The central bank held its key interest rate at 20% on Friday,
after an emergency rate hike in late February, and said it would
begin buying OFZ bonds when the Moscow Exchange resumed trading
those papers on Monday, hoping to limit volatility.
By 1018 GMT, the rouble gained 0.3% to 104.48 against the dollar
and had lost 0.4% to trade at 115.15 versus the euro.
In offshore markets, rouble bids were last indicated at 105.87
per dollar, having been as strong as 93.6 in earlier trade.
OFZ TRADING RESUMES
Prices on some rouble-denominated OFZ bonds tumbled by a third
in pre-market trade before trading on the main session resumed
at 1000 GMT, Moscow Exchange data showed.
The yield on Russia's benchmark 10-year OFZ bonds, which moves
inversely to prices, rose to a record 19.74% in pre-market
trading, before settling near 13.3% in the main trading session
where the central bank was expected to step in, Refinitiv Eikon
data showed.
The central bank's intervention on the market should provide
extra liquidity to the banking system and help the bond curve
adjust to the new environment, SOVA Capital said in a note, with
short-term rates remaining close but above the current key rate
of 20% and the curve being inverted.
Sales of OFZ bonds by non-residents, who used to own 19.1% of
all such bonds as of early February, will not be authorised
between March 21 and April 1, Moscow Exchange said on Monday.
Those investors will be able conduct repo and derivative
transactions and, when stock market trading resumes, buy
securities to close their short positions, but not sell
previously purchased securities, the bourse said.
Stocks and bonds last traded on the Moscow Exchange on Feb. 25.
The central bank subsequently curbed trading as Western
sanctions over events in Ukraine threw markets into turmoil.
The bank has yet to say when trading in instruments like stocks
can resume, as it looks for ways to clear a backlog of
transactions while avoiding a market collapse. But a limited
number of financial market operations have been permitted to
resume over the next two weeks.
Later on Monday, Russia's lower house of parliament will discuss
the nomination of Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina for
another term by President Vladimir Putin.
($1 = 104.8520 roubles)
(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Angus
MacSwan)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|