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Rouble rebounds past 100 vs US dollar after Putin’s gas payments decree

By Gleb Bryanski and Elena Fabrichnaya

MOSCOW (Reuters) – The Russian rouble rebounded past 100 to the U.S. dollar, trading at 99.50 on Friday, after a decree by President Vladimir Putin which opened new payment options for European buyers of Russian gas, allowing foreign currency flows to resume.

The rouble strengthened by 1.5% against the dollar, according to over-the-counter data from banks. It was also up by 2.4% at 13.57, rebounding past 14, against China’s yuan in trade on the Moscow stock exchange.

Putin’s decree meant that European buyers of Russian gas, including Hungary and Slovakia, who previously used Gazprombank for their transactions, could now convert their currency into roubles in other banks that are not under sanctions.

U.S. sanctions imposed on Gazprombank on Nov. 22 disrupted Russia’s foreign currency market, leading to a 15% fall in the rouble exchange rate against the dollar.

The Russian currency now is on track for its best week in four months, suggesting the market has adjusted to the sanctions. The rouble has been weakening since Aug. 6, the first day of Ukraine’s incursion into Russia’s Kursk region.

Russia’s Finance Minister Anton Siluanov directly linked problems with energy payments and U.S. sanctions against Gazprombank to the rouble’s weakness, saying the volatility will disappear as soon as a solution for payments is found.

“Our foreign trade participants are finding ways to settle accounts with their counterparts abroad, so I think that one more week and everything will be fine,” Siluanov was quoted by the Russian media as saying on Dec. 5.

Analysts and traders shared this view, saying that Putin’s decree has unlocked energy payments, giving a boost to the Russian currency.

“Previously stalled large export revenues, which were stuck due to new banking sanctions, may have been ‘unblocked’ and have now hit the market, which is already very thin,” a forex trader in a large Russian bank, who declined to be identified, told Reuters, explaining the reasons for the rouble’s rise.

Putin said this week that up to 90% of Russia’s foreign trade was now in roubles and currencies of ‘friendly’ nations such as China’s yuan. However, some importers still needed dollars and euros, creating domestic demand for both currencies.

Russia’s sanctioned largest lenders, including state-controlled Sberbank, can no longer hold and trade dollars in euros since they cannot have correspondent accounts in the U.S. and Europe and are cut off from the international SWIFT system.


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