Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Wednesday December 30 2015, @05:19PM   Printer-friendly
from the state-bank-needs-cash-infusion dept.

Bloomberg reports that a state bank used to pay for "special projects" in Russia may require an $18 billion bailout due to the effects of sanctions and low oil prices:

For years, Vladimir Putin used Vnesheconombank (VEB) to pay for "special projects," from the Sochi Olympics to covert acquisitions in Ukraine to oligarch bailouts. Now, the state bank needs a rescue of its own and it could be the Kremlin's costliest yet. VEB was supposed to be the financial supercharger of the Russian president's state-directed capitalism, using its government backing to raise billions at low rates on western markets and pumping them into ventures the Kremlin wanted funded, some concealed from public view with code names like "Lily of the Valley."

Hit by Western sanctions last year, VEB has stopped new lending. The cost of its bailout could reach 1.3 trillion rubles ($18 billion), according to several senior government officials, ballooning the budget deficit at a time when plunging oil prices are forcing spending cuts. "The government can't just leave it alone to face the problems caused by the financial and economic situation in the country, speaking directly, by various kinds of sanction pressures," Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev told a VEB board meeting discussing rescue options on Dec. 22.

The Finance Ministry has submitted proposals to aid VEB in 2016 to the government for approval, with some measures ready to be carried out in the first quarter, Svetlana Nikitina, an aide to the finance minister, said in Moscow on Tuesday. The plan provides for boosting capital to ensure the bank's ability to pay creditors, as well as supporting liquidity and cleaning up assets, she said.

Over the past eight years, VEB came to epitomize Putin's hybrid system that combined elements of market financing with tight Kremlin control, funding billions in industrial and infrastructure projects back in the days when oil prices were high and foreign credit was easy.

But U.S. and EU sanctions imposed in 2014 over the Ukraine crisis cut off VEB's access to international financial markets, leaving it without a source of cheap funding and facing as much as $16 billion in foreign-currency debt just as the ruble began its plunge. At the same time, falling oil prices accelerated Russia's slide into recession, pushing many of VEB's projects deeper into the red.


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by isostatic on Thursday December 31 2015, @01:37AM

    by isostatic (365) on Thursday December 31 2015, @01:37AM (#282811) Journal

    The change of the traditional family (2 adults, 2.4 kids, 1 house, 1 worker) into 2 workers has driven house prices up. People spend x% of their income on houses, it used to be £30k a year income, so say £1k a month. It's now £60k a year, giving £3k a month that can be spent (although some of that goes to child care, hence government subsidising childcare and encouraging outsourcing child upbringing)

    Sucks if you're a single parent, or if you want to bring up kids in the traditional way.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2