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This Article is From Oct 26, 2020

Russia Plays It Safe on Rates After Sanctions Threats Hit Ruble

Bank of Russia Governor Elvira Nabiullina kept rates on hold for the second policy meeting in a row, taking a cautious stance while leaving the door open to renewed easing once the U.S. presidential vote has passed.

The benchmark interest rate was left at 4.25%, according to a central bank statement on Friday. The decision was forecast by 34 out of 40 economists in a Bloomberg survey, with the rest expecting a 25 basis-point reduction.

The prospect of fresh sanctions should Democratic candidate Joe Biden win the U.S. presidential race has contributed to the ruble's 6.5% slide in the past three months, narrowing Nabiullina's scope to cut rates and lift the economy from a pandemic-driven slump.

“Whether the policy rate will be lowered at the last meeting this year on Dec. 18 will to a large degree depend on who wins the U.S. presidential election,” said Piotr Matys, a London-based strategist at Rabobank. A win by Democratic candidate Joe Biden “would limit room for a rate cut in December.”

Speaking in the last debate before the Nov. 3 vote, Biden warned that any country interfering in U.S. elections will “pay a price,” adding that it's clear Russia has already been involved.

Nabiullina said at a news conference after the decision that the risks mean the central bank needs to “use the room for monetary easing carefully.” She added, however, that the worsening virus situation in Russia and elsewhere has clouded the economic outlook, leaving room to extend the 350 basis points of rate cuts Russia has pushed out since June 2019.

Despite slightly improving its forecast, the central bank still sees a 4% to 5% slump this year and predicts disinflationary factors will prevail in the long term. The weaker ruble meant the regulator raised its inflation forecast for the end of the year slightly to 3.9%-4.2%, compared with the previous estimate of 3.7%-4.2%.

What Our Economists Say:

“Caution prevailed, but policy makers still see room to cut rates. They may pull the trigger in December, with the recovery losing momentum and underlying price pressure looking soft.”

--Scott Johnson, Bloomberg Economics

In its statement, the central bank warned that the situation in external financing and commodity markets remains vulnerable, while “increased volatility” including from geopolitical factors can persist in the near future.

The ruble held gains after the rate decision, trading 0.4% stronger at 76.2550 per dollar as of 6 p.m. in Moscow. Ten-year bond yields were unchanged at 5.97%.

“Both supply side and geopolitical tensions may push inflation expectations even higher in the next several months,” Evgeny Koshelev, an analyst at Rosbank in Moscow, said. “The room for further policy easing continues to narrow, even as the pandemic continues to spread all around.”

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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