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Ruble hits over two-year high vs euro in Moscow as Russia halts some gas supplies

The ruble soared to a more than two-year high against the euro in Moscow trade on Wednesday, supported by existing capital controls and upcoming income tax payments, after Russia upped the ante in a gas dispute with Europe.
Russia halted gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland for rejecting its demand for payment in rubles, taking direct aim at European economies in its toughest retaliation so far against international sanctions over Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.
By 1418 GMT, the ruble had gained 1.8 percent to trade at 75.43 versus the euro, its strongest since early March 2020.
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It was 1.1 percent stronger against the dollar at 72.75.
The suspension of gas supplies to a number of European countries could exacerbate geopolitical tensions and further worsen relations with Europe, negatively impacting sentiment, Veles Capital said in a note.
However, Promsvyazbank analysts said corporate income taxes due on Thursday could deter the greenback from strengthening significantly against the ruble.

Rate cut expectations

The market is also looking ahead to Friday’s rate decision.
The central bank is widely expected to cut its key interest rate by 200 basis points to 15 percent as it tries to stimulate more lending in the economy in the face of high inflation, a Reuters poll showed.
Lower rates support the economy through cheaper lending but can also fan inflation and make the ruble more vulnerable to external shocks.
Trading activity remains subdued and somewhat erratic compared with levels seen before February 24, when Moscow sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine. On the interbank market, the ruble was weaker: banks offered to buy dollars for 74.15
rubles and were selling them for 74.57.
Movements in the ruble are artificially limited by capital controls imposed by the central bank, and the economy faces soaring inflation, capital flight and the risk of a possible debt default after the West imposed tough sanctions.
President Vladimir Putin said Russia had withstood the impact of sanctions, but an economy ministry document seen by Reuters on Wednesday showed it expects gross domestic product to shrink by 12.4 percent in its most conservative scenario, suggesting that sanctions pressure is taking its toll.
Russian stock indexes were climbing.
The dollar-denominated RTS index was up 2.7 percent to 1,027.0 points. The ruble-based MOEX Russian index was 2.3 percent higher at 2,371.3 points.
Nasdaq-listed Yandex’s Moscow shares outperformed, jumping around 8.5 percent on the day after the company reported a strong year-on-year increase in quarterly revenues but flagged an adverse impact of “geopolitical developments” on some
operations since February 24.
Read more:

Polish officials: Russia suspending gas supplies over rubles

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