Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Ruble Hits New 2015 Highs in World's Best Currency Rebound

Ruble Hits New 2015 Highs in World's Best Currency Rebound

The Russian currency strengthened sharply Wednesday, bolstering a recent rally driven by greater confidence in the ruble, easing international tensions over Ukraine and oil price stability.
The ruble jumped over 3 percent in morning trading to 53.4 against the U.S. dollar before paring gains through the day. In the early evening in Moscow the Russian currency was up 2.6 percent at 53.66 against the dollar and 2.2 percent at 58 against the euro.
The ruble has clawed back some of the losses it sustained during a currency collapse in December, driven by lower oil prices and Western sanctions on Russia over Ukraine, and is now trading at record highs for this year.
“The market has reconciled itself to the growth of the ruble and it's risky to stand against it,” ING's chief economist in Russia, Dmitry Polevoy, wrote in a note to investors Wednesday.
Bruised by wild ruble volatility over the last six months, which has seen the currency swing from the world's worst performing to its best performing, experts are reluctant to predict future values, but some analysts warned Wednesday that the ruble rebound could soon fizzle out.
The Russian currency has climbed 34 percent against the greenback since mid-January and 7.6 percent this month alone.
Unlike in December and January, the market is no longer pricing in “catastrophic scenarios” including possible capital controls, according to Oleg Kouzmin, chief economist at Renaissance Capital in Moscow.
A Ukraine cease-fire, which has drastically reduced the levels of violence in eastern Ukraine, and stabilizing oil prices have also given the currency a boost. The price of international benchmark Brent oil has recovered from lows of about $50 recorded in January and is now trading at about $57 after dipping slightly on new data from the United States on Wednesday.
Local purchases of rubles appear to be driving much of the gains. “Companies and, probably, the population as a whole continue to sell,” Polevoy said.
Much of the ruble's weakness in late 2014 and earlier this year was due to large debt payments due to foreign creditors by Russian companies unable to roll over loans after U.S. and European Union debt markets were closed to many Russian firms in the wake of Western sanctions.
Repayment peaks in December and March have passed and payments for the rest of this year are evenly spaced, according to Kouzmin.
But the rally is put into context by last year's huge ruble devaluation: the currency shed 41 percent of its value against the dollar through 2014 and in December crashed to 80.1 against the dollar, its lowest level since the late 1990s.
Even amid its current run of strength, the ruble is down 39 percent over the last six months.
While Central Bank officials have said that the period of extreme volatility for the currency is over, analysts and experts appear split over the ruble's future prospects.
The Russian currency could keep rising against the dollar if the Central Bank takes no action to halt its surge, according to Vladimir Bragin, the head of financial markets and macroeconomic analysis at Alfa Capital, in a note published by the RBC news website Tuesday.
Former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said last month that given a steady oil price and no new Western sanctions, the ruble would stabilize. The Russian currency was likely to trade between 58 rubles to the dollar and 64 rubles to the dollar for the rest of the year, he predicted.
Some experts caution, however, that the rally might not last. The current trend is driven by the temporary phenomenon of "foreign investors closing long positions on the ruble,” according to Maxim Korovin, a currency analyst at VTB Capital in Moscow.
Others warned that the Central Bank could step in to halt a lengthy rally that could reduce the value of tax revenues being collected by the government. “The Central Bank may start direct dollar buying at a 50ish level to prevent the budget deficit widening,” said Aram Kazrayan, a senior FX and Derivatives trader at MDM Bank in Moscow, in written comments.
Analysts at Sberbank CIB warned that the ruble could overshoot.
“We see more room for advancement but are wary of a potentially sudden reversal, as we see fundamental support as lacking,” they wrote in a note to investors Wednesday.

Turkey and Pakistan pledge ‘all potential support’ to Saudis over Yemen

Turkey and Pakistan pledge ‘all potential support’ to Saudis over Yemen

ANKARA

Print Pa
     Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, left, and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoğlu shake hands after a joint news conference in Ankara, Turkey, Friday, April 3, 2015. AP PHoto
Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, left, and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoğlu shake hands after a joint news conference in Ankara, Turkey, Friday, April 3, 2015. AP PHoto

Turkey and Pakistan have called on “all Yemeni groups” for a peaceful solution to the country’s crisis, while pledging support for Saudi Arabia’s actions, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on April 3.


