General economic indicators
- The British Center for Economics and Business Research estimates that Russia’s GDP will fall by 14% in 2022 as a result of sanctions.
- According to JPMorgan analysts, Russia may face default. International sanctions against Russia have significantly increased the likelihood of the country defaulting on its public debt. Russia is due to pay off more than $ 700 million in government bonds this month. It is also projected that the Russian economy will fall by 35% in the second quarter of 2022 due to sanctions and by about 7% in the first year of their operation. Bloomberg Economics forecasts a 9% drop in GDP in 2022.
- According to experts from the World Bank and the IMF, Russia is close to defaulting on foreign debt and on the verge of a deep recession.
- According to Fitch, the invasion of Ukraine will reduce the Russian economy by 8% in 2022, while the default of 1998 cost the country a reduction in GDP by 5.4%. The agency predicts 18% inflation in Russia — the highest rate the country has had since 2022, the CBR will further raise the rate to curb inflation to 25%.
- Russian companies Severstal, Siberian Coal Energy Company, and Uralkali have been unable to repay loans and profits to Eurobond holders.
- Severstal is the first company in Russia to enter a technical default.
- Russia has lost access to more than half of its gold and foreign exchange reserves. The total amount of reserves reaches $ 604.4 billion, having decreased by $ 38.8 billion compared to February 2022, about 350 billion dollars of reserves are can not be used.
- Western sanctions have frozen $ 350 billion in Russia’s gold and foreign exchange reserves, about 60% of their volume, but the aggressor may continue to support the ruble at the expense of gas and oil supplies to the EU.
- According to Bloomberg experts, the surge in inflation in Russia will be among the highest in the world since the beginning of the century. Annual inflation in Russia accelerated to 9.15% in February from 8.73% in January, its highest in seven years. Food prices rose by 11.46%, non-food prices by 8.96%, and services by 6.1% at the end of February 2022. TVs went up by 15%, smartphones — by 9.6%. In Russia, vehicle prices jumped by 30-60% in March 2022.
- According to the Yale School of Management, since the start of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, over 600 companies have completely suspended or restricted their business ties with Russia. As a result, experts estimate that about 3 million Russians will become unemployed. Losses of the Russian market from the exit of the largest advertisers can reach 51 billion rubles, from blocking Instagram — 211 million dollars.
- The advertising market in Russia may shrink by 50% or more, and for the top 6 ex-international advertising groups — by 60-90%.
- 40% of developers froze construction throughout Russia due to the sharp rise in prices for building materials and financing.
- In Russia, sales are falling for 84% of small and medium-sized businesses as well as large retailers and restaurants have suspended or refused to open new outlets due to problems with the supply of new equipment..
- One in five Russian companies has laid off employees.
- AACSB (Association for the Development of University Business Schools), BGA (Association of Business School Alumni), AMBA (Association of MBA Programs), EFMD (Global Network of Business Schools, Companies and Associations for Management Development) withdraw accreditation from all universities in Russia, thus Russians are blocked from working in foreign companies. Databases of scientific articles Scopus and Web of Science will stop sales and promotion of goods and services to Russian and Belarusian scientific organizations
Credit ratings
- Rating agency Standard & Poor’s (S&P) on March 17th, 2022, lowered Russia’s rating to ‘CC’ from ‘CCC-‘, as the country reported difficulties meeting debt payments due on its dollar-denominated 2023 and 2043 Eurobonds. Ratings of some of the largest companies in Russia were downgraded to «C» and «CCC-» with a negative outlook. The changes affected companies such as Gazprom, Rosneft, Russian Railways, MTS, Alrosa and X5 Group.
- S&P Global Ratings, a unit of financial information provider S&P Global Inc, withdraws ratings for all Russian entities. S&P Global Ratings has revoked the ratings of a number of Russian banks: Alfa Bank and its holding company ABH Financial Ltd., Renaissance Credit Bank, Centrocredit Bank, Moscow Credit Bank (MKB) and its controlling shareholder Rosium, Gazprombank and its divisions — Gazprombank (Switzerland) Ltd. and Bank GPB International S.A., Soyuz Bank, RN-Bank, Raiffeisenbank, Russian Standard Bank, Unicredit Bank and Ural Bank for Reconstruction and Development. Before revoking the ratings, S&P downgraded them to «CC» from «CCC-» — two steps to the default rating.
- According to the S&P production activity index, the stocks of finished goods and the speed of supply in Russia in March 2022 achieved the worst results since 2008.
- International rating agency Moody’s downgrades Russia’s ratings to Ca from B3, the outlook is negative. Liabilities with such a rating are very speculative and probably in the process or very close to default, with little prospect of repayment of principal and interest.
