SWIFT says it is waiting for names of Russian banks to disconnect
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[March 01, 2022] By
Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) -SWIFT said on Tuesday it
was waiting to see which banks authorities want disconnected from its
global financial messaging system as sanctions in response to Russia's
invasion of Ukraine are rolled out.
The European Union, the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Canada
and Britain agreed on Saturday to ensure that selected Russian banks are
removed from SWIFT to harm their ability to operate globally.
"We will always comply with applicable sanctions laws," SWIFT said in a
statement on Tuesday.
"We are engaging with these authorities to understand which entities
will be subject to these new measures and will disconnect them once we
receive legal instruction to do so."
Banks use Belgian-based SWIFT to send millions of instructions daily
supporting trillions of dollars in payments annually to underpin
international trade.
The Council of EU states, which is expected to publish a list of the
banks affected, was unable to comment immediately.
The world's financial system is severing ties with Russia and its banks
to stop Russian companies raising funds on foreign markets.
Market sources said Bloomberg had flagged Russian sovereign bonds as
well as securities related to Russian banks VTB and Sberbank with a
warning label saying "sanctions apply to this security" though trading
continued.
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Swift logo is seen in this illustration taken, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
The London Stock Exchange said on Tuesday it will stop trading in two global
depository receipts (GDRs) for Russia's VTB Bank after Britain's financial
regulator suspended them in response to sanctions.
However, listings on the LSE in Gazprom and Sberbank were still trading and down
sharply on the day.
Denmark's Saxo Bank said it had halted trading pairs of the Russian rouble with
other currencies such as the dollar and euro.
Major securities settlement houses, along with Deutsche Boerse in Frankfurt, and
ICE and Nasdaq in New York, announced curbs on Russian trading on Monday.
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(Additional reporting by Karin Strohecker and Sudip Kar-Gupta, editing by Jason
Neely)
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