Appreciation of Russia’s Massive Gold Hoard Means Its Reserves Actually Grew Despite COVID Lockdown

And now the oil price has rebounded to where the budget is breaking even again

“If there is a deficit this year the ministry also now has the option of financing it by issuing Russian Ministry of Finance ruble-denominated OFZ treasury bills, which are increasingly seen as a safe haven by international investors thanks to Russia’s rock solid finances”

It’s Russia’s cheapest crisis ever and the country is still accumulating cash, despite the coronacrisis

Despite an oil price shock, a two-month lockdown of the entire Russian economy, a 20% devaluation of the ruble and an economic bailout package that is worth 10% of GDP, Russia managed to increase its hard currency reserves by $3.8bn between January 1 and May 31.

So far, the coronavirus (COVID-19) is proving to be the cheapest crisis Russia has ever experienced and despite the huge economic shock the economy has received, Russia Inc. is already back in profit.

The Central Bank of Russia (CBR) has managed to accumtulate more than $90.2bn in reserves over the last year, according to the latest data from the Ministry of Finance, and continued to stash extra cash away even in the midst of the current crisis, albeit at a lot slower pace.

So far the CBR has spent a total of just under $7bn from its collective reserves to deal with the aftermath of the various shocks that have hit economy, but that has more than been offset by the appreciation of the two thousand tonnes of gold the central bank holds as part of its cash reserves.

That is an enormous change from previous crises. Russia spent $212.8bn of its $596bn of total reserves to prop up the ruble and bolster the economy in the first nine months following the 2008 global financial meltdown, which is said to be less painful than the current coronacrisis.

Likewise, Russia spent $90bn of its $454bn of reserves in 2014 to cushion the blow during the last oil price shock, when both the value of the ruble and the price of oil halved in just a matter of months.

And neither of these two crises come anywhere close to the crises of 1991, when the Soviet Union collapsed, and 1998, when Russia’s financial sector entirely went into meltdown. The end of communism effective bankrupted the country completely and in the aftermath of 1998 Russia had a mere $8bn in hard currency reserves, much of which was stolen in the form of bailouts for the leading oligarch-owned banks, who promptly whisked the money away into offshore havens.

With a price tag of a mere $7bn, so far this coronacrisis has cost the CBR lunch money  and won’t make any noticeable dent in its cash mountain at all. [Which is also another way of saying the price of the unnecessary lockdown was carried by the populace.]

Golden lining

A large part of the increase in the value of Russia reserves is due to a revaluation of gold, as the CBR has accumulated 2,299 tonnes of the yellow metal as of March this year, which the CBR has valued at $127.6bn as of the start of June, or $17bn more than at the start of this year. The CBR has been actively buying gold since 2007 (and in parallel selling down its dollar-denominated assets like US federal T-bills) as it tries to unhook itself from dependence on the dollar. Today monetary gold accounts for 22% of Russia’s total reserves of $566.1bn as of June 1, up from $554.4 as of January 1 this year.

Gold prices always do well in a crisis, which is part of the reason the CBR has bought so much, but since oil prices bounced back in the last week, Russia could go back to accumulating reserve cash by more traditional means. Oil prices are up since the OPEC+ production cut deal, which will reduce output of oil by 9.7mn bpd, that Russia signed off on April 13, which was then extended last weekend to the end of July.

Rising oil prices put Russia Inc. back in profit

Oil prices have recovered remarkably fast after the OPEC+ deal was agreed, breaking above $40 to the barrel again, back into the Kremlin’s “comfort zone,” according to the Finance Ministry.

Russia Inc. is back in profit with $40 oil, which is the price a barrel needs to cost for the budget to break even. In addition, at $42 per barrel Russia will start accumulating money in its reserve fund, the National Welfare Fund (NWF), as under the so-called budget rule, any oil tax revenues earned from oil prices over $42.4 have to siphoned off into the NWF.

The NWF is there to cover any budget deficit in a crisis and the Finance Ministry was intending to tap the fund, which held RUB12 trillion ($174bn) as of the start of March, to cover an anticipated deficit of RUB3 trillion this year. The reserves fell to RUB9 trillion in May after the Ministry of Finance used part of the funds to buy a stake in Sberbank, the biggest bank in Russia, from the CBR – a backdoor route to give the CBR a war chest of cash it could use to defend the ruble if needed – but still leaving at least three years worth of cash in the fund to cover a budget deficit.

Still a crisis price to pay

That is not to say this crisis is not going to be painful, and the government is going to have to spend heavily to get Russia Inc. back to work. Rosstat reported this week that the basic sectors – a good proxy for GDP – were down by 10% year on year in April and that the consumer orientated sectors are all down by at least a third or more.

Last week Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin unveiled the latest version of the National Plan for Economic Recovery (NPER) that calls for some RUB5 trillion ($72.8bn) of spending, or 7.8% of GDP. However, much of this money is simply funds that were already committed under the current budget to pay for the 12 national projects and which are now going to be re-tasked to stimulate the economy or support the social sector.

Bottom line is, the 2% of GDP budget surplus will disappear and the government will run a 0.5% of GDP deficit, plus the Ministry of Finance intends to borrow an extra RUB2 trillion ($29bn) from the domestic bond market on top of the RUB2 trillion already pencilled into the current budget, to help pay for the NPER. Again, that means the reserves will remain a last line of defence and if Russia Inc. continues its rebound there is a good chance that the Kremlin will end this year with even more cash in reserve than it has now.

Russian rebound under way, safe haven for investors

As reported by bne IntelliNews, the economic rebound in Russia is already visible after the ruble has clawed back much of the ground it lost in the last two months against the dollar.

