The ruble ended the week down more than 20% against the dollar and euro in Moscow trading on Friday and dropped a third of its value on other platformsthis week as the country's economy buckles under the pressure of sanctions meant to isolate Russia in response to its invasion of Ukraine.
Russia's credit rating was cut deeper into junk by S&P Global, following similar moves from Moody's and Fitch, as international sanctions ramped up the chances of a default. Russian forces in Ukraine sparked worldwide alarm as they seized Europe's biggest nuclear power plant.
Thousands of people are believed to have been killed or wounded and more than 1 million refugees have fled Ukraine since the Feb. 24 start of the Russian invasion.
The ruble ended the week at 105 per U.S. dollar from 83 last Friday in Moscow, though it strengthened 1% on the session from its Thursday close. Against the euro, it closed just below 119 from 93 last week.
It hit a record low against the dollar on Thursday, and the euro on Friday.
On the EBS platform, the ruble closed down 12.9% on the day against the dollar at 124, for a decline of 32% this week alone, the most for any week on records back to 2007. The bid-ask spread was very wide throughout the day in what traders called a sign of evaporating liquidity.
Dmitry Polevoy, investment director at Locko Invest, cautioned that the sanctions imposed on Russia over the Ukraine invasion - which Moscow says is not designed to occupy territory - would lead to an economic shock of a magnitude not seen in a long time.
"Russian assets are being destroyed in value," said Cristian Maggio, head of portfolio strategy at TD Securities.
Russia five-year credit defaults swaps - a measure of the cost of insuring exposure to its debt - stood at 1,565 basis points (bps), up from Thursday's 1,412 bps close but still some way away from the record close of 1,973 on Monday, data from IHS Markit showed.
Moscow stock trading remained closed and bonds showed wide bid-ask spreads in little to no volume, as they did for most of the week.
On Friday, the Russian central bank lowered the commission on foreign exchange purchases by individuals via brokers to 12% from 30%. Analysts said an earlier move to hike the commission to 30% for purchases of currencies like the dollar, euro and British pound had led to distortions like a surge in demand for other currencies like the Chinese yuan and Japanese yen.
In a move to try to stabilize wildly fluctuating markets, the Moscow Exchange imposed a ban on short selling of euro currency and stock instruments.
Citing a deterioration in borrowing conditions, the finance ministry paused issuance of OFZ treasury bonds for households. There were roughly 39 billion rubles (US$343.5 million) of the retail investments outstanding as of Jan. 1.
(Reporting by Karin Strohecker in London, Anisha Sircar in Bangalore and Rodrigo Campos in New York; Editing by John Stonestreet, Alison Williams, Jonathan Oatis and Marguerita Choy)