Talk vs. Action: Russia’s Currency Dilemma Continues

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I’m a few days behind on this as I’ve been busy with other parts of this website, but there have been a number of developments since my post last week regarding how Russia discusses its currency maneuvers. The specific language used here is VERY important, so bear with me as I get nitpicky.

First, the facts as reported by various news outlets whose links are embedded within each bullet point:


  • Thedollar suffered an immediate decline following the announcement of thevarious plans to buy IMF bonds but then bounced back on Yosano’scomments.
“We are not going to significantly change the structure of ourinvestments. Ten billion is not a significant change (in currencyreserve holdings). A serious change is when we used to invest $100billion in Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, but no longer do. In the nearestfuture, I do not see major changes in our policy in relation to thedollar.”

“I don’t see the dollar as being weak, I think the dollar has beentoday correctly valued by the market. We see a dollar which today isstronger than one year ago….so I don’t see today a weak dollar and Idon’t forecast that we would have to expect many changes in the comingtime.”

Now for some additional items buried deeper in the above stories that are worth noting:

“Asusual the market takes everything at face value and thinks everythingwill be implemented tomorrow. I don’t believe this will be done on asignificant magnitude over the next six to twelve months. It’ssomething they have in mind in the long term.”

  • Maxim Oreshkin, OAO Rosbank’s Research Chief, agreed:
“Thecentral bank has never stood out for making fast moves with itsreserves. If it changes certain groups it will happen smoothly.”

Here’s what did NOT happen regarding the currency issue while all of this was going on:

  • Nouriel Roubini, whose prescience regarding the current global economicdownturn has gained him household name recognition, offered hisprognosis for the dollar’s status as the world’s primary reservecurrency. And much like his consistently bearish outlooks for the pastnumber of years, he avoided naming a date or quantitative threshold forthe dollar’s pending doom. As the old saying goes, “even a broken clock is right twice a day.”
  • Nobody to my knowledge has directly addressed any principal actor’sulterior political motives in expressing support for the dollar. At alater date, I will take up this particular aspect of Russia’s currencydilemma in greater detail.
  • I have not posted any quotes from any principal actors who think thedollar will lose primary reserve currency status in the immediatefuture because I cannot find any but am absolutely open to any suchcommentary out there. “Principal actors” in this case meanspolicymakers or market participants.

Finally, some concluding comments and observations of mine:

Recent history is riddled with examples of unfulfilled promises fromgovernment officials owing to a variety of reasons. When it comes toeconomy-related promises, the current state of affairs is such thatwith new information needs being revealed daily, if not morefrequently, the value of any promise or intent is only truly realizedupon delivery. The more colloquial way of saying this: Talk is cheap.

Interpreting that notion in the Russian context is entirelysubjective. The Russian government may go back on its promise to buyIMF bonds; it may go back on its outlook of having full confidence inthe dollar; it may do some combination of both. Either way, it appearsvery likely that what government officials truly want for the Russianeconomy will not be executable from a practical standpoint. To theextent that this is the case, no matter what the government does toaddress the broad array of economic challenges it faces, it willinevitably fall short of getting it 100 percent right. But regrettableoutcomes can be minimized if the right questions are asked and coursesof action are determined more on the basis of rationality than oncatering to semi-informed politically palatable outbursts.

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8 Comments

  1. Posted June 15, 2009 at 7:49 am | Permalink

    Lots of hemming and hawing from El Maestro (see final paragraph) but not many definitive statements.”The more colloquial way of saying this:” What’s your point?

  2. James
    Posted June 15, 2009 at 2:02 pm | Permalink

    I think he is trying to put this in words that even you could understand…

  3. Posted June 15, 2009 at 4:37 pm | Permalink

    Well then, I must really be stupid because I’m not sure I understand what point he (Mr. El Maestro) is trying to make exactly. Do you?

  4. Posted June 15, 2009 at 4:39 pm | Permalink

    …. and by the way, what’s with all this anonymous crap with you anti-Putin folks.First La Russophobe and now El Maestro. You guys take yourselves awfully seriously.

  5. Posted June 16, 2009 at 2:01 am | Permalink

    Timothy, as our last conversation here made apparent, foreign exchange policy, particularly for Russia, is influenced by a wide variety of inputs. So there are several purposes to this post, but the most important are these:1. Given the range of inputs influencing how currencies are discussed, traded and regulated, I aim to provide a single place where the relevant facts are collected for readers of this blog who have a stake in the way Russia carries out its foreign exchange policy. The incredible politicization – to say nothing of the infantilization – of this topic makes fact-based analysis all the more vital. It is therefore my aspiration to discuss Russia’s currency issues in as detached and as sophisticated a manner as I am capable.2. Specific to the concluding thoughts of the post, I direct you back to our previous conversation: what any government’s officials say is not necessarily what those officials will end up doing when push comes to shove regarding currency policy. For anyone predisposed toward any particular interpretation of that statement as it regards Russia, I ask that both sides be considered: officials may turn back on their support of the dollar and/or they may turn back on their pledge to buy IMF bonds. And neither outcome should surprise us. As a matter of fact, if anything, their rhetorical hedging on this issue certainly sets them up to do either and then credibly claim that they have put their money where their mouths are. Hence the title of this post: Talk vs. Action.As for definitive statements, I am hoping that any reasonable person would read this posting and see without any difficulty a number of definitive statements from me. Whether or not they are the sorts of statements you want or expect to see me write is another matter entirely.As for Putin, I personally am neither for nor against him. He is what he is, and that’s that. I’ve never met the man and I do not consider it my place to use this blog as an outlet for spouting off half-baked tirades that have the precision of an out-of-control garden hose. I do however find Russia a fascinating culture and where that intersects with my grounding in finance and economics I hope will provide readers with a perspective on modern Russia that they may not normally be accustomed to.As for taking myself seriously, I actually chose the nom de plume “El Maestro” with exactly the opposite intention. If there really is no part of you that finds that the least bit funny, then perhaps it is you who is taking things too seriously.By the way, from our previous comment thread, I meant to say, your assertion that the dollar faces “death by a thousand cuts” – I couldn’t agree more and actually really like that way of phrasing it. But as we noted, the hitch is how long those 1000 cuts take.

  6. Posted June 16, 2009 at 5:11 am | Permalink

    Ok, so we’re back to where we started.Namely, the US Dollar has a bumpy road ahead of it but there is still little consensus on when it will, if ever, relinquish its place as the reserve currency of choice- 1 year, 10 years, 100 years…. nobody knows. Fair enough.Additionally, you are tired of all the “white noise” emanating from the media in response to proclamations from government officials around the world on this topic. Your point, correct me if I’m wrong, is that the time has come to “fish or cut bait” (as we say in Boston), “put up or shut up” (as they say in New York), or “sheet or get off the pot” (as they say in Houston). Fair enough.Lastly, why then the anonymity? I agree with you that talk is cheap and, in particular, when delivered from the comfort of a pseudonym. Robert and James don’t feel the need; what makes you so special.

  7. Posted June 16, 2009 at 8:30 am | Permalink

    Lighten up.

  8. Timothy Post
    Posted June 16, 2009 at 9:44 am | Permalink

    @El Maestro “Lighten up”I’m working on it every day in the gym. Did 5,000 meters on the erg yesterday.

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