Rouble firms towards 61 vs dollar despite EU sanctions

  The Russian rouble reversed earlier losses and firmed towards 61 against the dollar in volatile trade on Tuesday as capital controls helped to offset downside pressure from concerns about new European sanctions against Moscow.

  European Union leaders agreed in principle on Monday to cut 90% of oil imports from Russia by year-end and on other sanctions, such as cutting Sberbank from the SWIFT transaction network, to punish Moscow for its intervention in Ukraine.

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  At 0949 GMT, the rouble was 1.6% stronger against the dollar at 61.23, heading away from the session low of 63.46. Last Wednesday it hit 55.80 to the dollar, its strongest since February 2018, before falling to 66.70 by the end of the week.

  “It looks like the local currency should be able to gain a foothold around 60 by the end of the day,” Sberbank CIB said in a note.

  Cash dollars in Russia remained notably more expensive than on the Moscow Exchange. Russias second-largest lender VTB offered to sell the U.S. currency for 84 roubles.

  Against the euro, the rouble gained 3.4% to 62.10, having last Wednesday hit a seven-year high of 57.10, at the peak of month-end tax payments that usually prompt export-focused companies to convert foreign currency to meet liabilities.

  Boosted by capital controls, the rouble had risen to become the world‘s best-performing currency so far this year until last week’s slide. New gas payment terms for EU consumers that require conversion of foreign currency into roubles and a fall in imports have also supported the rouble.

  Russian stock indexes were mixed.

  The dollar-denominated RTS index was flat at 1,215.6 points. The rouble-based MOEX Russian index shed 1.5% to 2,363.9 points.

  Shares in Sberbank, Russias No.1 lender, slightly underperformed the broader market and fell 1.9% on the day after the EU agreement on new sanctions. The bank said the move to cut it from the SWIFT messaging system would not affect its operations.

  For Russian equities guide see

  For Russian treasury bonds see

  (Reporting by Reuters; editing by Barbara Lewis and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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