Tag Archives: STK

Indian billionaire Adani seeks to control NDTV; media group says move without consent

  • India’s richest man, Adani, seeks to expand media business
  • NDTV says Adani unit moved without its consent
  • Adani takeover may not be friendly -legal expert
  • Deal to buy NDTV could heat up competition among billionaires

BENGALURU, Aug 23 (Reuters) – Indian billionaire Gautam Adani’s conglomerate on Tuesday said it seeks to control a majority stake in the popular New Delhi Television (NDTV.NS) (NDTV), a move the TV news group said was executed without its consent.

A unit of the Adani Group said it had used financial rights in a bid to purchase a 29.18% stake in NDTV, laying out plans for a subsequent open offer for a stake of another 26% in line with Indian regulations.

Hours after the announcement, NDTV issued a statement saying the move by the Adani Group “was executed without any input from, conversation with, or consent of the NDTV founders.”

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One of the nation’s most popular news organisations, NDTV is regarded as one of the few media groups that often takes a critical view of the ruling administration’s policies. It operates three national channels: NDTV 24×7 in English, NDTV India in Hindi and a business news channel. read more

“From NDTV’s statements, it seems this may not be a friendly takeover which generally is as per agreed terms and mechanism, and in fact, may end up being a hostile takeover,” said Dipti Lavya Swain, founder and managing partner, DLS Law Offices. He is not connected to the situation.

Adani Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment on NDTV’s statement.

While Adani did not disclose financial details of the group’s planned 29.18% stake purchase, it said its subsequent open offer would be for 294 Indian rupees ($3.68) per NDTV share, which would be worth 4.93 billion rupees.

That open offer price is at a 20.5% discount to NDTV’s Tuesday’s close of 369.75 rupees.

NDTV was founded by one of India’s most famous TV news personalities, Prannoy Roy, and his wife in 1988. Other than TV news channels, the group also runs online news websites.

On Monday, NDTV said in a stock exchange disclosure that Radhika and Prannoy Roy were not in discussions with any entity for a change in ownership or a divestment of their stake in NDTV.

They individually and through their company continue to hold 61.45% of NDTV, the statement said.

BATTLE OF BILLIONAIRES

In March, Adani, who is Asia’s richest man, made his first bet in the media sector by taking a minority stake in local digital business news platform Quintillion. But the proposed NDTV transaction marks Adani’s highest-profile media bet to date.

“NDTV is the most suitable broadcast and digital platform to deliver on our vision,” Adani Group executive Sanjay Pugalia said in the statement.

The move could set the stage for Adani to face off in the sector with fellow tycoon Mukesh Ambani.

Ambani, chairman of oil-to-telecom conglomerate Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), controls Network18 (NEFI.NS) which runs business channels including CNBC TV18.

Adani Group has several publicly listed companies in sectors including airports and ports, power generation and transmission, coal and gas trading.

India’s TV news industry is worth $351 million, Elara Capital said in a note, adding that 70% of this market was dominated by Hindi news. Other than Ambani, the other big player is Times Group which runs many news channels and newspapers.

Elara Capital said Adani’s planned bid to control NDTV was at “very premium valuations” but added “this move will enable a large corporate house backing for a news channel.”

Adani Group said NDTV had recorded a revenue of 4.21 billion rupees and a net profit of 850 million rupees in the fiscal year that ended in March 2022, with negligible debt.

Fitch Group’s debt research unit CreditSights on Tuesday published a report that said Adani Group is “deeply overleveraged” and that its many investments in capital-intensive businesses could pose long-term risks to investors. read more

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Reporting by Nallur Sethuraman, Chris Thomas in Bengaluru and M. Sriram and Shilpa Jamkhandikar in Mumbai
Writing by Sudarshan Varadhan and Aditya Kalra
Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri, Mike Harrison and Matthew Lewis

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Musk sells Tesla shares worth $6.9 billion, cites chance of forced Twitter deal

Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends the Tesla Shanghai Gigafactory groundbreaking ceremony in Shanghai, China January 7, 2019. REUTERS/Aly Song

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Aug 10 (Reuters) – Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk sold $6.9 billion worth of shares in the electric vehicle maker, saying the funds could be used to finance a potential Twitter deal if he loses a legal battle with the social media platform.