- Moody’s intends to withdraw credit ratings on Russian entities.
- Fitch has downgraded Russia’s Long-Term Foreign Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to ‘C’ from ‘B’. The ‘C’ rating reflects Fitch’s view that a sovereign default is imminent.and has downgraded 26 Russian natural resource companies, placed the ratings of 28 entities on Rating Watch Negative (RWN) and maintained one company on RWN.
- Fitch withdrew the ratings of 27 Russian banks (Sberbank, Gazprombank, Rosselkhozbank, Alfa-Bank, Raiffeisenbank, etc.), their affiliates and their SPV companies. At the time of the recall, the banks’ ratings were at «CC». The ratings of the Swiss «daughters» of Sberbank and Gazprombank, Sberbank Leasing, as well as the Cypriot holding company Alfa-Bank ABH Financial Limited have been revoked.
- In order to comply with European Union sanctions, Fitch Ratings intends to withdraw its ratings of all relevant Russian entities and their subsidiaries. In particular, the ratings of Evraz, X5 Retail, Petropavlovsk, Nord Gold, Yandex NV, Globaltrans, EuroChem Group AG (holding company «EuroChem»), Eurasia Drilling Company, as well as their subsidiaries specializing in bond placement were revoked.
Stocks, stock market
- The Central Bank of the RF has suspended trading on all markets of the Moscow Stock Exchange (from 28.02.2022). Moscow Stock Exchange opened on March 21st, 2022 and within the period of April 5-8th, 2022, trades in Russian debt securities, shares of Russian companies and foreign shares issued by companies with business in Russia and in 40 mutual funds. Securities of 50 international companies and shares of the exchange itself are traded on the SPB exchange;
- On March 28th, 2022 with a rollback, the Moscow Stock Exchange index fell by 3%, the RTS index by 3.4%;
- On March 29th, 2022, the Supervisory Board of Moscow Exchange recommended shareholders not to pay dividends for 2021;
- The New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Exchange have decided to temporarily suspend trading in shares of Russian-based companies such as Yandex, MTS, Cyan, Mechel, Qiwi PLC, Nexters Inc, HeadHunter Group PLC, Ozon Holdings PLC.
- The Association of European Energy Exchanges (Europex) excluded the St. Petersburg International Commodity Exchange (SPIMEX) from its membership.
- Investment companies BlackRock Inc. and Fidelity International refused to invest in Russian securities.
- Clearstream and Euroclear clearing systems have blocked the accounts of the National Settlement Depository of the RF, which means that Russian investors with Eurobonds and foreign stocks will not be able to receive payments on the body of debt, coupons and dividends through these systems.
SWIFT
- The EU, Switzerland, Canada and Japan disconnected 7 Russian banks from the SWIFT system (VTB, Russia Bank, Otkrytie Bank, Novikombank, Promsvyazbank, Sovcombank and VEB);
- On March 17th, 2022, Australia imposed additional sanctions against 11 Russian banks, which occupy 80% of the market: Sberbank, Gazprombank, VEB, VTB, Rosselkhozbank, Sovcombank, Novikombank, Alfa-Bank and Moscow Credit Bank.
Ruble exchange rate, banks
- The US has banned the export of US dollars to Russia, and the EU has banned the supply of euro banknotes to Russia. Lithuania has limited the amount of cash in euros (60 euros) that can be exported to Russia for personal use.
- The ruble has become the most volatile currency in the world. On April 5th, 2022, official XE is 83.59 RUB/USD and 92.39 RUB/EUR. On April 6th, 2022, the exchange rate was set in advance 83.35 rubles per dollar, the euro — 91.73 rubles.
- On April 1st, 2022, the White House stated that the ruble exchange rate no longer shows the real state of the Russian economy, as it is artificially supported.
- In an effort to quell the crisis, Russia’s central bank more than doubled its key interest rate on February 28, 2022 — from 9.5% to 20% — and announced the release of local reserves to support bank liquidity.
- In Russia, up to 50% of borrowers are denied credit vacations.
- On April 1st, 2022, the Central Bank of the Russian Federation doubled the limit on remittances of individuals abroad to $ 10,000 per month. This does not apply to non-residents from «unfriendly» countries who do not work in Russia.
- The EU, the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom are imposing restrictive measures that will prevent the Central Bank of Russia from using its international reserves in such a way as to undermine the impact of Western sanctions.
- On March 20th, 2022, France has frozen 22 billion euros in the assets of Russia’s Central Bank.
- Since March 18th, 2022, Sberbank is not able to make transfers to other banks in U.S. dollars, Canadian dollars, pounds sterling, Danish and Swedish crowns.
