Friday, September 21, 2018

Russians Removing Hard Foreign Currency From Banks In Fear Of Devaluation

Currently occupied by the regional branch of the VTB-24 bank.

Russian citizens are starting to withdraw large amounts of hard, foreign currency in an attempt to protect themselves from a possible devaluation in the country's currency, the ruble.

Rumors have been circulating after certain officials declared that if the U.S. targets Russian banks with sanctions, depositors could possibly received rubles in exchange at the present exchange rate - meaning a devalued rate and a loss for investors.

New data has shown that the falling ruble, fear of new sanctions and a rumored freeze of foreign currency deposits pushed Russians to withdraw large amounts from their bank accounts last month.

The content of the August withdrawals was also significant: 100 billion rubles was withdrawn from ruble-denominated deposits while $1.5 billion was withdrawn from foreign currency accounts.

It is likely that the majority of those withdrawing funds were state-owned banks: throughout August, the market was discussing the possibility of stronger U.S. sanctions that might limit the ability of such state banks to execute payments in dollars.

Russian money is now trapped: the risk of losing one's savings in a new sanctions crisis is growing, while there are fewer and fewer ways of getting money abroad. European regulators should look out for new schemes, more complicated than those used in the Danske Bank case, reported Russian news outlet The Bell.


https://tsarizm.com/news/2018/09/21/russians-removing-hard-foreign-currency-from-banks-in-fear-of-devaluation/

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