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Azerbaijan Spends 8% of Reserves as Ruble Rout Lashes Currencies

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  • Azerbaijan Spends 8% of Reserves as Ruble Rout Lashes Currencies

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2015-01-13/azerbaijan-spends-8-of-reserves-as-ruble-rout-lashes-currencies.html

    Azerbaijan Spends 8% of Reserves as Ruble Rout Lashes Currencies
    By Zulfugar Agayev
    Jan 13, 2015

    Azerbaijan's central bank spent about 8 percent of its international
    reserves to defend its currency last month as the crisis in Russia and
    slumping oil prices forced devaluations in other former Soviet states.

    The central bank used $1.13 billion from its currency holdings to
    support the manat in December after buying $1.27 billion in the first
    11 months to keep it from strengthening, the regulator in Baku said in
    an e-mailed statement. The manat appreciated 0.1 percent against the
    dollar last month.

    `As a result of the quick regulatory measures, stability was ensured
    fully in the currency market,' the central bank said, adding that it's
    already returned to purchasing foreign currency after last month's
    sales.

    Contagion from the Russian ruble's decline of more than 40 percent
    last year has rippled through the former Soviet Union, putting
    pressure on currencies from Belarus to Armenia. Azerbaijan's central
    bank has vowed to keep the manat stable even as economic growth slowed
    to 3 percent last year from 5.8 percent in 2013 because of a slump in
    oil prices and production. Azerbaijan, the third-biggest crude
    producer among ex-Soviet republics, relies on hydrocarbons for more
    than 90 percent of exports and 45 percent of gross domestic product,
    according to the International Monetary Fund.

    The central bank said the manat's stability is key to steadying the
    broader economy and promised to use `all means' at its disposal to
    keep the currency stable through 2015. Azeri President Ilham Aliyev
    said last month that his country will continue to support the manat's
    value for `social' reasons.

    The manat gained 0.1 percent today to 0.7844 against the dollar,
    according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

    `Of all the regional currencies, I would expect the Azeri central bank
    to value FX stability,' Timothy Ash, the London-based chief economist
    for emerging markets at Standard Bank Group Ltd., said by e-mail.
    `Remember they held the manat even through the Lehman crisis.'

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