“In the (hopefully unlikely) event that Twitter forces this deal to close *and* some equity partners don’t come through, it is important to avoid an emergency sale of Tesla stock,” he said in a tweet late on Tuesday.

Musk in early July tore up his April 25 agreement to buy Twitter for $44 billion. Twitter has sued Musk to force him to complete the transaction, dismissing his claim that he was misled about the number of spam accounts on the social media platform as buyer’s remorse in the wake of a plunge in technology stocks. The two sides head to trial on Oct. 17.

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“Street will read through this poker move that chances of Twitter deal more likely now,” Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, tweeted.

In other comments on Twitter on Tuesday, Musk said “yes” when asked if he was done selling Tesla stock, and also said he would buy Tesla stock again if the Twitter deal does not close.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Musk, the world’s richest person, sold $8.5 billion worth of Tesla shares in April and had said at the time there were no further sales planned. But since then, legal experts had suggested that if Musk is forced to complete the acquisition or settle the dispute with a stiff penalty, he was likely to sell more Tesla shares.

Musk sold about 7.92 million shares between Aug.5 and Aug.9, according to multiple filings. He now owns 155.04 million Tesla shares or just under 15% of the automaker according to Reuters calculations.

The latest sales bring total Tesla stock sales by Musk to about $32 billion in less than one year.

Tesla shares have risen nearly 15% since the automaker reported better-than-expected earnings on July 20, also helped by the Biden administration’s climate bill that, if passed, would lift the cap on tax credits for electric vehicles.

Musk also teased on Tuesday that he could start his own social media platform. When asked by a Twitter user if he had thought about creating his own platform if the deal didn’t close, he replied: “X.com”

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Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin in San Francisco and Akriti Sharma in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by Shubham Kalia and Shivam Patel; Editing by Edwina Gibbs

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Rouble heads away from 50 vs dollar as authorities flag interventions

A picture illustration shows Russian rouble banknotes of various denominations on a table in Warsaw, Poland, January 22, 2016. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

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  • This content was produced in Russia where the law restricts coverage of Russian military operations in Ukraine

MOSCOW, June 29 (Reuters) – The rouble pared gains in volatile trade on Wednesday as Russia’s finance minister flagged possible interventions to ease upside pressure on the currency after it neared 50 against the dollar for the first time since May 2015.

The rouble has become the world’s best-performing currency this year, boosted by measures – including restrictions on Russian households withdrawing foreign currency savings – taken to shield Russia’s financial system from Western sanctions imposed after Moscow sent troops into Ukraine on Feb. 24.

The strong rouble raised concerns among officials and export-focused companies as it dents Russia’s income from selling commodities and other goods abroad for dollars and euros.

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Many Russian companies, primarily non oil-and-gas exporters, are already suffering financially, said Evgeny Suvorov, an economist at CentroCreditBank.

Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said Russia could cut state spending and channel funds for foreign currency interventions to keep a lid on the rouble’s strengthening which threatens budget revenue. read more

The rouble pared gains after the comment and was 0.4% weaker on the day at 52.00 to the greenback at 1154 GMT after hitting 50.01.

Proceeds from commodity exports, a sharp drop in imports, and month-end tax payments in roubles by export-oriented Russian firms are further factors behind the currency’s gains.

“The rouble (is) set to retreat over the coming days… With the month’s main tax payments now in the rearview mirror, hard currency purchasers may begin to step in,” Sberbank CIB said in a note.

The rouble is up nearly 44% year-to-date on the Moscow Exchange but remains much weaker at banks. VTB (VTBR.MM), Russia’s No.2 bank, offered to sell cash dollars and euros at 63.45 and 67.85, respectively.

Deputy Prime Minister Andrei Belousov said this month that industry would be more comfortable if it fell between 70 to 80 against the dollar.

Against the euro, the rouble was 0.6% stronger at 54.20, having earlier climbed beyond 53 for the first time since April 2015 .

Capital controls have enabled the currency to shrug off what the White House and Moody’s credit agency said on Monday was the first default by Russia in more than a century on its international bonds. read more

The Kremlin, which has hard currency from oil and gas revenue to make the scheduled payments on the debt, has rejected the designation, calling it artificial and engineered by Western sanctions.

Just before Russia embarked on what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine, the rouble traded near 80 to the dollar and 90 against the euro. At that time it traded in free-float mode and, unsupported by capital controls, got hammered due to fears of sanctions.

