Russian Rouble Faces Pressure Amid Sanctions and Exporter Actions

The Russian rouble hovered around 88 against the dollar, influenced by reduced currency sales from exporters post-tax payments and trading shifts to the OTC market due to sanctions. Despite a brief rise, the rouble has weakened over five consecutive sessions, complicating reliable pricing access for the currency.


Reuters | Moscow | Updated: 05-07-2024 13:33 IST | Created: 05-07-2024 13:33 IST
Russian Rouble Faces Pressure Amid Sanctions and Exporter Actions
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The Russian rouble traded around 88 against the dollar on Friday and is likely to remain under continued pressure from lower currency sales by exporters after they completed their rouble tax payments. Sanctions on the Moscow Exchange and its clearing agent, the National Clearing Centre (NCC), led to a range of varying prices and spreads as trading shifted to the over-the-counter (OTC) market on June 14, obscuring access to reliable pricing for the Russian currency.

By 0735 GMT, the rouble was 1.1% higher at 88.00 against the dollar. The average dollar-rouble mixed composite rate, calculated by LSEG and based on data from international brokers and counterparties, stood at 88.16.

The rouble has weakened for five sessions in a row, coinciding with reduced foreign currency supply from exporters who usually convert FX revenues into roubles to meet local liabilities towards the end of each month. Against the yuan, which had already become the most traded foreign currency in Moscow before the latest sanctions were imposed, the rouble lost 0.2% to 12.02, according to an analysis of the OTC market.

It was up 0.4% at 95.82 against the euro. Brent crude oil, a global benchmark for Russia's main export, was down 0.2% at $87.60 a barrel.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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