At the same time, if there is a deficit this year the ministry also now has the option of financing it by issuing Russian Ministry of Finance ruble-denominated OFZ treasury bills, which are increasingly seen as a safe haven by international investors thanks to Russia’s rock solid finances.

Indeed, over a third of the foreign investors in the OFZ are from the US, where the bonds have proved to be a popular investment with institutional investors such as insurance companies and pension funds.

As a sign of how popular these bonds are, the yields on the OFZ have dropped 300 basis points in just four months to 5.4% as of the start of June after briefly spiking to 8.4% in March. A third of the outstanding OFZs are currently owned by foreign investors.

Doom and gloom overdone

In previous crises there has always been an army of doomsayers predicting Russia will run out of money, but not only have they been proved wrong, the opposite has always happened. In 2014 Russia did spend down its then Reserve Fund completely, but the NWF, which was originally intended to cover future pension payments, was simply re-tasked as a general economic support fund to replace the Reserve Fund.

Given the RUB12 trillion in the NWF at the start of April, Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said there was enough in the state’s coffers to cover the budget for ten years, even if oil prices remained as low as $25 per barrel. However, within a few weeks as the scale of the coronacrisis became more apparent, Siluanov walked those statements back and said the fund would cover some three years of deficits, without the need to cut budget spending or raise taxes. Now that oil prices are back in the Kremlin’s comfort zone it could well be that the Ministry of Finance doesn’t need to tap the fund at all.

Source: bne IntelliNews

11 Comments
  1. voza0db says

    Well… the scoundrels and terrorists from London and New York are ALWAYS manipulating the price of “GOLD” via “paper gold”!

    If moron slaves want to DESTROY the CURRENT MANIPULATE MARKETS the task is really easy… JUST DEMAND DELIVERY OF THE PHYSICAL GOLD!

    And enjoy the COLLAPSE SHOW!

    But, since the vast majority of moron slaves behave just like the scoundrels and terrorists, this action has a very low [~0] probability of happening.

  2. thomas malthaus says

    A recent article I read stated Russia nearly doubled its sovereign gold purchases from the month before.

    If true, I suspect Russia will maintain or accelerate that pace. I’ll assume that without evidence that domestic gold and silver production is in overdrive.

    1. cechas vodobenikov says

      only 2 nations mine more gold than Russia, only 1 more platinum and none more diamonds is doubtful that USA possesses any gold…otherwise they would permit an independent audit—they refuse

      1. thomas malthaus says

        One might conclude that issues of “national security” come to fore by not divulging an audit or video of US sovereign gold and silver stores.

        Even if 97 percent of US citizens were attuned to the imminent economic dangers, they couldn’t acquire appreciable amount of dollars to purchase difficult to acquire hard assets. That opinion goes to their massive personal debt load and their inclination to play the equities market.

        While I can’t say with certainty that I know the exact amount of Russia’s sovereign gold stores, I’ve seen enough video and photos to know
        they’ve significant amounts.

        That should come as a relief to Russian citizens and investors. It should also be comforting to foreign investors partaking in Russia’s economic resurgence.

        I wouldn’t claim to be a ruble-dollar currency analyst, but my personal opinion is by year end we’ll see a 35:1 ratio.

        Russia has been de-dollarizing for a few years. I can’t honestly say they’re about to ban euro-ruble currency exchanges, but Mr. Putin has as recently as late 2019 declared his desire for Russia’s self-sufficiency in every industry and service possible.

        The concerns are valid when he considers Europe under US occupation in every conceivable sense. Obviously he would also like Russians to be ambitious and seek higher achievements.

        It’s quite telling how investor and consumer optimism can hinge on whether a nation has gold stores, energy self-sufficiency, and an impressive national balance sheet.

        When the US initiates a war against Venezuela and Iran within two years, where would you be inclined to cast your lot?

  3. Mychal Arnold says

    Meanwhile in ussar well, 26 trillion in debt the richest country in the world, really?

    1. Ronnie&MargaretInDementia says

      and 40 million on the dole queue …

      1. Mychal Arnold says

        Proof?

      2. Mychal Arnold says

        Proof? And Dementia is quite apt!

  4. Tom Turek says

    ..e CBR has accumulated 2,299 tons.. really.? We have read of over 20K tons. Never mind, once Gold resets, they’ll be laughing louder.

  5. cechas vodobenikov says

    “growing up in amerika is largely an education in shopping” Prof. Gary Cross
    Despite that the education is quite poor, the consumerist amerikan society driven by the status anxiety of amerikans–to keep up with the Jones, differs considerably from Russian society and many others—indeed only in the USA does 40 sq ft of retail space exist for each individual that resides in USA (Twenge & Campbell: The Narcissism Epidemic)—Durkeim among many recognized that this produces a shallow national character, observed by everyone from Riesman to Berman to Tocqueville: “as one digs deeper into the national character of amerikans one sees they have sought the value of everything in this world according to the answer to a single question: how much money will it bring in?” Today if an amerikan lacks the newest mobile to hold hands with, she will be embarrassed
    “for an amerikan poverty is an embarrassment; fo a Serb it is a Socratic symbol of family unity–of struggle”….people that consider money and success to be happiness as US narcissism researchers write cannot be compared to people that live life and do not worship money…Marxists —there are none in the USA –are all fully aware that the authority of money (meszaros, Horkheimer, Adorno, etc) usurps the authority of the father and creates a childish (anti-authoritarian) people, something observed by Geoffrey Gorer in 1948–comparing all Asian and European societies—“only in amerika is the father vestigial: the amerikan mind and conscience is feminine”—which explains why Americans are so insecure and narcissistic—self loathing, grandiose, antagonistic

  6. fluttershield mlp says

    Good for Russia. Too bad here in the USA we do not have intelligent, moral leaders. We have Congressional parasites who work for Zionist billionaires.

Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Anti-Empire