Another Big Win For Putin!!!

unit321

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igor-strelkov.jpg

Igor Strelkov has admitted he is a FSB colonel in an interview(Reuters)
"I really am a FSB colonel, so I have a calm attitude and I do not advise you to call my military rank lower than it is. The title has a higher value for the military than [it has] for civilians."
Is this dood wearing RealTree camo? :comeon: That's official red neck clothing.
 

88m3

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Meet Putin’s New, and Poor, Neighbors in the Debt Market
By Ksenia Galouchko Dec 8, 2014 8:51 AM ET
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Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg
A worker carries a selection of bottled oil samples on a platform leading to an oil...Read More

Just how much has President Vladimir Putin’s Ukraine incursion eroded investor confidence in Russia?

Consider the names that the country is now surrounded by in the market where bondholders buy protection against default: Lebanon, El Salvador and war-torn Iraq. With investors charging 389 basis points a year to insure against a halt in Russian debt payments, those three countries -- all of which either have junk ratings or none at all -- are quoted at the closest levels to Putin’s government in the credit-default swaps market, according to CMA.

The cost of Russian credit-default swaps rose for the 11th straight day to a five-year high today, the longest run of increases since at least 2008, CMA data show. The country is heading toward recession as U.S. and European Union sanctions over Putin’s actions in Ukraine crimp access to foreign funding, while crude oil, the nation’s chief export earner, plunges into a bear market.

Waging Financial War

“All the problems that had accumulated in the Russian economy for years are now visible to all,” Konstantin Artemov, a money manager at Raiffeisen Capital Asset Management, who helps oversee $500 million, said by phone from Moscow Dec. 5. “Even if there’s no default, its chances are rising as there are problems with the budget because of falling oil prices.”


Photographer: Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg
A gas flare burns beyond petroleum cracking towers at an oil refinery in Nizhny... Read More

Closing ‘Channels’
Ruble government bonds tumbled, with 10-year yields jumping 146 basis points last week to a five-year high. The rate increased a further 54 basis points to 12.61 percent at 4:46 p.m. in Moscow. The currency has tumbled 13 percent over 10 days, touching a record low at 54.9090 per dollar on Dec. 3 before central bank interventions propped it up to 52.51 at the end of last week. It depreciated 1.8 percent to 53.4385 today.

Related:

Penalties over Crimea and Putin’s backing of pro-Russian separatists in east Ukraine have limited access to international capital markets for companies, pushing some of the largest, including oil producer OAO Rosneft, to request state aid as debt redemptions loom. The government has also scaled back bond sales as yields surged.

Credit-default swaps “reflect worse fundamentals, the much lower number of financing channels open to Russia and marginally the possibility of sanctions that affect foreign holdings of Russian bonds,” Paul McNamara, a money manager at GAM UK Ltd. in London, who helps oversee $6.3 billion of sovereign debt, said by e-mail.

The Finance Ministry’s press service didn’t immediately respond to an e-mailed comment request today.

‘Value Trade’
The price of oil, which together with natural gas accounts for about half of Russia’s government revenue, dropped 38 percent this year to a low of $68 a barrel amid the highest U.S. output in more than three decades.

Even after spending about $80 billion to manage the ruble’s retreat this year, Russia has more than $400 billion in international reserves, according to central bank data. While a weaker ruble has hurtconsumer spending, it benefits the budget by boosting export revenue in local-currency terms, helping to offset the slump in crude.

Russia’s total sovereign debt is equal to 9.2 percent of gross domestic product, the second-lowest among 50 countries tracked by Bloomberg. Brazil, with the same credit score as Russia fromStandard & Poor’s and whose CDS trade at 166 basis points, owes the equivalent of about 72 percent of GDP.

The country has “low debt levels, huge reserves and a flexible exchange rate, which insulates public finances from changes in global oil prices,” Jan Dehn, the London-based head of research at Ashmore Group Plc, which manages about $70 billion in emerging-market assets, said by e-mail. Russian assets are a “very good value trade,” he said.

Bailout ‘Burden’
The cost of Russian credit-default swaps has more than doubled this year as S&P cut the sovereign to the lowest investment grade in April. Unrated Iraq’s swaps are at 335 basis points, while junk-level Lebanon’s at 365 basis point and El Salvador at 415, according to CMA data.

“Investors see the main risks for Russia as having to conduct a large bailout of the economy at the same time as a recession and drop in living standards,” Dmitri Petrov, an analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc. in London, said by e-mail. “These factors clearly increase their burden on the sovereign with time, which means these risks will get gradually magnified, pushing the CDS even higher.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-12-07/meet-putin-s-new-and-poor-neighbors-in-the-debt-market.html

:rip:
 

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Domingo Halliburton

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Dominique Wilkins

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shyts in Swedish breh and I'm on my phone so I dont have those chrome options to translate it

my bad, spoiler for you

CONSTANCE A Russian military base nearly 30 mil from Norrbotten has begun renovating - and may increase by several thousand soldiers.


