Quote:
	
	
		
			
				
					Originally Posted by  VitaMan
					 
				 
				Oligarchs having a rough time of it 
			
		 | 
	
	
 
not really. 
How Russia rescued the ruble
https://www.npr.org/sections/money/2...cued-the-ruble
Russia said last week that it wants the European countries that buy its natural gas to 
make their payments in rubles,  rather than dollars or euros. A month ago, that might have seemed like a  pretty good deal: The ruble was down 40%, at 139 rubles to the dollar,  in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
   Since that low  point on March 7, however, the Russian ruble has staged a dramatic  recovery. At the time of this writing, it was trading at 84 to the  dollar, which is right back where it was at the time of the invasion.  And this is no 
dead cat bounce. It's a sharp and sustained recovery that made the ruble the world's 
top-performing currency in March.
    Yet  all the sanctions imposed when the war began are still in place, and in  some cases they're even more robust. So how have the Russians managed  to revive their currency? 
    
The holes in the sanctions wall
   This  recovery has several components. The first is thanks to the enormous  hole in the sanctions that were imposed by the coalition of countries  allied with the U.S.: natural gas. The sanctions are designed to  restrict Russia's ability to acquire foreign currency — dollars and  euros in particular. But several European countries continue to buy  Russian gas because they have become so dependent on it and because  there are not enough alternative suppliers to meet demand. 
Add to that the increase in oil and natural gas prices, as well as  the resilience of Russia's trading relations with other big economies  such as 
China and 
India,  and the net result is that there is still a steady flow of foreign  currency into Russia. This has eased concerns that Russia would become  insolvent, and it has helped put a floor under the ruble.
    Another  hole in the sanctions is worth mentioning here: the sovereign debt  carve-out. One of the biggest and most impactful sanctions on Russia was  the freezing of its foreign accounts. Russia holds about $640 billion  worth of euros, dollars, yen and other foreign currencies in banks  around the world. About half that amount is located in the U.S. and  Europe. The sanctions blocked Russia's access to that money, except when  it comes to making the interest payments on its sovereign debt. The  U.S. Treasury 
left a window open  to allow financial intermediaries to process payments for Russia. That  window is scheduled to close this month, but it has been a big help to  Russia. Without it, Russia might have needed to raise dollars by selling  rubles, which would have put downward pressure on the currency. And had  it not been able to raise those dollars, it would have defaulted.
                     
Financial alchemy
   Those are the tangible  external factors driving the ruble's recovery. The internal factors are  somewhat less corporeal. On Feb. 28, the Central Bank of Russia  increased 
interest rates to 20%.  Any Russian who might have been tempted to sell their rubles and buy  dollars or euros now has a big incentive to save that money instead. The  fewer rubles that go up for sale, the less downward pressure there is  on the currency.
   Next comes a government requirement on Russian businesses that 80% of any money that those businesses make overseas has to be 
swapped into rubles.  This means that a Russian steelmaker that makes 100 million euros  selling steel to a company in France has to turn around and change 80  million of those euros into rubles, regardless of the exchange rate. A  lot of Russian companies are doing a lot of business with foreign  companies, making a lot of euros, dollars and yen. The order to convert  80% of those revenues into rubles creates significant demand for the  Russian currency, thus helping to prop it up. 
   The Kremlin also issued an edict 
banning Russian brokers  from selling securities owned by foreigners. Many foreign investors own  Russian corporate shares and government bonds, and they might  understandably want to sell those securities. By banning those sales,  the government is shoring up both the stock and bond markets and keeping  money inside the country, all of which helps keep the ruble from  falling. 
   Russian citizens themselves have been targeted by the government, which has 
restricted them  from transferring money abroad. The initial ban said all foreign  exchange loans and transfers were to be suspended. This served to keep  foreign currency in the country and discourage Russians from selling  rubles for dollars or euros, which would put pressure on the currency.  Those restrictions have been 
eased somewhat  recently to give breathing room to Russians who regularly send money  abroad, but conversions of hard currency are limited to just $10,000 for  individuals through the end of this year.
    Perhaps the biggest  factor juicing the ruble is a risky ploy by President Vladimir Putin  that we mentioned at the top of this story: telling certain buyers of  Russian natural gas that they must henceforth 
pay their gas bills in rubles.  Natural gas contracts are usually written requiring payment in euros or  dollars, and the countries that buy natural gas —  EU nations, the  U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and South Korea — tend not  to have big reserves of rubles on hand. So if Putin is successful in  forcing these countries to pay in rubles, they're going to have to go  out and buy them. A lot of them. Demand for the currency will surge, and  the price of the ruble will naturally rise. It's the anticipation of  that rise that has helped drive the ruble's market value higher. 
    
