holy hell, 17 percent interest rate
Russia took its biggest step yet to shore up the ruble and defuse the currency crisis threatening its stricken economy.
In a surprise announcement just before 1 a.m. in Moscow, the Russian central bank said it would raise its key interest rate to 17 percent from 10.5 percent, effective today. The move was the largest single increase since 1998, when Russian rates soared past 100 percent and the government defaulted on debt.
The news prompted an immediate gain in the ruble, with one-month ruble forwards up 1.6 percent in Asian trading.
Yet the announcement, as well as its timing, underscored the financial straits in which Russia now finds itself. If sustained, the new higher rates would squeeze an economy that is already being hurt by sanctions led by the U.S. and European Union, and by a collapse in oil prices. Some analysts said they doubted the economy could withstand such high rates for long.
“This move symbolizes the surrender of economic growth for the sake of preserving the financial system,” said Ian Hague, founding partner at New York-based Firebird Management LLC, which oversees about $1.1 billion, including Russian stocks. “It’s the right move to make, and it wasn’t easy to make it.”
KVR said
we have been seeing some price drops wholesale, retail usually takes a little longer, but it never goes down as fast as it goes up, I'm waiting to see if they remove all the fuel surcharges that ha been added to the deliveries
That would surprise me
Be RADICAL Grow Food
spotted-horses said
KVR said
we have been seeing some price drops wholesale, retail usually takes a little longer, but it never goes down as fast as it goes up, I'm waiting to see if they remove all the fuel surcharges that ha been added to the deliveriesThat would surprise me
actually had the conversation with one of my sales rep this morning, he called his boss who said it was being reviewed at a corporate level. We shall see, that 5 bucks a delivery adds up fast, almost 500 dollars a year, and we have 7 different suppliers
this is getting worse by the day
The Russian currency crashed past 100 against the euro Tuesday, the latest milestone in a currency rout that has rapidly gained momentum despite a huge emergency rate hike from the Central Bank.
One ruble became worth less than one euro cent at 3:13 p.m., according to data from the Moscow Exchange. At the same time, the Russian currency plummeted to 80.1 against the U.S. dollar.
The crash took the ruble's fall Tuesday to 20 percent, the largest one-day currency movement since the financial crisis of 1998 and compounding a 10 percent tumble the previous day.
The ruble later reduced its losses, and at 9 p.m. had stabilized around 8 percent weaker against the greenback at 70 and 11 percent down versus the euro at 89.
The Russian currency has now fallen 55 percent against the dollar since the beginning of the year, making it the worst performing currency in the world in 2014.
"The Central Bank's credibility is in tatters,” said Timothy Ash, an emerging-markets analyst at Standard Bank, in a note to investors Tuesday.
Earlier Tuesday, the ruble jumped sharply, strengthening as much as 10 percent to 58.1 rubles against the dollar, following an overnight announcement from the Central Bank that it was increasing interest rates to 17 percent from 10.5 percent.
But the gains were short-lived, as oil price weakness and sentiment once again intensified pressure on Russia's tumbling currency.
Brent crude dropped below $60 a barrel, reaching $59.02, a level not seen since 2009 on Tuesday.
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev convened a meeting to discuss the financial situation Tuesday, according to a government press release.
The gathering was attended by Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov, Kremlin economic aide Andrei Belousov, Finance Minister Anton Siluanov, Economic Development Minister Alexei Ulyukayev and Central Bank chairwoman Elvira Nabiullina, the press release said.
Ulyukayev said after the meeting a set of measures to stabilize the situation had been discussed, including measures to boost access to hard-currency liquidity from the Central Bank and legislative initiatives to support banks and empower the regulator, according to news agency RBC.
With its largest interest rate hike since the 1990s, the Central Bank bet Tuesday that a higher return on deposits and savings would make the ruble more attractive, easing the pressure exerted by a declining oil price and Western sanctions on Moscow imposed as a result of the Ukraine crisis.
Central Bank chairwoman Elvira Nabiullina said Tuesday that Russians that they should get used to living in a “new zone,” according to an interview on state-owned television channel Rossia-24.
The Central Bank, which has already spent over $70 billion of its foreign currency reserves this year defending the ruble, will likely be forced into market interventions, analysts at Sberbank CIB said in a note to investors Tuesday.
“Meaningful currency interventions must follow the huge Central Bank rate hike,” the analysts said.
Despite speculation of intense political pressure on the Central Bank to try to tame the ruble without frittering away Russia's currency reserves, President Vladimir Putin has not commented on the currency's dramatic recent decline.
The market turbulence was caused by “emotions and a speculative mood,” Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday, according to Russian news agency RIA Novosti.
The ruble's tumble in recent days has sparked heavy criticism of Russia's authorities from investors and lawmakers.
"The fall of the ruble and the equity market is not only a reaction to the low price of oil and sanctions but to a distrust of the government's economic measures," former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin wrote on Twitter in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
Others said that the Central Bank and her chairwoman Elvira Nabiullina had disastrously miscalculated the situation.
"Lack of action had left the stability of the very financial system at stake. I am not sure whether Nabiullina can survive this," analyst Ash said.
“It has only to be a matter of time before the rating agencies respond with ratings downgrades, likely to junk status.”
http://www.themoscow.....13387.html
I think Putin is just crazy enough to start WW3 to save his economy
18 Feb ’12
I think Putin is just crazy enough to start WW3 to save his economy
Three Members of Congress Just Reignited the Cold War While No One Was Looking
Late Thursday night, the House of Representatives unanimously passed a far-reaching Russia sanctions bill, a hydra-headed incubator of poisonous conflict. The second provocative anti-Russian legislation in a week, it further polarizes our relations with Russia, helping to cement a Russia-China alliance against Western hegemony, and undermines long-term America’s financial and physical security by handing the national treasury over to war profiteers.
The Congressional Record will show only three of 425 members were present on the floor to consider the sanctions bill. Two of the three feigned objection, creating the legislative equivalent of a ‘time out.’ They entered a few words of support, withdrew their “objections” and the clock resumed.
ashleigh11 said
I think Putin is just crazy enough to start WW3 to save his economy
Three Members of Congress Just Reignited the Cold War While No One Was Looking
By Dennis Kucinich
Late Thursday night, the House of Representatives unanimously passed a far-reaching Russia sanctions bill, a hydra-headed incubator of poisonous conflict. The second provocative anti-Russian legislation in a week, it further polarizes our relations with Russia, helping to cement a Russia-China alliance against Western hegemony, and undermines long-term America’s financial and physical security by handing the national treasury over to war profiteers.
The Congressional Record will show only three of 425 members were present on the floor to consider the sanctions bill. Two of the three feigned objection, creating the legislative equivalent of a ‘time out.’ They entered a few words of support, withdrew their “objections” and the clock resumed.
http://www.truthdig......oking_2014
holy
Seems Putin is holding a press conference tomorrow, here is the ad for it
“Do you want Ukraine’s central government to destroy everybody there”? Mr Putin asks an interviewer. “We don’t want that. And we won’t allow it.”
Predictably, the video does not spare Mr Putin’s opponents in the West. Images of armed men waving automatics in the air, apparently shot in Syria or Iraq, play across the screen as the Russian leader says: “Our American friends are cutting off the branch they are sitting on.”
Speaking of Russia's future, he goes on: “The bear never asks permission from anyone… he will never give up his forest to anyone."
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