- On April 1st, 2022, Sberbank announced the closure of its London office following a reassessment of its economic potential as a result of the sanctions imposed by the United Kingdom on March 1, 2022.
- Funds of individuals in Russian banks in February 2022 decreased by 1.2 trillion rubles. The outflow of funds from deposits became a record since 2008.
- Payment systems Visa, Mastercard, Google Pay, Samsung Pay, PayPal, Payoneer, MoneyGram, JCB, Paysera and transfer systems Western Union, Paysend, Wise completely stop working in Russia and stop all card transactions. American Express has blocked access to the payment system of several Russian financial institutions. Finotech application Revolut has stopped transferring money from Russia and vice versa.
- On March 24th, 2022 Apple Pay disconnected Russian Mir cards.
- Russia’s VTB Bank closes its London branch due to sanctions.The «daughter» of VTB Bank — RCB Bank has begun liquidation;
- On April 5th, 2022, the EU announced that it plans to introduce a ban on transactions with the 4 largest Russian banks, including VTB Bank, which together account for 23% of the Russian market.
- Citigroup, BNY Mellon, BNP Paribas, Crédit Agricole cease banking business in Russia. UniCredit Bank and OTP Group are considering the option of terminating its activities in Russia. ING Bank refuses any new business contacts with Russian companies. Mitsubishi UFJ, Sumitomo Mitsui, Mizuho have stopped dollar operations with Sberbank.
- In Russia, since the end of February, trading in the NFT market has fallen by 32%.
- Japanese authorities have ordered cryptocurrencies not to process transactions involving cryptocurrencies that are subject to sanctions on the freezing of Russian assets.
- The world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange Binance will no longer support Mastercard and Visa cards issued in Russia. On March 21st, 2022 Binance disconnected Russian sanctioned banks (Sberbank, Gazprombank, Alfa Bank, Otkrytie, VTB, Bank Card Transfer (Russia), SBP — Fast Bank Transfer, Mir) and payment systems from the possibility of P2P transactions.
- According to Bloomberg, the cryptocurrency market is considered too small to circumvent the sanctions imposed on Russia.
Trade measures, embargoes
- Canada, the UK, Australia have imposed 35% tariffs on all goods from Russia.
- The US, EU, UK, Canada, Japan, Albania, Australia, Iceland, Republic of Korea, Moldova, Montenegro, New Zealand, Northern Macedonia and Norway deprived Russia of the most-favored-nation treatment (MFN) in trade. Japan has announced a similar intention.
- The United States has banned the import of Russian oil and gas, banned citizens from making new investments in Russia’s energy sector. From 16.03.2022 the US bans the export of both weak (beer, wine) and strong (rum, whiskey, vodka, tequila) alcoholic beverages, tobacco products, including cigars, any perfume and eau de toilette, fur and leather products, silk, camping equipment, luxury clothing and footwear worth more than $1,000, precious stones, pearls, silver jewelry, non-monetary gold, expensive watches, pianos and antiques, engines for ships and other equipment, some new and used vehicles (including motorcycles and mopeds).
- The largest consumers of Russian oil are boycotting it and have in fact been subject to individual sanctions. The consulting company Energy Aspects said that 70% of Russian oil «is struggling to find buyers.»
- Canada and the United Kingdom have announced plans to ban all crude oil imports from Russia. Poland is going to impose an embargo on Russian coal and propose not to buy oil in the coming months. Denmark will refuse Russian gas;
- Poland will not renew its long-term contract for the purchase of Russian gas, which expires on December 31st, 2022. Poland will ban the import of coal from Russia, a bill has already been developed by the government. Bulgaria to stop using Russian gas by 2023. Germany agreed gas deal with Qatar. Lithuania has been the first EU country to completely abandon Russian gas imports since early April 2022;
- Japan has banned the export of oil refining equipment and technology and of technological products (266 goods and 26 technologies) to Russia, including semiconductors, communications equipment, sensors, radars and encryption devices, programs for machines that make microchips, effective since March 18th,.2022.
- Australia has imposed an immediate ban on exports of alumina and aluminum ores, including bauxite, to Russia.
- The EU and Switzerland have banned the export to Russia of certain goods and services of the oil sector, certain goods and technologies that can be used in aviation and space, as well as the supplying of certain services related to these goods, such as insurance, repairs, inspections, mediation services and financial assistance.
- On March 9th, 2022, the EU imposed restrictions on exports to Russia of goods related to maritime navigation and radio communications. The EU plans to abolish the most-favored-nation treatment for Russia, ban the export of cars worth more than 50,000 euros (including Audi, BMW, Mercedes, Ferrari and Porsche) and boats, planes, chairlifts and motorcycles worth more than 5,000 euros.