A Potemkin currency 
   You  could say that these moves by the Russian government are just business  as usual. After all, the Federal Reserve tweaks interest rates all the  time. The U.S. Treasury has restrictions on 
remittances to certain countries.  And why shouldn't a country be able to stipulate what currency it gets  paid in? And don't governments have a responsibility to 
defend their currencies  anyway? All fair points. What the Russian government is up to here,  though, is more than defense of a currency: It is manipulating the  market for rubles and manufacturing demand that would not otherwise  exist. 
   Some observers are saying that Russia has essentially created a 
Potemkin currency.  This is a reference to Grigory Potemkin, who was appointed governor of  Crimea after Catherine the Great annexed it in 1784. Eager to show  Catherine how successful he had been in resettling Crimea with Russian  villagers, Potemkin 
supposedly  built and populated a mobile village that he assembled, disassembled  and then reassembled along her route as she inspected the region. The  head of the Central Bank of Russia, Elvira Nabiullina, is essentially  playing Potemkin to Putin's Catherine, using a range of tools to make  the ruble look like a currency that has value when in fact very few  people outside Russia want to buy a single ruble unless they absolutely  have to and when many people inside Russia 
don't really want rubles either. 
   There  are big risks to all this government intervention. The protectionist  measures enacted by the Central Bank of Russia are effectively a kind of  bridge for the ruble. If Russia manages to come to some kind of  resolution over Ukraine that involves the withdrawal of sanctions and  the reestablishment of trade relations with the West, then the ruble  might hold its current value once the measures are withdrawn. If the  measures are withdrawn without some kind of resolution, however, the  ruble could collapse, hammering the economy, jacking up inflation and  causing enormous pain to the Russian people. And the measures — some of  them, at least — will have to be withdrawn eventually. Russian borrowers  can't keep paying interest rates of more than 20% for long, if they can  even conceive of borrowing at that rate. Growth will be stifled — the  Russian economy is already expected to contract by 
more than 8% this year — and industry will slump.
   Perhaps  the greatest risks are those associated with Putin's natural gas ploy.  As mentioned earlier, the natural gas contracts that buyers have signed  with Russia all say that payment will be made in euros, dollars or other  foreign currencies. Putin can't just cross out "dollars" or "euros" and  write in "rubles" where those contracts stipulate how to pay. He has to  
renegotiate the terms of those contracts. And if he does so, it's likely that those countries will drastically reduce the amount of natural gas they buy from Russia. 
Russia  is the world's biggest exporter or natural gas, but it's not the only  source out there, and buyers of Russian gas could pivot to new  suppliers. The U.S. is already 
sending shipments to Europe. 
There's talk about supply coming from the U.K., Norway, Qatar and Azerbaijan. Israel is 
mulling the idea  of a pipeline. The countries that buy large amounts of Russian gas  probably couldn't all wean themselves off it overnight, but if Russia  insists on making this move, it risks turning one of its biggest revenue  streams into a trickle. In short, the problem with creating a facade,  as Russia has done with its currency, is not just that it might collapse  — it might also collapse on you.