U.S. sanctions threat hurts Russian banks, rouble
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[August 08, 2018]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The rouble
weakened and shares in Russia's top lenders Sberbank and VTB fell on
Wednesday after the Kommersant daily said they could be banned from
operating in the United States under proposed U.S. sanctions
legislation.
Kommersant published what it said was the full text of a draft U.S. law
outlining possible penalties against Russia. The document
https://www.kommersant.ru
/docs/2018/_2018d140-Menendez-Russia-Sanctions-Bill.pdf cited potential
restrictions on the operations of several state-owned Russian banks in
the United States.
Republican and Democratic U.S. senators introduced the legislation
earlier this month to impose stiff new sanctions on Russia and combat
cyber crime, the latest effort by lawmakers to punish Moscow over its
alleged interference in U.S. elections and its activities in Syria and
Ukraine.
The measure's prospects are unclear. It would have to pass both the
Senate and House of Representatives and be signed into law by President
Donald Trump.
Shares in Russia's largest lender Sberbank <SBER.MM> dropped to 195
roubles on the Kommersant report, their lowest since mid-April, before
pairing losses to 197.2 roubles as of 0940 GMT, down 2.2 percent on the
day.
Shares in Russia's second-largest bank VTB <VTBR.MM> were down 1.8
percent, underperforming the benchmark stock index MOEX that declined
1.1 percent to 2,287.9 <.IMOEX>.
Russian business conglomerate Sistema <AFKS.MM> saw its shares fall 3.5
percent, hit by a threat of targeted sanctions after Republican Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen, the most senior Representative from Florida, said on her
Twitter account on Tuesday that an investigation was underway into
Sistema's chairman Vladimir Yevtushenkov for "operations in illegally
annexed Crimea."
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A vendor places Russian rouble banknotes into a cash register at a
grocery shop in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Russia, August 6,
2015. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
Sistema's spokesman said the company had no investments in Crimea, the Black Sea
peninsula that Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014.
The rouble initially shrugged off the risk of more sanctions but soon gave in to
selling pressure in thin summer trade.
It weakened 1.1 percent to 64.17 <RUBUTSTN=MCX> to the dollar, the level last
seen on June 19. Versus the euro, it eased 1.0 percent to 74.39, its weakest
since July 20. <EURRUBTN=MCX>.
"The rouble is hit by the sanctions theme. Even though there will be no real
action until September, the signal is already there," said a dealer at a major
Western bank in Moscow.
Reports of new possible sanctions also sparked a sell-off in Russian treasury
bonds, known as OFZs, sending their prices lower and lifting their yields.
Yields in 10-year OFZ bonds jumped to 7.97 percent, their highest since June 19
<RU10YT=RR>.
(Reporting by Andrey Ostroukh and Vladimir Abramov; Additional reporting by
Anastasia Teterevleva; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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