Financial Safety
Russian Ruble Seesaws as
Oil Prices Fall, Exporters Sell Dollars
Reuters
Dec. 30 2014 16:48
Last edited 16:49
Sergei
Karpukhin / ReutersPeople
queue to enter a currency exchange office in Moscow on Dec. 29, 2014.
The Russian ruble staged an uncertain recovery on Tuesday as traders saw
modest foreign-currency sales on the final day of trading before the New Year
holidays.
At 3:30 p.m. in Moscow, the ruble was around 2.6 percent stronger
against the dollar at 56.81 rubles per dollar and 2.1 percent firmer against
the euro at 69.52.
Within the first hour of trading, the ruble had surged to trade as much
as 6 percent higher against the U.S. currency, before sliding back into
negative territory and then rising once more.
The Russian currency has swung wildly in recent weeks after the Central
Bank floated it and panic gripped the market, threatening to shatter the
economic prosperity on which President Vladimir Putin's popularity partly
rests.
"We think that state companies were 'explicitly recommended' to
sell foreign currency today so that the ruble ends the year on a beautiful
note," said Vladimir Miklashevsky, a trading desk strategist at Danske
Bank.
"Today the authorities will do everything so that the ruble ends
below 60 [to the dollar], whatever happens,” he said.
A forex trader at a Russian bank said the Central Bank was unlikely to
have intervened on Tuesday, citing the small volumes that were moving the
market.
"Our market is very thin ahead of the New Year's holidays. With
just $700 million in tomorrow trades, the ruble had moved by over 5
percent," the trader said.
Analysts at Nordea Bank said the early surge was probably driven by
forex sales by one of Russia's state exporters, which were recently ordered to
sell part of their overseas revenues to support the ruble.
A Finance Ministry official was unable to immediately say whether the
ministry had sold foreign currency left over on its accounts on Tuesday.
The Russian currency is down more than 40 percent against the dollar
this year, hurt by plunging oil prices and Western sanctions imposed over
Moscow's role in Ukraine's crisis. They have limited Russian firms' ability to
borrow abroad and spurred demand for dollars.
That slide has prompted heavy Central Bank interventions of more than
$80 billion to defend the ruble, sending Russia's reserves to their lowest
since 2009.
The Central Bank said on Tuesday that the Finance Ministry had sold $80
million in forex market interventions on Dec. 26, part of coordinated
government efforts to defend the ruble. It said it did not intervene itself on
Dec. 26.
Front-month Brent crude oil slumped on Tuesday to a new five-and-a-half
year low on Tuesday at below $57 a barrel, checking gains in the ruble.
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