On the stock market, the dollar-denominated RTS index (.IRTS) fell 1.1% to 1,449.1 points. The rouble-based MOEX Russian index (.IMOEX) was 1% lower at 2,384.5 points.

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Reporting by Reuters; editing by John Stonestreet, Angus MacSwan and Emelia Sithole-Matarise

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Ford sells shares in EV maker Rivian for $214 mln

May 10 (Reuters) – Ford Motor Co (F.N) sold eight million shares of electric-car maker Rivian Automotive Inc (RIVN.O) for $214 million, or $26.80 apiece, the U.S. automaker said in a filing on Tuesday.

Ford now holds nearly 94 million shares, or a 10.5% stake, and is still the fourth-largest shareholder in the Irvine, California-based company, according to Refinitiv data.

Rivian is struggling in a competitive market, including competition from Ford’s F-150 Lightning electric pickup truck, while a supply chain crisis is limiting production at its plants.

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The electric-car maker earlier slashed its planned 2022 production in half to 25,000 vehicles.

Ford’s selling price of $26.8 per share on May 9 came in lower than Rivian’s close of $28.79 on Friday.

Rivian shares have dropped nearly 21% since CNBC reported the sale over the weekend. read more

T.Rowe Price Associates is the largest shareholder in the electric car maker with an 18.2% stake, followed by Amazon.com Inc’s (AMZN.O) 17.7% stake.

Amazon.com posted a 59% slump in its first-quarter operating income, largely hurt by its investments in the carmaker.

The U.S. retail giant, which is also one of Rivian’s key customers, expects to receive 100,000 delivery vans by 2024. read more

A markdown in the value of Ford’s stake in Rivian led to its first-quarter net loss of $3.1 billion. read more

Rivian and Ford did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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Reporting by Jahnavi Nidumolu and Tanvi Mehta in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips

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Rouble falls as Russia relaxes capital controls; Rosbank shares jump 40%

A view shows Russian rouble coins in this illustration picture taken March 25, 2021. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov/Illustration/File Photo

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April 11 (Reuters) – The rouble weakened sharply on Monday, reversing some of the previous week’s gains, after Russia relaxed temporary capital control measures aimed at limiting a drop in the currency.

Shares in Rosbank (ROSB.MM), a Russian subsidiary of French bank Societe Generale, jumped 40% after SocGen said it would quit Russia and take a 3 billion euros ($3.3 billion) income hit from selling Rosbank to Interros Capital, a firm linked to Russian oligarch Vladimir Potanin. read more

By 1500 GMT, the rouble had lost more than 4% of its value in jittery trade, sliding to 79.45 to the dollar , and was down 4.5% to 86.45 against the euro .

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During the trading session on Moscow Exchange, the rouble fell to 82.0950 against the dollar, from the 71 roubles hit on Friday which was its strongest since Nov. 11. read more

Late on Friday the central bank said it would scrap a 12% commission for buying foreign currency through brokerages from April 11 and lift a temporary ban on selling foreign exchange cash to individuals from April 18. read more

“The central bank gave markets a unequivocal signal that a further rouble strengthening was undesirable,” said Vladimir Evstifeev, an analyst at Zenit Bank.

The decision to scrap the 12% commission on FX operations means speculators will be able to trade again, Alor Brokerage said, adding market players were tending to lock in even small profits.

The rouble retains support from the obligatory conversion of 80% of FX revenues by export-focused companies as well as from high interest rates, even though the central bank unexpectedly cut its key rate from 20% to 17% last week. read more

ITI Capital analysts said Russia receives about $1.4 billion a day in export revenues and the rouble could firm further, given Russian capital controls and shrinking imports.

The central bank’s cut supported Russian OFZ government bonds. The finance ministry said at the weekend that it wouldn’t borrow on local or foreign debt markets this year.

Finance Minister Anton Siluanov also said Russia would take legal action if the West tried to force it to default on its sovereign debt. read more

Yields on 10-year OFZs, which move inversely with their prices, fell to 10.45% on Monday . That was their lowest since Feb. 21, three days before Russia started what it calls “a special military operation” in Ukraine, triggering unprecedented Western sanctions against Russia.

On the stock market, the dollar-denominated RTS index (.IRTS) fell 5.8% to 1,017.4 points and the rouble-based MOEX Russian index (.IMOEX) shed 1% to 2,566.6 points, with losses limited by the rouble’s slide.

