The stash of liquid assets in Russia’s national wealth fund has fallen over 44% since Moscow invaded Ukraine, according to a Bloomberg report of Russian finance ministry data on Wednesday.
The massive slump in the national wealth fund’s liquid assets came as its holdings in Russian companies and in infrastructure bonds surged by 2 trillion rubles, per Bloomberg calculations.
Russia’s finance ministry also used around 3 trillion rubles from the fund to cover its budget deficit in 2023 after it doubled defense spending in the same period.
Russia could be running out of time and money soon as it keeps funding the war in Ukraine, which is soon heading into its third year.
While Russia’s economy still appears resilient, it is dealing with a swathe of Western sanctions and weak international oil prices that have fallen about 10% over the past 12 months.
Alex Isakov, an economist at Bloomberg Economics, said Russia’s national wealth fund’s liquid assets will last for another year or two if the country’s oil export prices fall below $50 a barrel.
The original article contains 311 words, the summary contains 175 words. Saved 44%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The stash of liquid assets in Russia’s national wealth fund has fallen over 44% since Moscow invaded Ukraine, according to a Bloomberg report of Russian finance ministry data on Wednesday.
The massive slump in the national wealth fund’s liquid assets came as its holdings in Russian companies and in infrastructure bonds surged by 2 trillion rubles, per Bloomberg calculations.
Russia’s finance ministry also used around 3 trillion rubles from the fund to cover its budget deficit in 2023 after it doubled defense spending in the same period.
Russia could be running out of time and money soon as it keeps funding the war in Ukraine, which is soon heading into its third year.
While Russia’s economy still appears resilient, it is dealing with a swathe of Western sanctions and weak international oil prices that have fallen about 10% over the past 12 months.
Alex Isakov, an economist at Bloomberg Economics, said Russia’s national wealth fund’s liquid assets will last for another year or two if the country’s oil export prices fall below $50 a barrel.
The original article contains 311 words, the summary contains 175 words. Saved 44%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!