Khaleej Times

Russian stocks and rouble dip

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PAGE 24

moscow — Russian stock indexes, the rouble and shares in several major Russian companies fell sharply on Monday as investors took fright after a new round of US sanctions against Moscow.

The new sanctions, published on Friday, target President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle in one of Washington’s most aggressive responses to alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election so far.

The rouble fell to a low of 59.82 against the dollar, its weakest level since November last year. 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.

Shares in Russia’s United Company Rusal, a leading global aluminium producer and one of the sanctioned firms, fell by 50 per cent to their lowest level since June 2016.

Rusal said in a statement on Friday that the 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.

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

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

Swiss engineerin­g company Sulzer decided to buy back 5 million of its own shares from majority shareholde­r Renova Group after an emergency board meeting on Sunday. Viktor Vekselberg, Renova’s Russian chairman, was included on the sanctions list on Friday.

Though Russian gas giant Gazprom was not sanctioned, Alexei Miller, its chief executive, was included on the US list. That could create complicate­d legal dilemmas for Gazprom’s many foreign partner companies.

Most are under EU jurisdicti­on, but they will not want to fall foul of US legislatio­n either. The Russian Foreign Ministry said on Friday it would respond to what it called “a new anti-Russian attack” harshly. Foreign Ministry Spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said on Sunday the ministry had a list of potential responses which were being worked on.

Russia may find it difficult to respond in kind by imposing sanctions on US businesses however since few of them have significan­t Russian exposure.

Russian companies not under sanctions are also taking a hit. Steel miner Evraz was the biggest faller on the FTSE 100 on Monday, down 8 per cent, while gold producer Polyus saw its 2023 dollar bond issue plumbing a record low.

Russian sovereign dollar bonds fell across the curve, with Russia’s September 2043 eurobond falling to a 5-day low.

The cost of insuring exposure to Russian debt also rose on Monday to its highest since midDecembe­r, IHS Markit data showed.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Traders work in an investment company in Moscow. Shares in several major Russian companies fell on Monday as investors took fright after a new round of US sanctions against Moscow.
— Bloomberg Traders work in an investment company in Moscow. Shares in several major Russian companies fell on Monday as investors took fright after a new round of US sanctions against Moscow.

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