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Russia's finance minister, Anton Siluanov
Russia's finance minister, Anton Siluanov, says Russia has taken ‘all the necessary steps’ to pay its foreign creditors in foreign currency and roubles. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Russia's finance minister, Anton Siluanov, says Russia has taken ‘all the necessary steps’ to pay its foreign creditors in foreign currency and roubles. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

Kremlin will take legal action if Russia pushed into default, minister threatens

This article is more than 2 years old

Sanctions are designed to make it difficult for Russia to make sovereign debt payments to foreign investors

Russia’s finance minister has said the Kremlin will take legal action if the west tries to force it to default on its sovereign debt as part of sanctions placed on the country after Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.

In comments hitting back against US, UK and EU-led sanctions, Anton Siluanov told the pro-Kremlin Izvestia newspaper that Russia had taken “all the necessary steps” to pay its international creditors.

In response to sweeping financial sanctions imposed on Russian banks since the war in Ukraine began, the Kremlin has said it would pay holders of its dollar-denominated bonds in roubles. However, many investors would view this as a form of default, a situation in which governments are unable to keep up their debt payments.

Siluanov suggested Russia could go to court to argue that the terms of its repayments had been met, without saying where such a hearing could happen. “Of course we will sue, because we have taken all the necessary steps to ensure that investors receive their payments,” he said.

“We will present in court our bills confirming our efforts to pay both in foreign currency and in roubles. It will not be an easy process. We will have to very actively prove our case, despite all the difficulties,” he added.

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The credit ratings agency Standard & Poor’s said last week that it believed Russia had made debt payments on its US dollar-denominated bonds in roubles when payments were due on 4 April. It had been due to make a payment of $649m (£498m) to holders of two of its sovereign bonds, although it was blocked from doing so by US sanctions preventing Russia from using dollars to service its debts.

Investors are not expected to be able to convert those payments into dollars equivalent to the original amounts the Russian government was due to pay. “We think sanctions on Russia are likely to be further increased in the coming weeks, hampering Russia’s willingness and technical abilities to honour the terms and conditions of its obligations to foreign debtholders,” Standard & Poor’s said.

Russia has a 30-day grace period to make payments. With government debt worth about $40bn in foreign currency bonds, the country has so far managed to avoid defaulting on its debts. However, sanctions imposed by the US Treasury are designed to force the country to choose between draining remaining dollar reserves or defaulting on its obligations.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Europe’s political leaders have been slow to recognise financial reality of long wars

  • China supporting Russia in massive military expansion, US says

  • EU moves towards using €27bn in profit from frozen Russian assets for Ukraine

  • Roman Abramovich business associate loses appeal against UK sanctions

  • Ukraine says frozen Russian assets should be used to rebuild war-hit economy

  • Russia warns US and Europe over reports Ukraine may get its seized assets

  • EU plans fresh Russia sanctions including against son of Dmitry Medvedev

  • French police detain Russian tycoon over alleged financial and sanctions violations

  • Russia has tightened capital controls to help prop up rouble, report says

  • David Cameron in Ukraine on first mission as UK foreign secretary

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