Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

The Russian central bank on Monday banned overseas institutions from selling local securities on the Moscow Exchange, and suspended trading in shares and derivatives on the bourse all day.Sergey Ponomarev/The New York Times News Service

Sign up for the new Globe Advisor weekly newsletter for professional financial advisors on our newsletter sign-up page. Get exclusive investment industry news and insights, the week’s top headlines, and what you and your clients need to know.

Global investors with at least US$150-billion in Russian securities on their books are rushing to find ways to execute trades after Western sanctions froze the country out of the global financial system.

Foreign investors held US$20-billion of Russia’s dollar debt and ruble-denominated sovereign bonds worth US$41-billion at the end of 2021, according to data from the Russian central bank. Holdings of Russian equities amounted to US$86-billion, Moscow Exchange data show.

But the exclusion of many Russian banks from the Swift payments network means foreign investors are now stuck, unclear how they can exit without falling foul of the new sanctions, and unable to find counterparties who are willing and able to buy.

“Markets have priced an extremely conservative level across the board because, frankly, markets have just pulled back and said, ‘We are going to wait and see what happens,’” says Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of global fixed income at BlackRock Inc., one of the biggest Western holders of Russian sovereign debt, according to data from Bloomberg LP. “There’s not a lot of actual trading going on. Nobody wants to be on the other side.”

Over the weekend, Western countries said they would bar some Russian banks from Swift, the messaging network that underpins global payments, while also blocking the central bank’s ability to access US$630-billion in foreign reserves. From Tuesday, the U.S. prohibited its financial institutions from buying new Russian government bonds.

Most trading has stopped. The Russian central bank on Monday banned overseas institutions from selling local securities on the Moscow Exchange and suspended trading in shares and derivatives on the bourse all day.

Overseas stock exchanges, meanwhile, suspended trading in listings of Russia’s best-known companies. Deutsche Börse Group, Germany’s largest stock exchange operator, suspended trading in shares of 16 Russian companies, including PJSC Aeroflot, PJSC Rosneft, PJSC Sberbank, VTB Bank and VEB Finance PLC.

Shares of Russian bank VTB were suspended on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday, hitting traders’ ability to sell out of clients’ positions.

The value of London-listed securities such as Sberbank, TCS Group Holding PLC and Gazprom PJSC plummeted on Monday, but many traders also voluntarily withdrew from making prices for fear of the repercussions – choosing instead to wait for more guidance from their compliance departments.

Nasdaq Stock Market and the New York Stock Exchange have halted trading in some Russian-listed groups temporarily as they search for more information on the impact of sanctions following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

U.S. regulations give the exchanges the power to suspend trading in shares and ensure that investors have full disclosure of any material information that may affect share prices. Among the companies Nasdaq halted include Nexters, Yandex NV and Ozon Holdings PLC.

One question for brokers and investors was whether their trading counterparts would be ejected from Swift. “I’m having to not trade Russia till I get a list,” says one trader at an investment bank.

Some brokers were concerned that even if they managed to strike a deal, there was little guarantee it would be settled and the asset exchanged for cash. Most cross-border trades are settled in U.S. dollars, and banks are responsible for managing the currency risk for such transactions.

“It’s just so messy. If you trade something and you can’t settle it, you’re left with the exposure,” said a trader at a U.S. broker.

Those concerns were exacerbated by worries that payments for trades and coupons on bonds would be frozen in accounts at custodian banks or international securities depositories, where deals are settled and balances between central banks and commercial banks are updated.

The two largest depositories, Belgium’s Euroclear and Clearstream, together hold about €50-trillion of assets in custody for global investors, making them a pillar of the financial system. Deals are usually finalized by transferring balances between customer accounts held at the depository, or between the two market utilities.

Late on Monday, Clearstream said the ruble would no longer be an eligible settlement currency, with immediate effect.

Euroclear said it would disable VTB, the main conduit between both customers of Euroclear and Clearstream, on Tuesday and cease ruble-denominated trades that take place outside Russia from March 3. It also said it could not accept incoming funds to its other correspondent bank, Dutch group ING Group. Correspondent banking entails one bank providing services to another, often in a separate country.

Some brokers pinned their hopes on Euroclear finding a new regulatory-compliant bank in Russia. However, such a process can take time.

“Setting up a new correspondent bank relationship can take months. It’s a very onerous process. Generally, you’re encouraged to do on-site visits for due diligence or explain why you haven’t,” says Virginie O’Shea, founder of Firebrand Research Ltd., a capital markets consultancy.

Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING, says Russia could counter the freezing of bank assets by introducing a moratorium on corporate debt repayments. On Monday, President Vladimir Putin barred Russians from moving foreign currency abroad, hindering banks’ foreign liability repayments.

BlackRock believes it is possible that Russia could default on its bonds because of an inability to make payments to investors’ accounts. “It’s the difference between the ability to pay and the desire to pay,” says Mr. Rieder.

© The Financial Times Limited 2022. All Rights Reserved. FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Ltd. Not to be redistributed, copied, or modified in any way.

For more from Globe Advisor, visit our homepage.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe