Dear All,
As this article shows
us, the Citizens of Russia are continuing to suffer under the wretched rule of
their Dictator Vladimir Putin, and as time goes by, their suffering continues
to increase, terribly.
The “Mothers of Russia”
(MOR) continue to try to expose the true body count of the growing numbers of
their dead sons and soldiers as they return home in body bags and pine boxes
from fighting in the Ukraine. The “MOR” does
this in order to expose the truth to their fellow Russians while Putin and his
cronies work hard to try and hide the truth from them. The authorities often threaten the relatives
of the dead to keep quiet or else, making the Mothers of Russia’s task
extremely difficult.
Meanwhile, the world
has turned its back on Dictator Putin in a major show of disrespect. Unfortunately this also negatively impacts the
“Quality of Life” for the average citizens of Russia, as can be seen from the
article below.
To be sure, Putin makes sure to protect his wealthy Oligarch friends, from his reckless leadership and huge mistakes, by subsidizing their financial losses at the expense of the Russian people, just so he can stay in power without fear.
To be sure, Putin makes sure to protect his wealthy Oligarch friends, from his reckless leadership and huge mistakes, by subsidizing their financial losses at the expense of the Russian people, just so he can stay in power without fear.
My question to the
Citizens of Russia is, “how much longer are you willing to allow the Dictator
Putin to cause you to suffer?........haven’t you seen and had enough? Yet?
The day that Putin is
removed from the Russian seat of power will be the day that the world will celebrate
and gladly welcome you into its arms to join, in peace and prosperity, with the
free nations of the world.
We are waiting…..God
Speed to the Citizens of Russia.
Ronald L. Kirkish
Russian Bank's Collapse
Raises Alarms of Possible Financial Crisis
- By Howard
Amos, Delphine
d'Amora
- Jan. 17 2015 - 19:29
Maxim Stulov / Vedomosti German Gref issued a stark warning
of the dangers to Russia's banking system.
The head of Russia's
largest bank, German Gref, offered a bleak picture of the fate awaiting the
country's banking sector in 2015 during the set piece Gaidar economic forum in
Moscow this week.
"It's obvious that
the banking crisis will be massive," the Sberbank chief told reporters.
"The state will
capitalize the banks and increase its stake in them, and the banks will buy
industrial enterprises and become financial-industrial groups," Gref said
Wednesday.
"All our economy
will be state-run."
The warning from Gref,
a former Minister for Economic Development and a prominent economic liberal, is
not the only prediction of approaching stress for the country's financial
system.
Amid a deepening
recession and the collapse of one of Russia's top-30 banks late last year, many
analysts are urging banking executives and government regulators to prepare for
a crisis that could be as bad, or worse, than that which engulfed Russia in
2008 and 2009.
Already Underway
High interests rates —
currently at 17 percent — and the pressures of a recession are already
intensifying competition among banks for a shrinking pool of clients and good
assets, while Western sanctions imposed for Russia's role in Ukraine restrict
the ability of Russian banks to borrow abroad.
"We are already in
a crisis," said Oleg Solntsev, the head of banking and monetary policy
research at the Center of Macroeconomic Analysis and Short-term Forecasting in
Moscow.
There are several
different measures usually considered the threshold for announcing a banking
crisis, according to Solntsev, and Russia already fulfills at least two of
them: State support for the banking sector has exceeded 2 percent of gross
domestic product and deposits are contracting.
Solntsev gave a
thumbnail sketch of the likely progression of events: a growing squeeze on
credit that pushes banks toward insolvency and an increasingly unstable
situation that provokes macroeconomic problems.
Finally, at the nadir,
panic emerges among the population and runs on banks become possible.
"The speed of the
crisis will depend on two key factors: the situation on the oil market … and
the behavior of the Central Bank," said Solntsev, who predicted a
stabilization might take place only in mid-2016.
Bank Failures
The shock of wild
swings in the value of the ruble late last year have already claimed their
first victims in Russia's banking sector.
The Central Bank
stepped in to save Trust Bank, ranked the country's 28th largest bank by assets
by banki.ru, on Dec. 22, after clients rushed to withdraw savings amid the
currency collapse.
The size of the bailout
has subsequently ballooned to 127 billion rubles ($1.9 billion).
Another bank, mid-sized
St. Petersburg lender Tavrichesky, is on the verge of being saved by the
regulators, according to newspapers Vedomosti and Kommersant on Friday.
The Central Bank
reportedly assigned 262.2 billion rubles ($4 billion) to bank bailouts in 2014,
a figure that does not include all the money allocated to save Trust Bank.
"Up until recently
there were only problems with top-100 banks but now it's reached the top-30.
There will be more like
Trust Bank," Solntsev said.
Regulatory Response
Central Bank officials
have sought to calm fears over the extent of the problems facing the banking
sector.
Credit provision will
expand between 10 and 12 percent this year, deputy Central Bank governor Alexei
Simanovsky told delegates during the Gaidar Forum on Thursday.
"It's difficult to
call it a crisis," he said.
But Simanovsky added that
the regulator was committed to keeping the banking sector healthy, and admitted
the current situation was not "simple."
Some analysts have
suggested that the appointment of Dmitry Tulin, an industry professional with
significant experience of commercial banking, to the position of deputy
governor at the Central Bank earlier this week was a sign that the regulator
was looking to head off a crisis in the sector.
'Liquidity is King'
Official steps to
provide greater access to capital for Russian banks are already underway.
At the end of last year
the government decided to allocate 1 trillion rubles ($15 billion) to banks via
bond issues.
Officials later said
that the money would be received only by banks with a capital requirement of
over 25 billion rubles ($384 million).
The first in line are
Russia's second-largest bank, state-owned VTB, as well two other major
state-controlled financial institutions, Gazprombank and Rosselkhozbank.
In a separate move,
Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said Wednesday that 500 billion rubles ($7.6
billion) from Russia's wealth funds could be invested in short-term deposits
with the country's banks, the Vedomosti newspaper reported.
Timely government
action could contain the fallout of the crisis, according to some banking executives
at the Gaidar Forum.
"Gref's fears are
somewhat exaggerated," Oleg Vyugin, the chairman of the board of directors
at MDM Bank, told a panel on banking on Thursday.
"Liquidity is
king.
If the Central Bank
handles risk management inside banks effectively enough … banks can exist with
insufficient capital," he said.
But the former central
banker warned that by toppling weaker players the crisis was still destined to
have a deep impact.
"It will be the
first time that we'll see a major change in the landscape of the banking system
of this country," Vyugin said.
Contact the authors at h.amos@imedia.ru and d.damora@imedia.ru
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