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Russian ruble suffers steepest drop in 16 years

Russian rouble banknotes are seen in this illustration picture taken in Moscow, September 30, 2014. Russia's central bank said on Tuesday it did not plan to implement "any kind" of capital controls, after a news report saying the bank was considering such controls sent the rouble plunging to a new all-time against a dollar-euro basket. Picture taken September 30, 2014. REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev (RUSSIA - Tags: BUSINESS) - RTR48FNS

(Reuters) – The ruble plunged more than 10 percent for the second day on Tuesday and recorded its worst fall since the Russian financial crisis in 1998 as confidence in the central bank evaporated after an ineffectual overnight rate hike.

Russian rouble banknotes are seen in this illustration picture taken in Moscow, September 30, 2014. Russia’s central bank said on Tuesday it did not plan to implement “any kind” of capital controls, after a news report saying the bank was considering such controls sent the rouble plunging to a new all-time against a dollar-euro basket. Picture taken September 30, 2014. REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev (RUSSIA – Tags: BUSINESS) – RTR48FNS

 

The rouble opened around 10 percent stronger against the dollar following the overnight 650-basis-point rate hike, but it reversed gains in early trade and fell to record lows, pushing losses this year against the dollar to over 50 percent.

At 0637 ET, the rouble was down over 11 percent against the dollar at 73.00 after dipping past 74 rubles per dollar for the first time. It was more than 15 percent weaker versus the euro at 92.99, dragged lower against both currencies by falling oil prices, increasing market panic and Western sanctions over Ukraine.

Russia’s dollar-denominated RTS share index at one point was down as much as 15 percent, extending similar losses from Monday. Russian sovereign dollar bonds fell and money market rates jumped.

President Vladimir Putin has blamed both the slide in oil and the rouble on speculators and the West. A weak rouble poses a major test for Putin, since his popularity in part depends on his reputation for guaranteeing prosperity and stability, and it stokes inflation.

The central bank will have a very hard time stabilizing the rouble as long as the sharp sell-off in oil prices continues, Vladimir Miklashevsky, an economist at Danske Bank, said in a note.

Brent crude prices fell over $1 per barrel on Tuesday to below $60 for the first time since July 2009. That hurts the outlook for Russia’s oil-dependent economy, which the central bank says is likely to contract early next year.

The ruble’s fall also reflects declining confidence in the central bank, whose Governor Elvira Nabiullina now appears powerless to stop the currency’s slide. The market ignored televised Nabiullina comments that the rouble was undervalued on Tuesday.

If such an interest rate rise didn’t impress the market, then they (the central bank) have left the option of interventions of $10 billion a day. They are in (the market) every day, said Natalia Orlova, chief economist at Alfa Bank.

The central bank has spent over $80 billion defending the rouble so far this year, including more than $8 billion since it floated the rouble in November. The country still has reserves of around $416 billion.

Oil prices and the Western sanctions imposed on Russia for its role in the Ukraine crisis have been the main force behind the ruble’s demise, but on Monday, analysts said, the currency was caught up in sheer panic.

This was obvious proof that what now rules the Russian currency is not oil, or even waiting for it to move, but panic fueled by a large number of rumors about the return of our country to the 98-year regime, said Alena Afanasyeva, a senior analyst at Forex Club in Moscow.

In 1998, the rouble collapsed within a matter of days, forcing Russia to default on its debt. Although Russia’s public finances and reserves are much healthier than in 1998, analysts say the country is on the brink of a full-blown currency crisis.

(Reporting by Lidia Kelly, Vladimir Abramov, Alexander Winning, Katya Golubkova and Elena Fabrichnaya; Editing by Elizabeth Piper, Larry King)

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