Russian Yields Rise to 3-Month High
2025-10-01 11:53
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
The yield on the 10-year Russian OFZ rose toward 15%, the highest in three months amid higher bond supply by the Ministry of Finance and higher interest rates by the Bank of Russia.
The draft of next year's budget reflected RUB 13 trillion, or 40% of the federal budget, allocated for defense spending amid Russia's war with Ukraine, more than noted in preliminary documents, to extend the period of ample spending by the Russian federal government.
The flat spending coincided with risks to government revenues amid Russia's slowing economy, low Russian commodity prices amid a strong ruble, and high interest rates by the central bank, which lifted the outlook on government bond issuance.
Urals oil remained below $65 per barrel in October, while LNG prices were relatively low amid the ample availability from the US and high stocks in Europe.
On the policy front, the CBR cut its rate to 17% instead of expectations of 16%, and pushed back against aggressive cuts due to inflationary risks.