简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
How Russia’s Central Bank Engineered the Ruble’s Rebound
Abstract:While Russia’s currency can still see sharp swings in a day
The ruble is in a central-bank-induced coma.
While Russias currency can still see sharp swings in a day, it has trimmed its steep losses and begun to stabilize. It is now trading at around 99 rubles to the dollar, about 17% weaker than it was before Russian troops invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 but stronger than its record low of 151 on March 7, according to FactSet.
Rising currency prices often reflect a general strengthening of a countrys economic outlook. Not so in Russia. Rather, central bank moves to limit ruble selling and force ruble buying have effectively manufactured demand for the currency.
Russia capped the amount of dollars that residents can withdraw from foreign-currency bank accounts and barred banks from selling foreign currencies to customers for the next six months. Russian brokerages also arent allowed to let foreign clients sell securities. These measures have made it more difficult to sell the ruble, thereby limiting its losses.
Banks, concerned about running afoul of Western sanctions, are having to clear every ruble transaction with their legal and compliance departments.
Western sanctions against Russia left carve-outs for exporters of energy upon which Europe is particularly dependent, which kept dollars and euros flowing into the country. Russia ordered those exporters to sell 80% of their foreign-currency revenues and buy rubles, helping the currency appreciate.
“It is fair to say that the ruble is not a market price,” said Robin Brooks, chief economist at the Institute of International Finance. “If there were a free flow in both directions, we would see a far weaker ruble.”
Russian President
Vladimir Putin
recently said he wants European nations to begin buying Russian gas with rubles rather than dollars and euros. That would reverse the current flow of money, making sanctioning nations support Russia‘s currency and ensuring that all funds from energy sales support its value, said Christian Kopf, head of fixed income at asset manager Union Investment. Such a move is unlikely, but it signals Russia’s desire to boost demand for the ruble.
The consequences of harsh economic sanctions against Russia are already being felt across the globe. WSJs Greg Ip joins other experts to explain the significance of what has happened so far and how the conflict might transform the global economy. Photo Illustration: Alexander Hotz
Currencies often move with the ups and downs of a country‘s economy. Investors want to put money into economies they think will thrive, buying stocks and bonds denominated in that country’s tender.
It is harder to take such insights from the ruble. Hundreds of companies have announced a withdrawal from Russia, meaning imports are likely to contract. At the same time, Russia is continuing to sell its oil, meaning exports and money gained from those will more than make up for the money necessary for imports. Oil prices above $100 a barrel are also adding a boost to revenue, even as Moscow‘s inventories trade at a discount. The imbalance could strengthen the ruble, though it doesn’t make Russias economy any stronger.
“There‘s so much stuff you’re not allowed to buy or sell,” said George Pearkes, a macro strategist at Bespoke Investment Group. “The ruble could strengthen a lot from here, and it wouldnt mean anything.”
After the war broke out, the ruble market split to have one value within Russia and another on international markets. In onshore trading, Russias currency was valued at 94 rubles to the dollar on Monday while it traded at 98 in international markets. That gap has narrowed from early March.
Russian banks offered slightly fewer rubles for customers‘ dollars than the Moscow Exchange on Monday. Sberbank PJSC offered about 89 rubles for a dollar while the Russian website of Austria’s
Raiffeisen Bank

Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
Read more

CMS Prime Review: Traders Report Withdrawal Blocks, Fund Scams & Unprofessional Support
Is your CMS Prime forex trading experience financially distressing? Does the broker constantly deny you to withdraw your funds? Has the broker defaulted on swap charges? Has the CMS Prime scammed you at every stage of your forex journey with it? Do you also have to witness unprofessional behavior from the broker officials? Well, these trading issues have become headlines on the CMS Prime broker’s review platforms. We have shared some complaints in this CMS Prime review article. Read on!

BingX Review: Traders Angry Over Withdrawal Denials, Account Blocks & More
Are BingX officials with you when you lose your trade? Do these officials apply restrictions on withdrawals as you earn profits? Do you lose access to BingX com login after earning profits? Does the US-based forex broker block your trading account in such situations? Failing to get key trading data access from the broker? These issues have been affecting many traders at BingX. In this BingX review article, we have shared some complaints. Take a look!

TD Markets Exposed: Price Manipulation, Withdrawal Issues & False Promises Hurt Traders
Is your winning trade converted into a loss upon closing it at TD Markets due to heavy price manipulation? Is withdrawing funds too much of a hassle at this South Africa-based forex broker? Does even the customer support fail to respond to your withdrawal requests? Have you been defrauded on the promise of zero commission upon withdrawal? Have you failed to close the trade due to the systemic issue at TD Markets? You are not alone! Many traders have commented while sharing the negative TD Markets review. We have shared some of them in this article. Take a look!

B2PRIME Retail Brings Pro-Level Trading to Everyone
B2PRIME unveils B2PRIME Retail, delivering pro-level execution and transparent pricing to retail traders with institutional-grade tech and multi-asset offerings.
