performing currencies. The hryvna has been battered by a
full-blown recession in Ukraine exacerbated by a war in the east of the
country and the introduction of capital controls.
Monday's moves by the ruble were “staggering,” said Timothy Ash, an
emerging markets analyst at Standard Bank, in a note to investors.
Currency traders said that the Central Bank intervened on the market
to support the ruble Monday afternoon, according to the Reuters news
agency. In line with the regulator's approach since letting the ruble
free-float on Nov.10 however, the interventions were relatively small —
apparently designed to slow the currency's fall rather defend a certain
level.
"The policy response from the Russian authorities has been close to
non-existent," according to analyst Ash. “This is a really high-risk
strategy from the Central Bank.”
Experts earlier warned that the Central Bank could stage a large
intervention on the market to punish traders betting on the ruble's
continued decline, but such expectations appear to be fading.
There is an increasing conviction that “ruble bears will not be subject to any sudden bounce back,” said strategist Levinson.
While Russia has spent over $70 billion defending the ruble this
year, it still has $420 of its foreign currency reserves left, according
to Central Bank data.
Additional downward pressure on the ruble was generated by fears of
an increase in tensions between Moscow and the West after the passage
through the U.S. House of Congress at the weekend of a new bill that
could harden sanctions against Russia over the Ukraine crisis if signed
into law by President Barack Obama.
The Ukraine Freedom Support Act would “be negative for market sentiment,” analysts at Sberbank CIB said in a note Monday.
The speed and extent of the ruble's disintegration in recent days has
also raised fears that the Russian government could resort to more
extreme measures, including restrictions on the free flow of capital, in
order to restore stability to the market.
“There is a growing sense that the currency crisis is spiraling out
of control,” London-based macroeconomic research company Capital
Economics said in an emailed report Monday.
“Hard-liners inside the Kremlin are most likely to be making the case for capital controls.”
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