Russia cuts interest rates... This is a positive. -Vi
MOSCOW, July 24 (AFP) - Russia's central bank cut its leading interest rate, the refinancing rate, from 80 percent to 60 percent Friday, a central bank spokeswoman said. The cut is to be effective from Friday, and comes despite a sharp fall in the value of the ruble this week. The spokeswoman would not give a reason for the easing of the refinancing rate, the bank's prime indicator of the prevailing rate in the economy. The ruble lost a further kopeck and a half against the dollar in interbank trade Friday as a heavy sell-off of the Russian currency continued amid a renewed slump on financial markets, Interfax reported. The ruble was trading at 6.27 to the dollar, down from 6.255 on Thursday. Markets continued their downward slide on the news, with stocks opening some 2.8 percent lower on Thursday's close. Traders said that investors were interpreting the rate hike as a coordinated strategy to ease the ruble's value gently downwards. "The idea seems to be that the authorities want a ruble slide slowly, so they can help oil companies become more profitable," said Alex Gorelik, a trader with the Rinako Plus brokerage. "A slide devaluation of 10 percent will help oil companies, and so help the budget, without overly hurting the banking sector that would be killed off by a forced sharp devaluation," Gorelik said. "Other than that I don't see why they need to lower rates," he added. "Lower rates sends the signal that we're out of the woods, but that's clearly not the case." The central bank was forced in May to hike rates to 150 percent to defend its currency from a massive investor sell-off, triggered by growing concern over the state of government finances. The bank pared rates back to 60 percent on June 5, but was forced once again to hike the refinancing rate to 80 percent on June 29.
MOSCOW, July 24 (AFP) - Russia's central bank cut the economy some slack Friday by easing interest rates in what economists said was a move to offset the painful effects of a government austerity package on business and the oil sector. The bank said it had lowered its leading rate, the refinancing rate, to 60 percent from 80 percent effective Friday. Bank officials would not comment on the reason for the cut, which comes despite a steady decline of the ruble this week. But economists and market players said the decision would ease the pressure of punitively high rates on economic growth and industry, and allow an economy wheezing under the constrictions of the government's belt-tightening measures a chance to breathe again. The government has already revised its growth forecast for 1998 sharply downwards as a result of the financial crisis, predicting that gross domestic product (GDP) will contract by 0.5 percent this year, and not grow by two percent as previously predicted. "The country can't exist on high interest rates," said Al Breach, an economist with the Russia-European Centre for Economic Policy. "They have done the things now that should have made it possible to defend the ruble, and they have got the IMF (International Monetary Fund) money. "They have now to bring interest rates down to a level where the economy can work," he added. "They have moved into a situation where people aren't expecting a run on the currency, so they can allow the ruble just to depreciate a little." The ruble has done just that this week, sliding from 6.20 against the dollar on Monday to change hands at 6.27 on Friday. Traders have explained the slide on a bout of profit-taking in Russia's financial markets which followed the decision by the IMF to earmark 11.2 billion dollars in fresh loans to Russia by year-end, conditional on Moscow pushing through its radical belt-tightening measures. The new money, part of a 22.6-billion-dollar bailout package for Russia, was approved to rescue the country from the gravest economic crisis since the chaotic early 1990s. The ruble has creaked under intense pressure for months as investors fled markets fearing that a yawning gap in government finances could trigger outright economic collapse. The central bank has been forced to hike interest rates to punitively high levels to defend the ruble. Rates peaked at 150 percent in May, and have persisted above 50 percent for more than two months now. Analysts believe that the IMF money has bought the government -- and the ruble -- some breathing space, but expressed concern that Friday's rate cut may have come too soon. "It would have been better to wait a little bit longer," said John Orford, an emerging market specialist at Robert Fleming Securities in London. "The markets haven't really stabilised yet," he pointed out. "There is heightened concern in the financial community that the measures agreed with the IMF might have some difficulty passing in the (State) Duma" lower house of parliament. Traders said that markets were interpreting the bank's move as a coordinated strategy to ease the ruble's value gently downwards, particularly now that the spectre of a forced, sharp devaluation has been averted by the international bailout. "The idea seems to be that the authorities want a ruble slide slowly, so they can help oil companies become more profitable," said Alex Gorelik, a trader with the Rinako Plus brokerage. "A slide devaluation of 10 percent will help oil companies, and so help the budget, without overly hurting the banking sector that would be killed off by a forced sharp devaluation," Gorelik said. "Other than that I don't see why they need to lower rates," he added. "Lower rates sends the signal that we're out of the woods, but that's clearly not the case." Stocks were trading little changed from Thursday's close in mid-afternoon trading. The Russian Trading System (RTS) index stood at 160.33 at 1:00 p.m. (0900 GMT) from 159.86 at Thursday's close.
MOSCOW, July 24 (UPI) -- Russia's Central Bank has cut the refinancing rate from 80 percent to 60 percent, effective immediately, to ease pressure on the economy. The Central Bank, which boosted rates as high as 150 percent in May to protect the ruble, had said it intended to pull the rates back below 50 percent as soon as possible. The ruble has been under pressure for three months on global currency markets on rumors of a devaluation, which seems unlikely now that Russia has secured billions of dollars in new stabilization loans from the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, which will boost Central Bank reserves. The move sent the ruble lower, as currency traders speculated the government would allow the currency to depreciate against the U.S. dollar to help exporters. The ruble traded at 6.26 to the dollar, down from 6.20 a week earlier. Russian shares also moved lower, falling almost 2 percent in light trading after losing 5 percent Thursday. But Russia's oil exporters, who have been battered by a government tax crackdown and falling world prices, will be helped by the rate reduction. |