Amirs of Caucasian Mujahideen
Sat., 25.11.1429 Hjr / 22.11.2008, 20:50 Djokhar time РусскийEnglishtürkçeУкраїнськийعربي

main

mirrors

add. formats
Google
Kavkaz-Center
WWW
Our button

News feeds
 
RussiaEvents Also in this section

Russian stocks fall, adding to record slump, on rescue loans

Publication time: 7 October 2008, 19:59

Russian stocks fell, extending yesterday's record drop, as a plan by President Dmitry Medvedev to lend billion to banks wasn't enough to convince investors the government can halt its worst financial crisis since 1998.

 

OAO Sberbank, Russia's biggest lender, should get more than half of the planned loans at 500 billion rubles ( billion), and No. 2 bank VTB Group should get 200 billion rubles, Medvedev said today. OAO Lukoil, the country's second-biggest oil producer, dropped after a spokesman said it had asked the government for loans to refinance its debt.

 

''Medvedev's proposal is only positive if the banks pass it on through the system,'' said James Beadle, an investment strategist at Pilgrim Asset Management in Moscow.

 

The new funds add to more than 0 billion already pledged to the country's biggest banks in an attempt to get them to lend. The MosPrime interbank rate that Russian banks charge each other soared to 7.29 percent today from 4.75 percent at the end of last week.

 

Sberbank jumped as much as 11 percent to 39.05 rubles and was 2.5 percent higher at 4:57 p.m. in Moscow. VTB surged as much as 14 percent to 3.85 kopeks. The Micex Index fell 4.5 percent to 717.83, after losing 19 percent yesterday to the lowest since August 2005.

 

The government plans to approve new measures to help get funds to smaller lenders as soon as today, Deputy Economy Minister Andrei Klepach said at a meeting of the dominant United Russia party in Moscow.

 

Oil Funding

 

Lukoil is seeking between billion and billion to refinance loans, spokesman Dmitry Dolgov said by phone in Moscow today. Dolgov said other companies are also seeking government loans, including OAO Gazprom, the country's gas exporter, OAO Rosneft, its biggest oil producer, and TNK-BP, BP Plc's 50 percent Russian venture.

 

Marina Dracheva, spokeswoman for TNK-BP, and Nikolai Manvelov, spokesman for Rosneft, declined to comment immediately. No one at Gazprom was available to comment.

 

Gazprom sank 4.9 percent to 136.10 rubles. Rosneft fell 6.6 percent to 101.87 rubles. Lukoil declined 5.3 percent to 1,047.90 rubles.

 

Russia led the worst drop for emerging market stocks on record yesterday. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell 1.74 percent to 659.52, after falling 9.5 percent in the worst slump since the index was established in 1987. Russia's dollar- denominated RTS Index fell 3 percent after retreating 19 percent yesterday, the biggest slump since the index began in 1995.

 

Mobius Buying

 

''When markets come down like this we add, not subtract,'' Mark Mobius, who manages about billion in emerging market stocks as executive chairman of Templeton Asset Management Ltd., said in an interview from Milan today. ``It's a once-in-a- lifetime opportunity.''

 

Russian stocks dropped 62 percent this year, the fifth- worst among 88 national equity indexes tracked by Bloomberg, as falling oil prices exacerbated a selloff that began with the five-day war in Georgia in August.

 

Regulators have suspended stock trading nine times in the past three weeks, including this morning.

Russia is in talks to also provide a 4 billion-euro (.43 billion) loan to Iceland's government to help ease its banking crisis, Iceland's central bank Governor David Oddsson said in an interview today.

 

''The market was very heavily oversold yesterday, even by recent standards, said Julian Rimmer, a London-based director at UralSib Financial Corp., whose asset management unit oversees .2 billion.

 

''Share price are less meaningful than they were because of the volatility.''

The extra yield investors demand to own developing-nation bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries widened 2 basis points to 4.88 percentage points, a four-year high, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s EMBI+ Index.

 

The yield on the Russian government's 30-year dollar bonds fell 1 basis points to 7.48 percent, retreating from a four-year high, Bloomberg prices show.

Source: Agencies

 

Kavkaz Center


«Attractive Dates» for Israel to strike Iran?
Fearing Taliban, Pakistan Cops resign
We can't defeat Taleban, says Brigadier Mark Carleton-Smith
Secret Pakistan-US Deal
The dog's fate: 'Vostok' and 'Zapad' gangs disbanded
Barack Obama did not respond to Dmitry Medvedev's congratulation
After Yevkurov's appointment as 'president of Ingushetia', Kadyrov demands to kill Yamadayev
Russia aims to be high on Obama's agenda
Obama's Russia challenge
Death of Dagestan's Sharia Jamaat leader fails to halt rebel attacks
Israeli officer who shot a handcuffed young man in Bil'in acquitted
Afghan officials aided an attack on U.S. invaders
Gaddafi's tent in central Grozny
The War on Teen Terror
Pamphlets protesting the execution of Amrozi and friends circulating widely in Solo
Peace Jirga or a new formula to compensate for the U.S. fiasco in Afghanistan
U.K. commander in Afghanistan resigns
US-IRAQ: Detainees may go from frying pan to fire
Maguire: U.N. is responsible for every death resulting from the siege on Gaza
Russia replaces Ingushetia puppet
Israel builds museum on Muslim graves
The torturer's tale
Syrians stage mass protest over deadly US raid
Truth be told, Iraq is still a living hell
Blasts occurred in Gali