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Russia’s Economic And Financial Meltdown Continues Apace

Edward Hugh (December 16th, 2008) Writes:
By Edward Hugh: Barcelonabr /br /Russia's foreign-exchange reserves have been now been declining very rapidly since mid August, and as the money goes so does the faith that the large stock of reserves the country built up during the boom times would be sufficient to see them through any downturn in energy prices. As the money leaves, so it seems does the decade of economic growth and stability which they symbolised. Indeed so rapid has been the decline that Russia's international reserves, which are the third-biggest after those of China and Japan, have now fallen $161 billion, or 27% percent, since 8 August last, and decreased by $17.9 billion to $437 billion in the week to 5 December. Investors have now pulled $211 billion out of the country since August, according to estimates by BNP Paribas.br /br /br /pa href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_ngczZkrw340/SUbQptNe4tI/AAAAAAAALyE/K0xlBOy3AlA/s1600-h/russia+GDP.png"img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5280137028067844818" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: ...
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Oil And Agriculture Set To Soar In 2009

Contrarian Profits (December 15th, 2008) Writes:

Some commodities are due a strong rebound, says Manraaj Singh. The underlying fundamentals are largely unchanged from July, when many resources were posting record highs. Manraaj says crude oil prices could double by the end of 2009, while agricultural prices will also soar.

This from Fleet Street Invest:

Just a few months ago it seemed like the whole investment world was jumping onto the commodities bandwagon. Now it seems that they can’t jump off fast enough.

The benchmark Reuters/Jefferies Commodity Index has now fallen by 51% from its peak in July (see chart below).

Benchmark Reuters/Jefferies Commodity Index

But as I’ll explain in a moment, commodity prices are set for a rebound. And if you are willing to take a longer term view, this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

Commodity prices reflect future expectations about the global economy. Less business activity and infrastructure spending means less demand for commodities.

...

Russia’s Consumption-Driven Inflation: Will It All End In Tears?

Claus Vistesen (July 9th, 2008) Writes:
by Edward Hugh: BarcelonaRussia's inflation rate remained tantalisingly frozen at its highest in more than five years in June as energy and food prices continued to move on upwards. Russian consumer prices were up 15.1 percent from a year ago - matching the rate in May- according to data released earlier this week by the Federal Statistics Service.As a result he Russian government is struggling to bring inflation down towards it's 10.5 percent target after increased income from rising global energy prices boosted domestic demand and made possible 300 billion rubles ($13 billion) of extra government spending on items like pensions and state wages in the run up to last December's elections. The result has been a massive surge in consumer spending and construction activity which has pushed the rate of expansion in the Russian economy above its long ...
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Russia’s Consumption-Driven Inflation: Will It All End In Tears?

Edward Hugh (July 7th, 2008) Writes:
Russia's inflation rate remained tantalisingly frozen at its highest in more than five years in June as energy and food prices continued to move on upwards. Russian consumer prices were up 15.1 percent from a year ago - matching the rate in May- according to data released earlier this week by the Federal Statistics Service.As a result he Russian government is struggling to bring inflation down towards it's 10.5 percent target after increased income from rising global energy prices boosted domestic demand and made possible 300 billion rubles ($13 billion) of extra government spending on items like pensions and state wages in the run up to last December's elections. The result has been a massive surge in consumer spending and construction activity which has pushed the rate of expansion in the Russian economy above its long term "comfort" capacity level.

In

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Article IV, Bank of Russia, Banking, central bank, central bank crredibility, chemical products, China, communication services, Eastern Europe, Electricity, electricity generating, electro-technical equipment, end-product, energy, energy equivalent, energy exporter, energy price increases, Energy Prices, Federal Statistics Service, food, Food Industry, food inflation, food inflation shock, Food price rises, food price shock, food price spike, Food Prices, food priceshave, Health Services, high oil prices, higher global oil prices, India, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, International Monetary Fund, Konstantin Korishchenko, Korea, non-banking sectors, non-food prices, non-oil deficit, non-tradable services, Oil, oil account, oil and gas account, oil and gas prices, oil and gas revenue, oil and gas sector, oil income, Oil Prices, oil revenues, Plastics, Record Oil Prices, Retail Trade, RUB, rubber, Russia, Russia, Russian federal government, Russian Federation, Russian Government, Russsian government, Saudi Arabia, the Russian central banks buys, Urals, USD, Volga, wholesale and retail trade

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