Turkey and Pakistan agreed to lend “all potential support” to Saudi Arabia in order to defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Yemen, Sharif said, speaking at a joint press conference with Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu.

The two countries would work together to help resolve the crisis in Yemen, Sharif said, stressing a “common understanding” between Turkey and Pakistan to “stand behind Saudi leadership.”

For his part, Davutoğlu underlined that Turkey’s position on Yemen is to support all “steps taken for the constitutional reconstruction” of the country.

Putin: Greece did not seek financial aid from Russia

Putin: Greece did not seek financial aid from Russia

  • 2 hours ago
  •  
  • From the sectionEurope
Media captionChris Morris reports from Athens on the ties that bind Greece and Russia
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras did not ask for financial aid from Russia during talks in Moscow, Russia's President Vladimir Putin has said.
There had been speculation that Mr Tsipras would seek Russian aid to ease Greece's debt crisis, and to counter pressure from its creditors in the EU.
Mr Putin said Russia would consider loans to Greece for big joint projects, potentially in the energy sector.
But analysts say Russia's own economic woes mean any help would be limited.
Greece's new government is embroiled in negotiations with the EU and IMF to unblock a bailout package and could run out of funds within weeks.
Russia was among Greece's leading trade partners before sanctions on its energy industry and Greece's own economic difficulties reduced trade between the two countries by 40%.

Greece and Hungary sign up to Russia gas pipeline

Greece and Hungary sign up to Russia gas pipeline

  • The Budapest meeting comes amid Russian attempts to split the EU over Ukraine (Photo: Axel Buhrmann)

Greece and Hungary have endorsed plans to build a new Russian gas pipeline in the latest blow to EU unity over the Ukraine crisis.
Their foreign ministers, Nikos Kotzias and Peter Szijjarto, added their names to a declaration on the “Turkish Stream” project signed in Budapest on Tuesday (7 April) with counterparts from Serbia, Macedonia, and Turkey.
The text says they “expressed … support to create a commercially viable option of route and source diversification for delivering natural gas from the Republic of Turkey through the territories of our countries to the countries of Central and South Eastern Europe”.
It calls for the EU to help fund related infrastructure, claiming that the pipeline “would … make a significant contribution to the overall energy security of Europe and must therefore be a common responsibility of the European Union”.

Now Greece may turn to Russia for a bailout: Kremlin set to offer discounts on natural gas supplies in exchange for some of Athens' assets

Now Greece may turn to Russia for a bailout: Kremlin set to offer discounts on natural gas supplies in exchange for some of Athens' assets

  • Alexis Tsipras, Greece’s prime minister, will meet Vladimir Putin in Moscow
  • The meeting comes amid reports Russia is considering bailing out Greece 
  • Reports Kremlin may offer loans and discounts on supplies of natural gas
Russia is considering bailing out Greece in exchange for the country’s ‘assets’, it was reported last night.

Alexis Tsipras, Greece’s prime minister, will meet Vladimir Putin in Moscow today, amid reports that the Kremlin will offer controversial loans and discounts on supplies of natural gas in a bid to lessen its dependence on the West

The visit will raise fears the radical left government is looking east in search of alternative sources of finance as it bids to avoid bankruptcy.
Scroll down for video 

Alexis Tsipras, Greece’s prime minister, will meet Vladimir Putin (pictured earlier this week) in Moscow today, amid reports that the Kremlin will offer controversial loans and discounts on supplies of natural gas
Ahead of his visit, Mr Tsipras condemned the West’s economic sanctions on Moscow as ‘a road to nowhere’.

But Martin Schulz, the president of the European Parliament, has already warned it would be ‘unacceptable’ if Mr Tsipras ‘jeopardised Europe’s common policy on Russia’ in return for Kremlin aid.
Kommersant newspaper quoted an anonymous Russian government source last night saying that lines of credit were being offered.

‘We’re ready to consider the question of providing Greece discounts on gas: the price for it is tied to the cost of oil which has significantly fallen in recent months,’ the source said.

‘We are also ready to discuss the possibility of granting Greece new loans. But here we, in turn, are interested in reciprocal moves – in particular, in Russia receiving particular assets in Greece.’

Yesterday Greece demanded more than £200billion in compensation from Germany for Nazi atrocities during the Second World War.

The government unveiled its final calculation for the war reparations stemming from occupation by the Third Reich.