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Editing by David Goodman and Mark Potter

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Musk takes 9% stake in Twitter to become top shareholder, starts poll on edit button

  • Stake valued at about $3 billion
  • Twitter shares surge 27%
  • Musk starts poll on edit button

April 4 (Reuters) – Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) boss Elon Musk on Monday disclosed a 9.2% stake in Twitter Inc (TWTR.N), worth nearly $3 billion, making him the micro-blogging site’s largest shareholder and triggering a rise of more than 27% in the company’s shares.

Musk’s move, revealed in a regulatory filing, comes on the heels of his tweet that he was giving “serious thought” to building a new social media platform, while questioning Twitter’s commitment to free speech.

He also started a poll asking Twitter users if they want an edit button, a long-awaited feature on which the social media platform has been working. It was followed by Chief Executive Parag Agrawal urging users to “vote carefully”.

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Within two hours of starting the poll, more than 1.1 million users voted, with over 75% of them backing an edit option.

Last week, in another poll, Musk had asked if Twitter alogrithm should be open source. More than 82% of the users said yes, while former CEO Jack Dorsey said, “the choice of which algorithm to use (or not) should be open to everyone.”

A prolific Twitter user, Musk has over 80 million followers since joining the site in 2009 and has used the platform to make several announcements, including teasing a go-private deal for Tesla that landed him in hot water with regulators.

Of late, however, the world’s richest person has been critical of the social media platform and its policies, and recently ran a Twitter poll asking users if they believed the platform adheres to the principle of free speech, to which over 70% voted “no.” read more

In December, Musk put out a meme that compared CEO Agrawal with Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin and showed Jack Dorsey as a his close associate who was later on executed.

Twitter’s latest quarterly results and lower-than-expected user additions have raised doubts about its growth prospects, even as it pursues big projects such as audio chat rooms and newsletters to end long-running stagnation.

“It does send a message to Twitter … having a meaningful stake in the company will keep them on their toes, because that passive stake could very quickly become an active stake,” said Thomas Hayes, managing member at Great Hill Capital LLC.

Musk – who, according to Forbes, has a net worth of about $300 billion – has been reducing his stake in Tesla since November, when he said he would offload 10% of his holding in the electric-car maker. He has already sold $16.4 billion worth of shares since then.

A regulatory filing on Monday showed that Musk owns 73.5 million Twitter shares, which are held by the Elon Musk Revocable Trust, of which he is the sole trustee. Vanguard is Twitter’s second-biggest shareholder, with an 8.79% stake, according to Refinitiv data.

Twitter shares rose 27.1% on Monday to close at $49.97. The stock, which had fallen 38% in the past 12 months through Friday’s close, on Monday added as much as $8.38 billion to its market capitalization, which now stands at $39.3 billion.

BUYOUT?

“Musk’s actual investment is a very small percentage of his wealth and an all-out buyout should not be ruled out,” CFRA Research analyst Angelo Zino wrote in a client note.

The stake in Twitter is more likely to result in positive outcomes for shareholders than negative ones, said Ryan Jacob, chief executive officer of Jacob Asset Management, who said Twitter is one of the fund’s largest holdings.

“If (Musk) decides to take an active position and Twitter goes private, it will probably be at a higher price than it is now,” he said. “If it gets other companies interested (in acquiring Twitter), it’ll probably be at a higher price than right now.”

Musk has previously made early-stage investments in companies, including online payment processor Stripe Inc and artificial intelligence firm Vicarious.

He is also the founder and chief executive officer of SpaceX, and leads brain-chip startup Neuralink and infrastructure firm the Boring Company.

Twitter was the target of activist investor Elliott Management Corp in 2020, when the hedge fund argued the social networking company’s then-boss and co-founder, Jack Dorsey, was paying too little attention to Twitter while also running what was then called Square Inc (SQ.N).

Dorsey, who owns a stake of more than 2% in Twitter, stepped down as CEO and chairman in November last year, handing the reins to company veteran Parag Agrawal.

