The liquidity deficit within the Russian banking system hit 2 trillion roubles in June, yet regulators remain unswayed. The central bank insists it is providing the necessary volume of funding to accommodate increased demand, noting that money market rates remain aligned with its key interest rate. While some observers point to the growing preference for physical currency as a setback for years of digital payment development, the regulator views the current strain as manageable within existing frameworks.
Economic pressures are mounting, however. Sberbank’s First Deputy CEO Alexander Vedyakhin recently identified government tax hikes as a secondary driver for the cash surge, as small businesses increasingly rely on untraceable transactions to manage costs. Analysts at Finam suggest that while the liquidity deficit could widen to 3.6 trillion roubles by year-end, major lenders continue to operate with comfortable regulatory buffers. The central bank expects the trend could reverse if payment infrastructure stabilizes and broader macroeconomic conditions improve.
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