- On March 15th, 2022, the EU and UK banned the export to Russia of luxury items, including cars, haute couture fashion, works of art;
- The EU and Switzerland imposed comprehensive export restrictions on equipment, technology and services for the energy sector and further trade restrictions on cast iron and steel, and banned new investments in Russia’s energy sector;
- On April 5th, 2022, the EU announced that it plans to:
- ban the import of Russian coal, which will cost Russia 4 billion euros annually;
- ban exports to Russia worth 10 billion euros annually (quantum computers, high-tech semiconductors, transport components)
- ban imports from Russia of a number of goods and raw materials such as wood, seeds, seafood and alcohol worth 5.5 billion euros annually;
- prohibit Russian companies from participating in European public procurement.
- According to Bloomberg, trade relations between China and Russia have deteriorated due to the war. After the start of the war, Chinese buyers and creditors financing their purchases avoided supplies of coal, liquefied natural gas, and crude oil from Russia;
- In Russia, the supply of juices and milk to stores began to disrupt due to shortages of packaging materials — cardboard and tetrapack. Pharmaceutical companies have faced serious problems in purchasing coated cardboard from the EU, which is used to pack medicines;
- Russia will lose up to $ 15 billion in arms exports due to sanctions and the fact that the world has seen the ineffectiveness of Russia’s weapons;
- The devaluation of the ruble and logistical problems could lead to a drop in alcohol imports to Russia by 20-40% by year. The cost of all imported components will inevitably lead to higher prices for Russian wine — at least 15% in 2022;
- Imports of imported fish (primarily salmon, tuna, shrimp) to Russia due to sanctions will be reduced by 28-35% year on year.
Airspace + aviation cooperation
- The EU authorities have decided to completely ban the supply and leasing of aircraft, helicopters and other aircraft to Russia, as well as their insurance and maintenance. The Bermuda Civil Aviation Authority (BCAA) has suspended the airworthiness certificates of Russian Bermuda-registered aircraft.
- On March 17th, 2022, Rosaviatsia issued certificate to Aeroflot provider for maintenance and repair of aircraft for maintenance of Boeing and Airbus aircraft.
- 78 Russian airlines planes on lease have been seized abroad. Therefore, the Russian airline Red Wings plans to return to the owners of 8 Airbus aircraft left in it to avoid the arrest of their Sukhoi Superjet aircraft while flying abroad.
- Russian companies have received requests from foreign lessors to return more than 500 aircraft worth a total of $ 20 billion.
- 38 countries have already closed their skies to Russia (USA, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, Albania, Iceland, Norway, Moldova, Northern Macedonia, Switzerland, Montenegro and all EU countries).
- Boeing, Airbus, Embraer and engine manufacturer CFM International have stopped servicing Russian airlines, including the supply of spare parts, pilot training in Russia, and the purchase of titanium in Russia.
- German Lufthansa, Azerbaijan’s AZAL and Buta Airways, Kazakhstan’s Air Astana, Turkey’s Pegasus Airlines, Korean Air, Air Serbia, Vietnam Airlines, Armenia Airlines, SriLankan Airlines, Air India are suspending flights to and from Russia. Turkish Airlines stops transporting Russians to all countries except Turkey.
- Restrictions on flights at 11 Russian airports have been extended until April 7th, 2022.
- Planes of the largest cargo carrier in Russia «Volga-Dnepr» completely stopped flights. European regulators have banned flights of British and German airlines.
- The United Kingdom is imposing aviation sanctions, which give the right to detain any Russian aircraft and ban the export of aviation or space goods to Russia.
- China has refused to supply Russian airlines with spare parts for aircrafts.
- The Russian aviation industry does not receive components from abroad, even on prepaid orders.
- An aircraft in Russia could break down in 5 months due to the closure of the Rostov Civil Aviation Plant № 412. Russia’s Pobeda is reducing its fleet from 41 to 25 Boeing aircraft due to a lack of spare parts.
- The largest airport in Russia — «Sheremetyevo» — sent a simple 40% of staff (6-7 thousand people) against the background of EU and US sanctions against the Russian aviation industry. Russian airline AZUR air also sent some employees to idle.
- Pobeda Airlines has announced the transition to a four-day work week from June 1st, 2022 for the ground team, including managers.
Sea ports
- The three Baltic states (Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia) could ban Russian vessels from their ports.
Other transport connections
- Finland canceled passenger trains to Russia;
- On April 4th, 2022, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia have announced their intention to start the process of complete transport isolation from Russia in the next few days.
- The EU plans to introduce a ban on entry to the block of most Russian trucks and ships.