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Russia says paid dollar debt in rubles amid default fears

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Russia said Wednesday it had been forced to make foreign debt payments on dollar-denominated bonds in rubles, raising the prospect of a potential default amid unprecedented Western sanctions over the Ukraine conflict.

The announcement came on the 42nd day of Russia’s military campaign in pro-Western Ukraine, with thousands killed and more than 11 million having fled their homes or the country in the worst refugee crisis in Europe since World War II.

The West has pummelled Russia with debilitating sanctions since President Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine on February 24.

On Wednesday, the United States and the European Union were readying new sanctions after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky showed the UN Security Council harrowing images of violence.

The Russian finance ministry said on Wednesday that it had been forced to repay $649.2 million to foreign debt-holders in rubles after a correspondent bank refused to execute payment instructions.

Ratings agencies have downgraded Russia and warned that payments of dollar-denominated debt in local currency would constitute a sovereign default, the country’s first in decades.

The United States from Monday barred Russia from making debt payments using funds held at American banks, ramping up the economic pain in Moscow.

“A foreign correspondent bank refused to execute instructions for the payment” of debt on two eurobonds on April 4, the ministry said in a statement.

“In order to fulfil the state debt obligations of the Russian Federation,” the finance ministry said it “was forced to call upon a Russian financial institution to make the necessary payments”.

The finance ministry did not specify whether the ruble payment had been accepted.

“If Russia attempts to transfer payment in rubles –- as it has warned in the past –- via a special payment procedure set up in mid-March, for bonds that do not have a ruble repayment clause, this will constitute default,” said Elina Ribakova, deputy chief economist at the Institute of International Finance, a US-headquartered financial industry association.

‘Putin impoverishing Russia’

The Kremlin denied suggestions that Russia could default on foreign debt payments.

“Russia has all the necessary resources to service its debts,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“There are no grounds for a real default.”

Timothy Ash, an emerging markets strategist at BlueBay Asset Management, said, however, that it was hard to see Russia avoiding a sovereign default.

“Putin is impoverishing Russia for years to come,” he said in a note to clients.

“Default might not crash Russian markets and the economy immediately but will have devastating longer term consequences,” he said, adding that investment, growth and living standards will be affected.

Russia missed payments on domestic, ruble-denominated debt in 1998 amid a broader financial crisis, but last defaulted on its foreign currency debt in 1918, when Bolshevik revolution leader Vladimir Lenin refused to recognise the obligations of the deposed tsar’s regime.

In recent years, Moscow amassed about $600 billion in foreign currency reserves, including gold, largely from oil and natural gas sales.

The government owes about $40 billion in dollar- or euro-denominated debt, though only half of that is held by foreign creditors.

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AFP

Agence France-Presse (AFP) is a French international news agency headquartered in Paris, France. Founded in 1835 as Havas, it is the world's oldest news agency.







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