Vancouver Sun

Russia takes ‘cautious’ outlook on growth for oil sector

- KSENIA GALOUCHKO Bloomberg

Perhaps the Bank of Russia knows something the world doesn’t.

As the Organizati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies prepare to meet for a review of their production cuts this weekend, the central bank of the world’s biggest energy exporter is hunkering down for years of oil near US$40 a barrel.

While analysts in a Bloomberg survey see the price of benchmark Brent crude — which trades at a small premium to Russia’s Urals export blend — rising 16 per cent from current levels by the end of the year, oil’s 10 per cent decline in March alone amid supply woes is making the market nervous. Russia, a key partner in the deal and a participan­t in the talks in Kuwait, might only add to those jitters. “The Finance Ministry, the cabinet and the central bank are leaning on the cautious side in terms of their expectatio­ns regarding growth, driven still to a large degree by oil,” said Piotr Matys, an emerging-market currency strategist at Rabobank in London. “It’s better to be conservati­ve and to be surprised on the upside than too optimistic and end up disappoint­ed.”

Policy-makers in Moscow said on Friday they see Urals at an average of US$50 a barrel this year, but falling to US$40 at end-2017 and then staying near that level in 2018-19. As the central bank honed its forecasts, it also gingerly resumed monetary easing, pointing to the “uncertaint­y” in the oil market as a factor for its “conservati­ve” forecasts.

Russia’s Finance Ministry similarly highlighte­d the US$40 level in January when it announced that the central bank will start buying foreign currency on its behalf when crude exceeds that level in order to insulate the exchange rate from oil volatility. The price of US$40 is additional­ly being used to calculate the country’s budget in 2017-19.

Even as oil has recovered, Russia’s tendency to stick with the more conservati­ve scenario is “positive” as it “leaves room for upside surprises,” according to Viktor Szabo, a bond fund manager at Aberdeen Asset Management Plc.

Forecastin­g oil is no game for the Bank of Russia. Its 65 per cent plunge in 2014 and 2015 battered the nation’s currency, forced an emergency rate increase in the middle of the night and pushed Russia into recession. The share of oil and gas revenue was at 36 per cent of budget income in 2016.

Even as the historic OP EC supply-cut deal helped halt oil’s collapse, pushing it up to US$55 a barrel and setting the stage for Russia’s economic recovery, the central bank is taking nothing for granted.

The correlatio­n between the ruble and oil has declined this year, falling to the lowest since August 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. As crude slid below US$50 a barrel this week, the Russian currency barely budged, weakening less than one per cent.

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