Chart Of The Day: Bearish Russian Ruble Comes Roaring Back...For Now

 | Apr 07, 2022 14:32

On Feb. 22, as Russian troops were amassing along portions of the Ukraine border and the possibility of a Russian incursion began to look probable, the US and U.K. instituted sanctions against Russian banks and oligarchs close to the country's president Vladimir Putin.

Just days after Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, Russian banks were removed from the SWIFT, the global interbank system that enables financial transactions and payments between banks worldwide. In addition, the West placed sanctions on Russia's central bank, in order to prevent it from liquidating its $630 billion in foreign reserves as a way of offsetting increasing sanctions.

Russia's currency, the ruble, collapsed between Feb. 24 and Mar. 7, dropping as much as 104.7% when the USD/RUB pair hit a record low of 143.000. The ruble's demise was a clear illustration of Russia's vulnerability. Indeed, in a speech given during that period, US President Joseph Biden famously derided the Russian ruble, saying it had been reduced to "rubble."

Yet, as of this week, the ruble has erased all of its losses and returned to pre-Ukraine-invasion levels. Does that mean that ongoing sanctions have been ineffective?

According to US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, Russian authorities are using plenty of behind-the scenes manipulation to artificially boost the country's currency. He said , "people are being prevented from unloading rubles… That’s artificially propping up the value.” However, such government control isn't sustainable indefinitely Blinken noted, adding, “I think you’re going to see that change.”

Will the Russian currency continue to strengthen, or might this be a good time to short it? We can't know what the future holds, of course, but more likely than not, this could be a buying opportunity from a psychological perspective.

Because of a spike of 104% in about two weeks, traders are keenly focused on the technicals. Therefore, for now we predict that the majority of them will be long-oriented. This dynamic is reflected in the chart.