Trading

Russian rouble gains 3% on first working day of 2023

Published by Jessica Weisman-Pitts

Posted on January 9, 2023

2 min read

· Last updated: February 2, 2026

Add as preferred source on Google
A Russian one rouble coin in front of the Kremlin, symbolizing currency trading - Global Banking & Finance Review
This image features a Russian one rouble coin placed in front of the Kremlin, highlighting the recent gains in the rouble's value against the dollar. It reflects the trading dynamics discussed in the article about the rouble's performance in early 2023.
Global Banking & Finance Awards 2026 — Call for Entries

By Jake Cordell (Reuters) – The Russian rouble started the first full trading day of the new year on the front foot, advancing by more than 3% against the U.S. dollar to rebound from six-month lows hit in volatile trading at the end of 2022. At 1005 GMT on Monday, the rouble had passed through […]

By Jake Cordell

(Reuters) – The Russian rouble started the first full trading day of the new year on the front foot, advancing by more than 3% against the U.S. dollar to rebound from six-month lows hit in volatile trading at the end of 2022.

At 1005 GMT on Monday, the rouble had passed through the 70-mark against the U.S. dollar, trading up 3.4% at 69.68. The currency was also up 1.9% against the euro to 74.77, and was 2.2% stronger against the Chinese yuan, trading at 10.23 in Moscow.

Having spent long periods of last year as the world’s best-performing currency, the Russian rouble lost 17% in December following Western moves to introduce a price cap and an EU embargo on Russian oil exports.

“Before New Year there was clearly a tendency to reduce exposure to stocks and a rush to the dollar,” said Alor Broker analysts in a research note on Monday.

“In the coming days, if the geopolitical background does not interfere, there should be a reversal of those trends … major exporters should start selling foreign exchange earnings accumulated over the holidays and investors should start to sell-down dollars bought for protection,” they added.

Russian markets saw record low trading volumes during extended start-of-year holidays in the first week of January, partly due to the exodus of Western institutional investors from the Russian markets last year.

The rouble and stocks saw little change amid the low liquidity – with the large corporates that power Russia’s FX markets and the retail investors that are increasingly the drivers of the stock market away from their desks.

On Monday, Russian stocks followed the rouble higher. The dollar-denominated RTS index jumped 3.9% to 979.1 points – largely on the currency effect – while the rouble-based MOEX Russian index advanced 0.4% to 2,164.6 points.

For Russian equities guide see

For Russian treasury bonds see

(Reporting by Jake Cordell; Editing by Alex Richardson )

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Russian rouble?
The Russian rouble is the currency of Russia, denoted by the symbol ₽. It is subdivided into 100 kopecks and is used in all financial transactions within the country.
What is market liquidity?
Market liquidity refers to how easily assets can be bought or sold in the market without affecting their price. High liquidity indicates a stable market with many buyers and sellers.
What is the stock market?
The stock market is a collection of markets where shares of publicly traded companies are bought and sold. It serves as a platform for companies to raise capital and for investors to gain ownership.

Tags

Related Articles

More from Trading

Explore more articles in the Trading category