Alakurtti located approximately five mil from Finland and almost 30 mil straight line from Sweden. Already during the Soviet era, there was a military base. In the fall began to circulate information in the Russian media that it announced a renovation and new construction in Alakurtti, under the former lieutenant colonel and Russia expert Jorgen Elfving. He believes that one must see an upgrading of Alakurtti as part of Russia's military effort and calls it "a piece of the puzzle of many".

- The garrison of Alakurtti has a new life must be related to what happened in other current Russian Defence Forces rearmament. You can not lift the Alakurtti as a private, like anything special, but you have to see it in the context of what is going on overall within the Russian armed forces, he says.

Jorgen Elfving is clear that he can only rule on an upgrade with a figure of 3500 soldiers, as it is the only figure he saw. But according to the Russian newspaperMoscow Times , a brigade stationed in Alakurtti next year. According to the newspaper houses a brigadier 7000 soldiers.

- If there is a nyuppsatt mechanized brigade and assuming the task that is 7000 a reasonable figure, says Jörgen Elfving.

Russia is investing militarily in the Arctic.

- I see it all as a part of the Russian interest in the Arctic. There have been a pretty intense activity and structure in the Arctic region from the Russian side, and in 2014 or 2015 is a year when you should invest in the Arctic, says Jörgen Elfving.

The nearest military base in Sweden is F21 in Luleå, followed by Constance. But no direct danger is not.

- There is not a direct or immediate danger. It can be noted is that once again there are Russian troops in relative proximity to both Finland and Sweden. Then it's a question if you intend to use them. We know nothing about. There is a capacity-building, but if it poses no danger to Sweden, we can not say today, says Jörgen Elfving.

Colonel Olof Granander, Director of the Norrbotten Regiment, said that they follow all the developments taking place in the neighborhood, even Alakurtti.

- We've got some more money to test the readiness and ensure that the systems work. That's partly why we have implemented some exercises both in Norrbotten and Västerbotten, says Olof Granander.

Since 2009, the Armed Forces have increased their readiness to more quickly mobilize their forces.

- It is important that we follow developments in the immediate area and especially on the Russian side, given that there is so fierce exchange of words between Russia and Europe today, says Olof Granander.

Both he and Jorgen Elfving mean that it's not up to them to assess whether the defense is enough.

- It is ultimately a political issue to assess whether we have a sufficient defense capability, says Olof Granander.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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Russia central bank hikes rates as ruble tanks

By CNBC.com staff3 hours ago


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View photo

Stepan Popov | E+ | Getty Images


The Central Bank of Russia (CBR) raised its key interest rate by 100 basis points on Thursday in an effort to support its currency, which has fallen over 65 percent against the dollar this year.
The Russian ruble (Exchange: RUB=) hit an all-time low of 55.46 against the dollar following the announcement. The central bank raised its key interest rate to 10.5 percent and warned about the future of Russia's embattled economy.

Economic growth in the country will be close to zero in 2015-16, according to the CBR, and inflation could hit 10 percent in the first three months of 2015, heightening the pressure on Russian consumers.

Read More Putin set to scare away investment in 2015

The currency's slide comes on the back on a sharp decline in the price of oil - Russia's main export and revenue source. The country's central bank has hiked interest rates throughout the year in an attempt to bolster the country's struggling economy, which - along with falling commodity prices - is battling sanctions from the West and subsequent capital outflows.

Read More As ruble tumbles,what will Putin do next?

There are growing concerns about the strength of the economy, and on Tuesday the World Bank revised down Russia's growth projections for 2015/2016. It now predicts that the Russian economy will contract by 0.7 percent in 2015, amid continued volatility in oil prices.

Timothy Ash, head of emerging markets research at Standard Bank, said the Russian rate rise reminded him of Turkey, which delivered a massive hike in interest rates in January to defend its currency.

"The central bank (is) lagging behind the curve, and (is) likely to be forced by the market into an even larger rate hike to eventually stop the rot," Ash said in a note.

shorting russian bonds and the ruble has been free money
 

Domingo Halliburton

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about all that gold they've been hoarding....

Russia Is Fighting Its Financial Problems By Selling The Gold They've Been Hoarding


Russia is finally using all that gold they've been hoarding.

On Thursday, the Central Bank of Russia announced that gold reserves dropped by $4.3 billion in just one week, reports Vesti Finance.

Which isn't all that surprising.

Last week, the Central Bank of Russia announced that it would "sell the currency in the exchange in order to maintain the exchange rate," reported Vesti Finance .

Russia has been buying up cheaper gold "in order to prepare for the possibility of a long-lasting economic war with the West" following the sanctions imposed by the West, according to theTelegraph.

In the third quarter alone, Russia added more gold to its reserves than any other nation, according to the Telegraph. And over the last decade, Russia has tripled its gold stocks, according to data from the World Gold Council.

Until recently, Russia hasn't dipped into these enormous reserves.

But now that the ruble is getting pummeled following the decline in oil prices and sanctions imposed on Russia's economy by the West, Russia's central bank is apparently selling off some of its gold reserves to fight inflation and the ruble's decline.