Meanwhile, Musk and Dorsey have found some common ground in dismissing the so-called Web3, a vague term for a utopian version of the internet that is decentralized. read more

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Reporting by Nivedita Balu, Eva Mathews, Akash Sriram, Praveen Paramasivam and Maria Ponnezhath in Bengaluru;
Additional reporting by Sheila Dang in Dallas and Hyun Joo Jin in San Francisco;
Editing by Anil D’Silva, Matthew Lewis, Rashmi Aich and Arun Koyyur

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Russia stocks jump as trade resumes after month-long break

  • Energy stocks see double-digit gains on Moscow reopening
  • Sanctioned lender VTB, Aeroflot suffer falls
  • Rouble strengthens vs dollar, euro after Putin statement
  • OFZ benchmark 10-year yield nudges lower to 13.64%
  • Moscow Exchange to restart trading more instruments

March 24 (Reuters) – Energy and metals firms led a jump in Russian stocks on Thursday as trading resumed after almost a month’s suspension, reflecting soaring global prices for oil, gas and other commodities on fears the Ukraine crisis will threaten supply.

The market was also underpinned by a government commitment to support stocks, leading a senior U.S. official to dismiss the limited resumption of trading as a “a charade: a Potemkin market opening”.

Stocks had not traded on Moscow’s bourse since Feb. 25, the day after President Vladimir Putin sent troops into neighbouring Ukraine, prompting Western sanctions aimed at isolating Russia economically and then Russian countermeasures.

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The reaction has cut off Russian financial markets from global networks and sent the rouble currency tumbling. Stocks had also plunged immediately after Moscow launched what it calls “a special military operation” to disarm and “denazify” its southern neighbour.

Restrictions on trade with foreigners and a ban on short selling remained in place on Thursday as the Moscow Exchange cautiously resumed equities trading. On Friday, more securities, including corporate bonds and Eurobonds will be traded, the central bank said.

“We will do everything possible to open all segments of the stock market soon,” Boris Blokhin, head of Moscow Exchange’s stock market department, said.

STELLAR GAINS

The short session saw energy firms make stellar gains, with gas producer Novatek (NVTK.MM), oil majors Rosneft and Lukoil (LKOH.MM) and gas giant Gazprom (GAZP.MM) up 12%-18.5%.

Brent crude oil , a global benchmark for Russia’s main export, was trading near $120.6 per barrel on Thursday, having jumped more than 20% from a month ago as worries about supply disruptions from the Ukraine crisis drive up prices.

Shares in mining giant Nornickel also gained 10.2% (GMKN.MM).

Novatek and Nornickel pared losses sustained since before Feb. 24 by the session’s close. Fertiliser producer Phosagro (PHOR.MM) closed at a record high.

Reuters Graphics

“Large bids to buy Russian shares have been seen since the market opening,” BCS Brokerage said in a note, adding that a promise Russia’s rainy-day fund will buy shares was also underpinning the market.

“The overall sentiment is supported by the confidence that the finance ministry will buy stocks,” BCS said.

The government said on March 1 that it would use up to 1 trillion roubles ($10.4 billion) from the National Wealth Fund to buy battered Russian stocks, although it was not clear whether any purchases were being made on Thursday.

The finance ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

‘POTEMKIN MARKET OPENING’

An interior view shows the headquarters of Moscow Exchange in Moscow, Russia April 27, 2021. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

A senior U.S. official said Moscow’s commitment to buy amounted to artificially propping up shares, and called the limited resumption “a Potemkin market opening”.

“This is not a real market and not a sustainable model – which only underscores Russia’s isolation from the global financial system,” deputy White House national security adviser Daleep Singh said in a statement.

Trading in Russian companies listed on the London Stock Exchange remains suspended. Prices of some instruments had plunged to almost zero before the bourse halted trading of them in early March.

The Moscow Exchange said 567,000 private investors had accounted for 58.2% of Thursday’s trading volume, with 121 professional participants conducting the remainder.

“Today the first step was made in our new reality,” said Elbek Dalimov, head of equity trading at Aton brokerage, adding that trading orders were limited with non-residents, who hold more than half the free float on the market, sidelined.

“In the morning we saw a huge number of retail investors who on the one hand were closing short positions and on the other were ready to park their roubles in shares, so as to somehow save them from inflation,” he said.

The benchmark MOEX stock index ended the short trading session 4.4% higher at 2,578.51 points, having earlier reached a day peak of 2,761.17 (.IMOEX).

The dollar-denominated RTS index (.IRTS) fell 9% on the day to 852.64, pressured by the weaker rouble, according to MOEX data that was suspended in the Eikon terminal.

