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WRAPUP 1-Russia Kudrin Calls For Caution In Reserves Use

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  • WRAPUP 1-Russia Kudrin Calls For Caution In Reserves Use

    WRAPUP 1-RUSSIA KUDRIN CALLS FOR CAUTION IN RESERVES USE
    By Gleb Bryanski and Dmitry Sergeyev

    Reuters
    Tue Oct 21, 2008 5:06am EDT

    MOSCOW, Oct 21 (Reuters) - Russia must use caution in deploying its
    foreign exchange reserves to battle the effects of the global economic
    crisis, after spending nearly a tenth of its total in two months,
    Finance Minister said on Tuesday. The reserves, the world's third
    largest, are now at $530.6 billion, down $66.9 billion since early
    August. The rating agencies have said Russia's reserves are a key
    factor for the country's investment grade rating,

    The call on the cash pile is rising because the country has to support
    its currency, fund high budget social spending and finance a $210
    billion financial system rescue plan, a challenging task at a time
    of declining oil prices.

    "The gold and forex reserves have fallen by $50 billion," Finance
    Minister Alexei Kudrin told fellow finance ministers from former Soviet
    states. "We need to be careful when we use this stabilising influence."

    "Gold and forex reserves allow us to guarantee the currency rate
    stability," he added.

    Reserves have fallen mostly because of heavy interventions by the
    central bank over the past months.

    The regulator has managed to keep the currency stable versus the
    dollar/euro basket at around 30.40.

    But as ordinary Russians track their savings through the dollar rate
    officials have to intervene almost daily to persuade the population
    that the rouble will not weaken. "No rouble devaluation is planned,"
    Kudrin's deputy Sergei Shatalov told reporters in the Armenian
    capital of Yerevan, where he was travelling as part of President
    Dmitry Medvedev's delegation.

    As the dollar continued its rally versus the euro on global markets,
    its rate versus the rouble <RUB=> rose to the highest level since
    February 2007 of 26.5 while exchanges rates on the streets were as
    high as 28.

    Traders said, however, they haven't seen signs of central bank's
    interventions in the past two days.

    BIG DEMAND FOR REFINANCING

    The reserves are poised to fall by a total of $74 billion in the
    next weeks. Russia has earmarked $50 billion to help its companies
    refinance foreign loans, another $6.7 billion to buy local stocks and
    $17.3 billion in subordinated loans for the country's largest banks.

    The money will mainly flow via state agent, Development Bank, known
    in Russian as VEB, whose head said on Tuesday he had already received
    $97 billion in refinancing applications.

    Russian companies have borrowed aggressively abroad to fund growth
    and acquisitions in the past years and now struggle to refinance
    loans as capital markets are shut.

    "Banks have applied for twice as much as companies -- $64 billion
    from the banks and $33 billion from companies," Vladimir Dmitriyev
    told reporters adding that the first 10 applications would be cleared
    in the near future.

    He also said the bank may start investing state funds in the stock
    market this week.

    Kudrin said the Finance Ministry will withdraw from refinancing banks,
    leaving that role to the central bank's new system of collateral free
    loan auctions, which began on Monday.

    He also told finance chiefs of the Commonwealth of Independent
    States (CIS), a loose grouping of ex-Soviet republics, that they
    would be affected by a slowdown in Russia's construction industry,
    which employs migrants from all over the region.

    "The industry is overheated and will suffer a decline in demand and
    many who only just started their projects feel it already," Kudrin
    said. (Additional reporting by Denis Dyomkin and Andrei Ostroukh,
    Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Victoria Main)
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