Friday, October 31, 2008

"A $15 billion weekly outflow is rather large."

Brad Setser with some scary money flows from Russia:

"But about $15 billion reflects Russian intervention in the currency market, as well as the drain on Russia’s reserves associated with the loans Russia’s government is making to Russian banks and firms seeking foreign exchange to repay their foreign currency debts.

A $15 billion weekly outflow is rather large.

$15 billion is as much as the IMF committed to lend Russia back in 1998. And the IMF actually only disbursed a third of that total.

The most the IMF ever actually lent out to a single country in the past was roughly $30 billion (to Brazil, in 2002-03). At the current rate, Russia will run through that much in two weeks."

So, $15 billion, and the IMF has only ever loaned to one country $30 billion.

"But the pace of decline in Russia’s reserves is also evidence of the scale of the reversal in capital flows to emerging economies — and the pace of the current outflow.

More money is probably leaving Russia than is leaving other countries, as Russia has some uniquely Russian vulnerabilities that other emerging economies lack. But even if Russia is at one end of the distribution, it certainly isn’t atypical …

But"

Here's my comment:

    October 31st, 2008 at 2:10 pm

  1. Is there any way to even estimate what the IMF might need to fulfill the two programs that they recently announced?

But nothing. Wow,

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