The radical left Syriza party says Germany owes Greece nearly 279billion euros, or £204billion to compensate it for looting and war crimes.

The German government says the issue was resolved legally years ago.

Greece’s defence minister said it had obtained ‘stunning evidence’ to support its massive claims for reparations.

Panos Kammenos said the country had obtained records held by the US military that review the extent of damage to private and public property during the Nazi occupation.

Ahead of his meeting with Putin, Mr Tsipras (pictured) condemned the West’s economic sanctions on Moscow as ‘a road to nowhere’. Greece is obliged to pay 450million euros of its debt in a matter of days

The demand comes just days before Greece is obliged to pay 450million euros of its debt to the International Monetary Fund.

Yanis Varoufakis, the Greek finance minister, has said the country ‘intends to meet all obligations to all its creditors, ad infinitum’.

Greece suffered a brutal occupation at the hands Adolf Hitler’s forces in 1941. More than 40,000 people are believed to have starved to death in Athens alone.

Yesterday a parliamentary cmmittee established by Mr Tsipras for the first time put an official number on the reparations claim.

It includes the cost of a 10billion euro forced Nazi loan made by the Bank of Greece and the return of archaeological treasures.

The revised figures amount to nearly 10 per cent of Germany’s GDP.

Mr Tsipras raised the reparations issue when he met German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin last month.

He has called the reparations question a ‘moral and ethical’ issue for his country.

The new figure was revealed yesterday by Greek deputy finance minister Dimitris Mardas.

‘According to our calculations, the debt linked to German reparations is 278.7bn euros,’ he told a parliamentary committee investigating responsibility for Greece’s debt crisis.

Mr Mardas said the reparations calculation had been made by Greece’s state general accounting office.

Berlin paid 115m deutschmarks to Athens in 1960 in compensation – a fraction of the Greek demand.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras raised the issue of compensation from Germany for Nazi atrocities during the Second World War when he met German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin last month (pictured)

Greece says this did not cover payments for damaged infrastructure, war crimes and the return of the forced loan.

Germany insists the reparations issue was settled in 1990 legally and politically before Germany reunified.

Syriza politicians have frequently blamed Germany for the hardship suffered by Greeks under the tough bailout conditions imposed by international lenders.

Ministers have floated the idea of seizing German assets in the country to compensate the families of victims of Nazi war crimes.

A poll carried for Greek radio found more than 80 per cent of Greeks agreed with the pusuit of Nazi war debt claims.

Yesterday Greek MPs also voted to establish a committee examining the circumstances of its 2010 bail-out by eurozone creditors and the IMF to the tune of 240billion euros.

‘After five years of parliamentary silence on the major issues that caused the bailout catastrophe, today we commence a procedure that will give answers to the questions concerning the Greek people,’ Mr Tsipras said.

Finance minister Yanis Varoufakis has claimed the economy was unfairly lumbered with the liabilities that it is now struggling to pay off as its coffers run empty.

He has claimed Europe dealt with his country’s bankruptcy by ‘loading the largest loan in human history on the weakest of shoulders - the Greek taxpayer’. 

Watchtowers on Poland-Russia border 'not linked' to Ukraine conflict

Watchtowers on Poland-Russia border 'not linked' to Ukraine conflict

  • Kaliningrad is one of Russia's poorest regions (Photo: Christoph)
Poland says its plan to build watchtowers on its border with the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad is not linked to the Ukraine crisis.
Joanna Rokicka, a spokeswoman for the Polish Border Guard, told EUobserver on Tuesday (7 April) that the scheme, which is part-funded by the European Commission, was agreed “quite some time ago, before the events in Ukraine”.
“We are building the towers purely for migration-control purposes. It’s not designed to prevent any situation linked to the current crisis in Ukraine”.

Putin Meets With Alexis Tsipras of Greece, Raising eyebrows in Europe

Putin Meets With Alexis Tsipras of Greece, Raising eyebrows in Europe


Welcoming the Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, to Moscow at a time of badly strained relations between Russia and Europe, President Vladimir V. Putin on Wednesday declared that the visit “could not have come at a better time.” 

Mr. Tsipras, who is in tough negotiations with fellow European leaders over international financial assistance that Greece needs to avoid bankruptcy, arrived here on Tuesday night. His visit has raised eyebrows across the Continent because of a perception that he may be trying to gain leverage by cozying up to Mr. Putin.