The negative impact of sanctions was clear in some sectors, with shares in Russia’s second-largest lender VTB (VTBR.MM) down 5.5%. And with most European airspace closed to Russian planes, flagship carrier Aeroflot (AFLT.MM) sank 16.44%.

Trading apps of major brokerages with leading banks, including Sberbank, VTB and Alfa, reported temporary problems with processing clients’ orders following the restart.

ROUBLE FIRMS

The rouble meanwhile extended its recovery, gaining 1.3% to trade at 96.50 against the dollar in Moscow trade by 1502 GMT.

The currency had hit its strongest level in three weeks at 94.975 on Wednesday after Putin said Russia would start selling its gas to “unfriendly” countries in roubles. read more

Against the euro, the rouble was 2.1% higher at 105.75 , pulling further away from an all-time low of 132.4 it hit in Moscow trading earlier in March, but far from levels of around 90 seen before Feb. 24.

Russia resumed trading of OFZ treasury bonds on Monday with the central bank helping to stabilise the market with interventions, the amount of which it has not yet disclosed.

Yields of benchmark 10-year OFZ bonds, which move inversely to their prices, stood at 13.68% after hitting an all-time high of 19.74% on Monday .

($1 = 96.0000 roubles)

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Rouble hits record low in Moscow, remains volatile outside Russia

Russian Rouble coins are seen in front of displayed U.S. Dollar banknote in this illustration taken, February 24, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/Files

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NEW YORK, March 2 (Reuters) – The rouble touched a record low of 110 to the dollar in Moscow on Wednesday and crawled back near 100 in other trading platforms, though it continued under pressure as Russia’s financial system teetered under the weight of Western sanctions imposed over the invasion of Ukraine.

The Russian stock market remained closed and trading on bonds showed wide bid-ask spreads and little-to-no volume.

The rouble fell 4.5% to 106.02 against the dollar in Moscow trade , earlier hitting 110.0, a record low. It has lost 30% of its value against the dollar since the start of the year. Against the euro , it shed 2.5% on Wednesday to finish the day at 115.40.

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But trading outside of Russia , saw the currency rebound to end the day up 6% to 100 on the EBS platform and 7.6% at 97.6 elsewhere.

The currency is still over 20% weaker than where it traded at during the first half of February.

On the EBS platform, the rouble has this week had the three widest daily ranges since 2010, with Monday the widest range on record.

“Who gosh-darn knows what’s going to happen tomorrow,” said Colin Stewart, head of Americas at Quant Insight in New York.

“It’s just too volatile.”

Russia has responded to the currency weakness by more than doubling its benchmark interest rate to 20% and telling companies to convert 80% of their foreign currency revenues on the domestic market as the central bank, which is now under Western sanctions, has stopped foreign exchange interventions.

The weak rouble will hit living standards in Russia and fan already high inflation, while Western sanctions are expected to create shortages of essential goods and services such as cars or flights. read more

Many international companies have announced plans to exit Russia, while the country’s credit ratings are coming under pressure as a result of the crisis.

Credit rating agency Moody’s said it was reviewing Russia’s rating for a downgrade, a move that “reflects the negative credit implications for Russia’s credit profile from the additional and more severe sanctions being imposed.”

JPMorgan said about $4.2 billion in Russian debt is at risk of being kicked out of investment-grade bond indexes.

Meanwhile, Scope Ratings said capital controls “raise significant questions surrounding the Russian state’s willingness to service its debt owed to foreign residents” a day after cutting its Russia rating to junk status.

The measures, Scope added, make Russia “more vulnerable to banking and liquidity crises.”

In a separate note, JPMorgan said there was a deep recession in the making for Russia and the bank was reassessing its regional macro forecasts.

“The most recent measures targeting the CBR have completely changed the picture,” JPMorgan said.

“Russia’s large current account surplus could have accommodated large capital outflows, but with accompanying CBR and SWIFT sanctions, on top of the existing restrictions, it is likely that Russia’s export earnings will be disrupted, and capital outflows will likely be immediate.”

Several Russian banks have been barred from the SWIFT global financial network that facilitates transfers between banks.

As households and businesses in Russia have rushed to convert the falling rouble into foreign currency, banks raised rates for foreign currency deposits to attract those flows.

Russia’s largest lender Sberbank (SBER.MM) is offering to pay 4% on deposits of up to $1,000, while the largest private lender Alfa Bank is offering 8% on three-month dollar deposits. For rouble deposits, Sberbank offers a 20% annual return.

