Khaleej Times

Russia stocks outlook is grim: Analyst

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moscow — Veteran Russia strategist John-Paul Smith has a warning for anyone looking to buy the nation’s stocks on the cheap after this week’s selloff.

“Investors could become collateral damage from the actions of either side in the new cool war,” Smith, a former Deutsche Bank strategist and founder of research firm Ecstrat, said in a note published on Friday. While he doesn’t rule out a short-term rebound in the rouble or the nation’s benchmark equity index after the market rout, the longerterm prognosis “remains grim.”

Russia’s dollar-denominate­d RTS Index suffered its biggest weekly plunge in more than two years after the harshest US sanctions to date blocked trading of a handful of companies, including billionair­e Oleg Deripaska’s metals giant United Co Rusal. While some traders see the panic selling around the move as a buying opportunit­y, others are questionin­g whether all Russian assets are now vulnerable to penalties.

Investors could become collateral damage from the actions of either side in the new cool war

John-Paul Smith, Founder of Ecstrat

For Smith, investors have indeed “been far too complacent about the implicatio­ns” of the standoff between Russia and the West, which he described as “a clash of political, economic and financial systems.” A long-time bear on Russia, Smith won recognitio­n for warning early in 1998 that investors were too optimistic on the country’s assets, saying it faced an unsustaina­ble financial crisis that could trigger a devaluatio­n. Months later, the country defaulted on $40 billion of domestic debt and the ruble went into freefall.

Investors are now waiting to see how Russia will retaliate against the US penalties. Proposals currently under considerat­ion include curbs on imports of American farm products and cooperatio­n in nuclear energy and space launches, as well as a possible ban on titanium sales to Boeing Co. Another key risk is the escalation of the conflict in Syria, where the US and Russia are also at loggerhead­s.

Washington’s sanctions “seem to be achieving their purpose by firing a so-far-metaphoric­al shot across the bows of the Kremlin,” Smith said. “The next move is left hanging in the air, but it is clear that almost any of the major listed companies could become targets for actions by the US, which would cause much broader complicati­ons.” — Bloomberg

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