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Russia's Central Bank Vows To Address Ruble Crisis

Published 12/16/2014, 10:57 AM
Updated 12/16/2014, 11:01 AM
© Reuters. People walk past a shop with a sale advertisement in St. Petersburg November 7, 2014. Russia's central bank plans further steps to prop up the declining ruble, according to central bank first deputy chairman Sergei Shvetsov.

By Connor Adams Sheets -

© Reuters. People walk past a shop with a sale advertisement in St. Petersburg November 7, 2014. Russia's central bank plans further steps to prop up the declining ruble, according to central bank first deputy chairman Sergei Shvetsov.

The swift decline of Russia's ruble is a "critical" situation that the nation's central bank will take further steps to address in the coming days, the bank's first deputy chairman Sergei Shvetsov said Tuesday. The comments come in the wake of a move by the bank to increase interest rates from 10.5 percent to 17 percent overnight, which was aimed at saving the ruble from further losses.

"The situation is critical. We could not imagine this in our worst nightmare a year ago," Interfax quoted Shyetsov as saying, according to Channel News Asia. "[The rate hike] will be followed by other measures to stabilise the situation."

The ruble hit a record low against the dollar Tuesday in the latest in a series of setbacks for the currency, signifying that investor confidence in the interest hike's ablity to prop up the currency was low, the Wall Street Journal reported. The ruble fell to 74 a dollar Tuesday afternoon before rebounding to 59 a dollar, then falling back below 64 a dollar. A day before, the ruble lost over 10 percent of its value on Monday, according to the Journal.

The fall of the ruble demonstrates that sanctions against Russia imposed by Western nations are combining with the dramatic recent drop in oil prices to put significant economic pressure on Russia, according to National Public Radio.

The ruble's poor recent performance contributed to a minor downward tick in the Dow Jones industrial average and S&P 500, both of which were down at least 0.1 percent by 10 a.m Eastern Standard Time, while the Nasdaq composite was down 0.3 percent, according to USA Today. The ongoing drop in oil prices has also made investors skittish. West Texas Intermediate crude oil hit a new 5 1/2-year low of $54.39 a barrel Tuesday morning, the newspaper reported.

"The slide in oil continues to drive markets," Barclays said in an Tuesday morning report, according to USA Today.

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