Sberbank said on Wednesday it was quitting almost all European markets, blaming big cash outflows and threats to its staff and property, after the ECB ordered the closure of its European arm. read more

The bank’s London-traded shares fell to 4.5 cents from $16 at the start of the year.

A U.S.-traded ETF of Russian companies and others heavily exposed to Russia fell 13% on Wednesday, for a 72% drop since mid-February.

Moscow calls its actions in Ukraine a “special operation” that it says is not designed to occupy territory but to destroy its neighbour’s military capabilities and capture what it regards as dangerous nationalists.

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Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Jane Merriman, Jonathan Oatis and Grant McCool

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Buffett laments lack of good investments even as Berkshire profit sets record

Feb 26 (Reuters) – Warren Buffett on Saturday signaled he will stick to his knitting, bemoaning the lack of good investment opportunities for Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N) as it sits on a massive pile of cash even after repurchasing a huge amount of its own stock.

In his widely read annual letter to Berkshire shareholders, the 91-year-old billionaire expressed strong confidence in Berkshire, saying its emphasis on investing in strong businesses and stocks benefits investors with a similar long-term focus.

“People who are comfortable with their investments will, on average, achieve better results than those who are motivated by ever-changing headlines, chatter and promises,” Buffett wrote.

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Noting generally the risks of changes in world politics, terrorism and cyberattacks, Berkshire remains wary.

Cash swelled to a near-record $146.7 billion, even after Berkshire repurchased $51.7 billion of its own stock in 2020 and 2021.

Buffett also said, “We find little that excites us” in the stock market, and that major acquisitions remain hard to come by after six years without any.

“Today, internal opportunities deliver far better returns than acquisitions,” he wrote.

Many of those opportunities appeared to pay off in 2021.

Operating profit rose 25% to a record $27.46 billion, with more than one-third from the BNSF railroad and Berkshire Hathaway Energy despite COVID-19 supply chain disruptions. In the fourth quarter, operating profit swelled 45%.

Full-year net income more than doubled to a record $89.8 billion, bolstered by gains from Buffett’s investments in Apple Inc (AAPL.O), Bank of America Corp (BAC.N), American Express Co (AXP.N) and other stocks in Berkshire’s vast portfolio.

“He is offering a story of a multifaceted growth engine,” said Tom Russo, a partner at Gardner, Russo & Quinn in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, a longtime Berkshire investor. “The primary message is that Berkshire has found some magnificent businesses, so let’s celebrate them.”

The Apple stake alone totaled $161.2 billion as of Dec. 31, more than five times the $31.1 billion Berkshire paid for it. Buffett called Apple’s Tim Cook a “brilliant” chief executive.

Stock buybacks totaled $27 billion in 2021 but have slowed in 2022, totaling $1.2 billion so far. Berkshire’s stock price is 2% below its record high.

“Buffett’s patience and discipline enabled him to make what is in essence the largest acquisition in Berkshire’s history, its own stock, at a substantial discount to its current market price,” said Jim Shanahan, an analyst at Edward Jones & Co.

‘FOUR GIANTS’

In his letter, Buffett touted what he called Berkshire’s “four giants” including its massive insurance operations, BNSF, Berkshire Hathaway Energy and the Apple stake.

“Our goal is to have meaningful investments in businesses with both durable economic advantages and a first-class CEO,” Buffett wrote.

He said also Berkshire favors an “old-fashioned sort of earnings,” including $6 billion last year at its BNSF railroad, throwing shade on companies that may manipulate their results to boost their stock prices.

“Deceptive ‘adjustments’ to earnings — to use a polite description — have become both more frequent and more fanciful as stocks have risen,” Buffett wrote. “Speaking less politely, I would say that bull markets breed bloviated bull….”

Buffett said Berkshire’s huge cash stake was “not some deranged expression of patriotism,” but rather a shield against losses in its vast insurance operations, including a business insuring against major catastrophes.

Uncle Sam does benefit from Berkshire’s size, Buffett said, collecting $3.3 billion of income tax from the company in 2021 out of the $402 billion in total corporate income tax receipts received by the U.S. Treasury.

Buffett also pledged to keep more than $30 billion of cash on hand, after long saying $20 billion was the minimum. That still leaves plenty available for the right acquisition.

