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Interest Rate Trends in Post-Soviet Economies: Case of Russia. Iakov Kuga Higher School of Economics in St. Petersburg Baku February 28, 2012. Some Features of Russian Economy. High inflation (~ 10% p.a.)
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Interest Rate Trends in Post-Soviet Economies: Case of Russia Iakov Kuga Higher School of Economics in St. Petersburg Baku February 28, 2012
Some Features of Russian Economy • High inflation (~ 10% p.a.) • Total assets of banking system as GDP share doubled since 2005 (starting from 40% of GDP) • Discretionary and eclectic monetary policy • Highly concentrated banking sector • State participates in the capital of biggest banks
Major findings (1) • Real interest rates on deposit are negative • Real rates on corporate loans are moderate (up to 3% before and after crisis and 6 to 7% during the crisis • Consumer credit is very expensive • Real rates are volatile in short run as nominal rates lags inflation, which is itself volatile • Note! Volatile interest rates lead to a higher margins of banks (risk premiums) (Saunders and Ho (1981)) • Interest income to interest expenditure ratio is not unusual for East-European countries
Major findings (2) • Risks on loans to households are higher, but it is not enough to explain spreads with loan rates to enterprises • Market structure is important • Sberbank’s share is more than 30% and grows • Sberbank’s margin is higher than market average and the difference grows • Sberbank is net borrower at interbank money market, though it has better access to capital markets (safe haven?) • Monetary policy is discretionary. CBR usually doesn’t meet its’ inflation targets. Inflation is rather unpredictable. • CBR did well during the crisis providing banks with liquidity • Inflation rates drop considerably during the crisis
Monetary policy framework • Central bank targets inflation rate. Though it is not an inflation targeter officially. • During the pre-crisis period CBR tightly pegged price of bi-currency basket (of $0.55 and €0.45). It provides liquidity mainly through fx interventions • During the crisis price of basket became volatile (managed floating) and liquidity provided through “lombard auctions” and loans to banks of different kinds.
Interest rates during the crisis • Financial conditions in Russian economy tightened for Summer of 2008 to Spring of 2010 • Both nominal and real interest rates grows up • Real deposit rates reached zero level • Real rates on corporate loans grew up to 5-7 per cent • Interest rates on consumer credits rocketed up to 25-35 per cent level • Note! Inflation during the crisis went down • Higher real interest rates due to non-anticipated disinflation? • Higher risks • Share of overdue loans increased rapidly during the crisis
Concentration and participation of the state in capital • Sberbank is the biggest Russian bank borrowing about 1/3 of loans and attracting even higher share of household deposits • Government participates significantly in capital of top five banks in economy (Sber, VTB, VTB24, Gazprombank, Rossel’khozbank) • CR5 ratio have grown from 50 to 62 per cent during the period • Sberbank enjoys lower deposit rates • Selfselection? • Active operations of the “State banks” may be dictated by political reasons • Note! Relatively small growth of corporate loan rates during the crisis • Sberbank (and other “State banks”) have easier access to central bank loans • Did they borrow from central bank and lent at money market? • In 2010 Sberbank borrowed at money market more than lent there. • Safe haven effect (as in case with T-Bonds)?
Conclusion • Real interest rates on corporate loans and deposits are not high, but are unstable due to inflation rate movements • Bank margin is reasonable. Nonetheless, lower inflation and more stable real rates are able to narrow it further. • High market share of Sberbank is probably additional factor of widening the margin • This share tends to grow as well as CR5