Russia to Stem a Rally in the Ruble
Russia is racing to stem a rally in the ruble and is
poised to accelerate interest-rate cuts as officials increasingly view the
currency’s rebound as an economic threat.
The biggest currency appreciation globally was initially
touted by the Kremlin as a sign Russia had weathered sanctions over its
invasion of Ukraine. But now the gains are giving the government pause, as they
bite into exporter competitiveness and budget revenue on oil, gas and other
commodities sold abroad.
The currency’s appreciation has dominated President
Vladimir Putin’s discussions with economic officials, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on a conference call.
“The strengthening of the ruble is a matter for the
special attention of the government,” he said.
An unscheduled interest-rate meeting for Thursday has
spurred expectations for a big reduction — and the possibility that capital
restrictions could be loosened further. The ruble initially held onto gains
after the announcement, before abruptly swinging to losses of as much as 6.6%
versus the dollar in afternoon trading in Moscow, ending a five-day surge.
Despite the sweeping sanctions imposed on Russia, surging
exports and capital controls have sapped demand for foreign exchange and sent
the currency soaring to the highest levels since 2018. Efforts by the
authorities to slow the gains, including two rate cuts in April and the easing
of key capital controls earlier this week, so far haven’t helped.
The Bank of Russia didn’t comment on the options on the
agenda, but officials have said further rate cuts are likely, pointing to
inflation that’s slowed since an emergency rate hike in the days after Russia’s
Feb. 24 invasion.
The ruble’s seemingly unstoppable rise amid a flood of
energy earnings and a dearth of imports are fueling bets for a big cut.
The benchmark is currently at 14%, and TD Securities sees
it slashed 300 basis points, up from an earlier prediction of 100 basis points
in June. Oxford Economics predicts a 500 basis-point reduction, which would
take the rate back into single digits. The median forecast of economists
surveyed by Bloomberg is for a 200 basis-point cut.
Pain Threshold
“There is no point in calling an emergency meeting and
announcing it to the market unless they are thinking of a large cut,” said
Tatiana Orlova at Oxford Economics. “I wouldn’t even
be surprised at a 700 to 800 basis-point cut.”
The decision is due to be announced at 10:30 a.m. Moscow
time, but without the traditional news conference, the bank said. The next
scheduled meeting hadn’t been due until June 10.
The ruble’s 30% gain this year has taken it to “the pain
threshold,” said Dmitry Polevoy of Locko Bank. Still, a rate cut alone “is unlikely to stop
the strengthening” because it’s driven by a huge trade surplus, he said.
Policy makers may also use the rate meeting to further
loosen capital controls and allow more two-way flows in the currency, according
to TD Securities.
“The currency is no longer a free float and the exchange
rate mostly reflects trade balance flows mostly due to Russian exports of
hydrocarbons,” said Cristian Maggio, head of portfolio strategy at TD
Securities in London. “Perhaps some restrictions may be softened on the Russian
side.”
The central bank already delivered a bigger-than-forecast
cut of 300 basis points at its last meeting in April. It also lowered rates by
the same amount at another unscheduled meeting earlier that month. That
reversed part of the emergency hike delivered after the attacks started on
Ukraine.
“This meeting and the rate cut are a part of the solution,
but not the only one,” said Guillaume Tresca, a
senior emerging-market strategist at Generali
Insurance Asset Management. “They just want to front load the easing and limit
the ruble appreciation. It is a pragmatic approach.”