“They are having a tough time (making acquisitions), given frothiness in the market and difficulty competing with private equity firms and SPACs,” said CFRA Research analyst Cathy Seifert, referring to special purpose acquisition companies.

Berkshire’s annual report, also released Saturday, included a letter from Vice Chairman Greg Abel describing the company’s commitment to sustainability and protecting the environment.

Abel, 59, would become Berkshire’s chief executive if Buffett were unable to continue. Portfolio managers Todd Combs and Ted Weschler, who invest $34 billion, are in line to oversee Berkshire’s stock investments.

The company’s more than 90 operating units also include Dairy Queen ice cream, See’s candies and several industrial companies.

Berkshire also said on Saturday it plans for the first time since 2019 to hold its usual shareholder weekend in Omaha, including the April 30 annual meeting.

“Woodstock for Capitalists,” as Buffett calls the weekend, typically draws about 40,000 people for shopping, dining, a 5-kilometer run and other events.

Proof of COVID-19 vaccination will be required to attend the annual meeting and obtain some shopping discounts.

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Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Megan Davies, Diane Craft and Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Rouble sinks, stocks plunge as Russia recognises Ukraine breakaway regions

  • Russian rouble dives past 80 vs dollar
  • Rouble hits lowest point since Jan. 26
  • Stocks plunge over 10% to lowest since Nov. 2020

MOSCOW, Feb 21 (Reuters) – The rouble tanked on Monday, slipping past 80 against the dollar, while stocks plunged to their lowest in over a year as Russian President Vladimir Putin called for the immediate recognition of two breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine.

Putin signed a decree recognising the breakaway regions in eastern Ukraine as independent entities, upping the ante in a regional crisis the West fears could erupt into war. read more

The rouble fell to as low as 80.0650 against the dollar during Putin’s lengthy televised address to the Russian nation but pared some losses as Putin announced his decision, which he said would find support among Russian people.

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The sharp drop in the rouble from levels around 70 to the greenback seen just four months ago is expected to fuel already high inflation, one of the main concerns among Russians, which would dent the country’s already falling living standards.

By 1956 GMT, the rouble fell 2.7% to 79.37 against the dollar . It had been as strong as 76.1450 earlier in the session.

Against the euro, the rouble had lost 2.6% to 89.79 after hitting 90.7850, a level last seen in April 2021.

No Russian assets were left unscathed, with stocks cascading to their lowest since early November 2020 and bond yields, which move inversely to prices, soaring to their highest since January 2016.

The dollar-denominated RTS index (.IRTS) finished the day 13.2% lower at 1,207.5 points and the rouble-based MOEX Russian index (.IMOEX) lost 10.5% to 3,036.9 points.

Yields on Russia’s 10-year benchmark OFZ bonds hit a high of 10.64%. The cost of insuring Russia sovereign debt against default also surged to its highest since early 2016 and both Moscow and Kyiv’s sovereign dollar bonds tumbled.

Goldman Sachs analysts said it now seemed plausible that geopolitical risks in the Ukraine-Russia standoff were starting to have a meaningful impact on global assets.

Comparing the rouble with its high-yielding emerging market peers was a good measure of the amount of risk premium still priced into the rouble, they said.

“On that basis, our latest estimates would put the risk premium from recent escalation at 9% based on Friday’s closing prices,” Goldman Sachs said.

DIPLOMACY VS. SANCTIONS

The prospect of a possible summit between Putin and U.S. President Joe Biden, as well as upcoming talks between the United States and Russia’s top diplomats on Feb. 24, had given investors a glimmer of hope earlier in the session.

Despite Moscow’s repeated denials of Western statements saying that it plans to invade neighbouring Ukraine, Russian assets have been hammered by fears of a military conflict that would almost certainly trigger sweeping new Western sanctions against Moscow.

Washington has prepared an initial package of sanctions against Russia that includes barring U.S. financial institutions from processing transactions for major Russian banks, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters. read more

Shares of Russia’s top banks Sberbank (SBER.MM) and VTB (VTBR.MM) fell 20% and 17% respectively, underperforming the wider market.

Oil major Rosneft’s (ROSN.MM) shares also dropped 13.3%.

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Reporting by Alexander Marrow and Andrey Ostroukh; Editing by Stephen Coates, Bernadette Baum, Tomasz Janowski, Andrew Heavens and Aurora Ellis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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