On Thursday, the Central Bank of Russia raised rates to 10.5%, up from 9 .5% in an attempt to stem the fall of the ruble and fight inflation that jumped to 9.1% in November.

S o far, this has not had the intended effect: the ruble dropped to a new low of nearly 56 rubles to the dollar on Thursday.

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Russia_Is_Fighting_Its_Financial-38e5cbef902c2a733c764efa6f9e856e

Bloomberg
 

88m3

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The Ruble Collapse Is Dragging These Homeowners Underwater
By Carol Matlack December 11, 2014
1211-Russian-homes-970-630x420.jpg

Photograph by Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

Luxury residential properties in the Golden Mile district of Moscow on Oct. 29

When Alexey Khodorych took out a $160,000 loan to buy his Moscow apartment in 2007, he opted for a mortgage denominated in dollars, because the interest rate was lower than it would have been for a loan in rubles.

Back then, with the ruble trading at about 25 per dollar, the monthly payment of $1,600 was no problem for Khodorych, who’s an editor at a children’s magazine. Now, though, the exchange rate has jumped to more than 54 per dollar. While Khodorych says he can still afford food for his family, they’ve had to cut back on other spending. “If the ruble falls down to 70 per dollar,” he says, “I’ll be in a mess.”

Among the victims of Russia’s currency collapse, few have been hit harder than homeowners with foreign-currency mortgages. Russia’s central bank says 117 billion rubles ($2.2 billion at today’s rate) in foreign-currency loans were outstanding on Nov. 1. That’s only about 3 percent of total mortgages. But as the ruble’s value has plunged 40 percent against the dollar in recent months, some 15 percent of those loans are now delinquent. By contrast, the delinquency rate on ruble mortgages is less than 1 percent.

STORY: Ordinary Russians Suffer Ruble Shock
Homebuyers were drawn to foreign-currency mortgages by banks offering more-generous terms, including interest rates 4 to 6 percentage points lower than on ruble loans. It’s a decision they now regret. Denis Denisov, a bank employee in Moscow, took out a dollar mortgage last spring for about three-fourths of the purchase price of the apartment he was buying. Now, he says, “the loan exceeds the total value of the apartment by about 10 percent.”

Magazine editor Khodorych says he realized two years ago that a currency collapse could land him in big trouble and asked if he could switch to a ruble loan. But he dropped the idea when the bank asked for a 500,000 ruble penalty, about $16,000 at the time. “That was a wrong decision,” he says. “I should have paid that money, even though it was difficult.”

STORY: For Putin, the Economic Signals Are Looking Worse and Worse

http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2014-12-11/the-big-squeeze-for-russian-mortgage-holders

:leostare:



:wtf:




:skip:
 

88m3

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Rage Comes to Russia
Why Moscow Should Worry about Terrorism
By Ilan Berman
DECEMBER 7, 2014
Berman_RageComesToRussia.jpg

A burnt-out car is seen near the Press House building, a local media agency, in the Chechen capital Grozny, December 4, 2014. (Courtesy Reuters)
In recent months, discussions of Russia in Washington and European capitals have focused on the Kremlin’s ongoing neoimperialist aggression against Ukraine. But Wednesday's coordinated terrorist assault on the Chechen capital of Grozny—which left at least 20 dead and scores more injured—should refocus global attention on a problem that Russia itself increasingly is confronting: a resilient wave of radical Islam.

Indeed, the Caucasus Emirate—the notorious al Qaeda–linked terrorist group that has claimed responsibility for the brazen December offensive in Grozny—has carried out a spate of attacks over the past year, including the high-profile bombing of a train station in Volgograd on the eve of the Sochi Olympics. Russian President Vladimir Putin might claim that his country has turned a corner in its fight against terrorism, but these attacks—and the overall security situation in the North Caucasus—paint a very different picture.

And now, Russia's problem with radical Islam is poised to get much, much worse, for at least three reasons.

The first is Syria. Over the past three and a half years, the conflict between the regime of Bashar al-Assad and assorted opposition forces has steadily transformed from a civil war into an international jihad. Syria has progressively taken on Afghanistan’s old role as Islamist fighters and would-be holy warriors from North Africa, the Middle East, and Europe have flooded to the front there.

Russia is not immune from this trend. Russian counterterrorism experts estimate that there are close to 1,000 active militants fighting in the North Caucasus right now, and that, to date, some 400 or so fighters have left the Russian Federation to go fight in Syria. The latter number, they say, is made up almost entirely of new recruits—people who had not previously taken up arms. Officials in Moscow worry that, when the fires of Syria’s fast-moving holy war die down, these foreign fighters will return home and swell the ranks of the Islamist insurgency in the Caucasus by as much as a third. (Indeed, this fear goes a long way toward explaining why Russia continues to back Assad’s brutal regime. Quite simply, Moscow would much prefer Damascus do its dirty work than be forced to deal with mounting Islamic militancy at home.)

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/142433/ilan-berman/rage-comes-to-russia
 
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