ADVERTISEMENT

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

And the ruble is set to top the pack again in 2020, offering a safe haven amid concerns over the trade war between U.S. and China.

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge
Receipts, 100 ruble bank notes and coins sit on a tray at the check-outs inside a supermarket in Moscow, Russia. (Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Five years ago, central bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina’s decision to let the ruble trade freely faced a gut-wrenching test. An oil-price collapse and international sanctions had put the currency into a nosedive that even a 650 basis-point rate hike couldn’t immediately halt.

Fast-forward half a decade and the picture in Russian markets couldn’t look more different.

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

The government’s decision to abandon currency interventions, a cautious interest-rate policy, and tighter budget rules, means it enters 2020 with more than half a trillion dollars of reserves and one of the world’s most lucrative carry-trade currencies.

And the ruble is set to top the pack again in 2020, offering a safe haven amid concerns over the trade war between the U.S. and China, according to a Bloomberg survey of 57 global investors, strategists and traders. Analysts at HSBC Holdings Plc see the currency gaining as much as 7% from current levels, calling it a “beacon of light” in emerging Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

The following charts show how far Russia has come in the past five years:

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

A high interest-rate differential relative to U.S. borrowing costs and ruble strength have combined to yield the best carry-trade returns in emerging markets. In fact, investors profited from ruble assets more than twice as much as the second-best performer, the Egyptian pound, which was floated in 2016.

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

The Bank of Russia started cutting within weeks of its emergency hike at the end of 2014, which, for a while, led to negative real rates in the ruble. However, falling inflation has restored those adjusted returns, which are almost as good as when the benchmark rate was at 17%.

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

A budget rule that absorbs Russia’s windfall oil revenue has boosted international reserves as a percentage of the nation’s gross domestic product back to the highest level since 2010. The government enjoys a twin surplus on its budget and current accounts, with both measures at the highest levels in at least a decade.

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

Plunging oil prices and international sanctions over Ukraine pushed the ruble to a record low in January 2016. Since then the budget rule has made the ruble less vulnerable to the oil price.

Five Years After Meltdown, Ruble Is Reborn as Trade-War Refuge

The price of hedging against a potential default by Moscow using credit-default swaps has narrowed faster than a similar drop for the developing world.

To contact the reporters on this story: Srinivasan Sivabalan in London at ssivabalan@bloomberg.net;Áine Quinn in Moscow at aquinn38@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alex Nicholson at anicholson6@bloomberg.net, Natasha Doff

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.