Times of Oman

Russia’s rouble in biggest one-day fall since 2016 as US sanctions bite

-

MOSCOW: Russia’s rouble experience­d its biggest one-day fall for over two years on Monday and stocks in major Russian companies also slid, as investors reacted to a new round of US sanctions targeting some of Russia’s biggest tycoons.

The sanctions, announced on Friday, target officials and businesspe­ople around President Vladimir Putin in an aggressive response to alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election.

The impact of the new sanctions could threaten Russia’s fragile economic recovery, which was only just beginning to take hold after the first major wave of sanctions against Russia, introduced in response to Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Russia’s currency plunged 3.39 per cent to its lowest level since November last year, trading at 60.24 to the dollar .

That was its biggest percentage fall in a single day since January 2016.

On equities markets, Russian aluminium tycoon Oleg Deripaska saw the share price of one of his companies halve and another drop 34 per cent after he joined six other so-called “oligarchs” sanctioned together with their businesses.

The dollar-denominate­d RTS index was down more than 11 per cent, and the rouble-based MOEX Russian index fell by more than 9 per cent, their lowest levels since September and November respective­ly.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Moscow was watching events on the markets closely but that an assessment of the impact of the sanctions would take time.

“The situation is pretty egregious from the point of view of legality, it tramples on all kinds of norms, and so a thorough analysis is necessary,” Peskov said.

United Company Rusal Plc, at the heart of Deripaska’s global aluminium empire, saw its share price fall over 50 per cent on Monday. Rusal said in a statement the impact of sanctions could trigger technical defaults on some of its debts.

On Monday, its dollar-denominate­d bonds fell hard on default fears, while its Moscow-listed shares tumbled 17 per cent. “Rusal will probably have to be bailed out by Russian state banks,” analysts at TS Lombard wrote, adding that Deripaska may also be forced to sell his stake in Norilsk Nickel, losing a drawn-out battle for control of the metals giant with Vladimir Potanin.

Three private jets that are linked to Deripaska’s family, according to Russian media reports, have returned to Moscow in the past few days, flight tracking services showed.

Losing access

The sanctions mean Russian companies face the prospect of losing access to the US market, which accounted for around 14 per cent of Rusal’s revenue last year, according to analysts at Promsvyazb­ank.

But Russian firms could also run into trouble in other markets as investment partners pull out to reduce exposure.

The Swiss engineerin­g company Sulzer decided to buy back 5 million of its own shares from Renova Group at an emergency board meeting on Sunday, to reduce Renova’s holding to below 49 per cent. Viktor Vekselberg, Renova’s Russian chairman, was included on the sanctions list on Friday.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? — REUTERS/Files ?? TARGET: A combinatio­n of file photos show prominent Russian businessme­n and officials on a US sanctions list released by the US Treasury Department in Washington, D.C. April 6, 2018. (Top, left to right) Oleg Deripaska, Vladimir Bogdanov, Suleiman...
— REUTERS/Files TARGET: A combinatio­n of file photos show prominent Russian businessme­n and officials on a US sanctions list released by the US Treasury Department in Washington, D.C. April 6, 2018. (Top, left to right) Oleg Deripaska, Vladimir Bogdanov, Suleiman...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman