Berliner Boersenzeitung - US, allies to end normal trade relations with Russia

EUR -
AED 3.973743
AFN 72.902233
ALL 98.375571
AMD 417.79432
ANG 1.945844
AOA 986.133506
ARS 1068.267744
AUD 1.653032
AWG 1.947377
AZN 1.839693
BAM 1.955305
BBD 2.179969
BDT 129.017365
BGN 1.95627
BHD 0.407693
BIF 3138.035244
BMD 1.081876
BND 1.431051
BOB 7.460113
BRL 6.233336
BSD 1.079637
BTN 90.755044
BWP 14.492602
BYN 3.533306
BYR 21204.776285
BZD 2.17627
CAD 1.505853
CDF 3148.259798
CHF 0.938418
CLF 0.036956
CLP 1019.721489
CNY 7.717785
CNH 7.702197
COP 4719.155418
CRC 554.25724
CUC 1.081876
CUP 28.669723
CVE 110.237116
CZK 25.353879
DJF 192.263144
DKK 7.460507
DOP 65.024454
DZD 144.297528
EGP 52.717527
ERN 16.228145
ETB 129.016558
FJD 2.467322
FKP 0.827818
GBP 0.832012
GEL 2.953711
GGP 0.827818
GHS 17.544562
GIP 0.827818
GMD 75.193377
GNF 9311.730682
GTQ 8.345889
GYD 225.882863
HKD 8.407061
HNL 27.235363
HRK 7.453079
HTG 142.285324
HUF 405.477492
IDR 17028.300858
ILS 4.035942
IMP 0.827818
INR 90.973088
IQD 1414.355314
IRR 45552.402923
ISK 148.498191
JEP 0.827818
JMD 170.806005
JOD 0.766941
JPY 165.872743
KES 139.561795
KGS 92.836702
KHR 4388.930395
KMF 492.741184
KPW 973.688463
KRW 1496.656931
KWD 0.331692
KYD 0.899781
KZT 529.261016
LAK 23669.01296
LBP 96736.830569
LKR 317.0598
LRD 207.301396
LSL 19.12304
LTL 3.1945
LVL 0.654416
LYD 5.21173
MAD 10.651106
MDL 19.353015
MGA 4990.82984
MKD 61.599419
MMK 3513.892154
MNT 3676.215837
MOP 8.639815
MRU 42.689202
MUR 49.885388
MVR 16.617965
MWK 1872.161049
MXN 21.700092
MYR 4.753221
MZN 69.142553
NAD 19.12304
NGN 1775.975519
NIO 39.730318
NOK 11.859675
NPR 145.209612
NZD 1.814788
OMR 0.416517
PAB 1.079627
PEN 4.06381
PGK 4.323946
PHP 63.080941
PKR 299.874733
PLN 4.338975
PYG 8594.905376
QAR 3.936404
RON 4.975118
RSD 117.105565
RUB 105.443931
RWF 1468.321804
SAR 4.063125
SBD 9.015862
SCR 15.191686
SDG 650.753943
SEK 11.51203
SGD 1.433492
SHP 0.827818
SLE 24.559198
SLL 22686.402474
SOS 617.041069
SRD 37.138645
STD 22392.65596
SVC 9.446698
SYP 2718.247053
SZL 19.12825
THB 36.545776
TJS 11.498292
TMT 3.786567
TND 3.344254
TOP 2.533864
TRY 37.097237
TTD 7.317149
TWD 34.666025
TZS 2942.70341
UAH 44.65603
UGX 3956.999083
USD 1.081876
UYU 44.928635
UZS 13803.508424
VEF 3919153.881248
VES 45.625543
VND 27406.63241
VUV 128.442565
WST 3.030535
XAF 655.788089
XAG 0.032073
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.923825
XDR 0.81151
XOF 655.797179
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.820683
ZAR 19.12303
ZMK 9738.24388
ZMW 28.745994
ZWL 348.36374
  • RBGPF

    62.3500

    62.35

    +100%

  • NGG

    -0.8800

    65.12

    -1.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    7.25

    +0.55%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    47.91

    -0.52%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • BTI

    -0.4500

    34.46

    -1.31%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    66.58

    +0.6%

  • GSK

    0.2900

    38.17

    +0.76%

  • AZN

    -0.7900

    75.22

    -1.05%

  • BP

    -1.6900

    29.36

    -5.76%

  • SCS

    -0.3800

    12.21

    -3.11%

  • VOD

    -0.2600

    9.28

    -2.8%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.84

    -0.16%

  • BCC

    -6.9800

    131.64

    -5.3%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    32.46

    -0.71%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    12.98

    -0.69%

US, allies to end normal trade relations with Russia
US, allies to end normal trade relations with Russia

US, allies to end normal trade relations with Russia

Washington and its allies moved Friday to end normal trade relations with Russia, as President Joe Biden vowed the West would make Vladimir Putin "pay the price" for his invasion of Ukraine.

Text size:

Biden announced the new step, which would enable Western nations to inflict steep tariff hikes on Moscow, in coordination with NATO allies, the Group of Seven and the European Union.

On the US side, lawmakers -- who would have the final say -- have already indicated they support the step, which involves stripping Russia of the preferential status that ensures equal treatment between international trade partners.

Warning in a speech at the White House that "Putin must pay the price" as the "aggressor" in its ex-Soviet neighbor, Biden said the US move would be mirrored by similar steps in allied nations.

And in a statement issued in Berlin, G7 leaders confirmed they would each "endeavor" to take action to deny Russia favored trade status.

"The United States and our allies and partners continue in lockstep to ramp up the economic pressures on Putin and to further isolate Russia on the global stage," Biden said.

"He cannot pursue a war that threatens the very foundation of international peace and stability and then ask for help from the international community."

A key principle of the World Trade Organization, the so-called favored status known in the United States as permanent normal trade relations (PNTR) requires member countries to guarantee one another equal tariff and regulatory treatment.

Accorded by the United States to most countries in the world, with notable exceptions like Cuba and North Korea, the status grants imported goods from a country equal footing with other trading partners.

Stripping Moscow of the designation, granted in December 2012, would allow Biden to impose steep tariffs on Russian goods or restrict imports of some products.

The president also announced a ban on imports of Russian vodka, diamonds and seafood into the United States, while the Commerce Department said it would stop exports of American luxury goods to Russia and Belarus, which supported the invasion.

The new trade sanction would cap several rounds of measures intended to sever Russia's economic and financial ties with the rest of the world over its invasion of the ex-Soviet nation.

They have included banning Russian oil imports, seizing the assets of billionaires tied to President Vladimir Putin, and freezing the nation's stockpile of cash.

Together, the moves have already pushed Moscow to the brink of a debt default.

- Limited impact? -

Those steps have also caused prices for key commodities, like gasoline and wheat, to soar, harming US consumers already facing the highest inflation in four decades.

And trade experts are dubious about whether new tariffs would be effective.

"US direct trade with Russia is relatively small, so higher tariffs would not do much damage to them but could raise costs for our manufacturers who rely on them for key raw materials," said William Reinsch of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

"The additional damage this does to the trading system, while not immediate, could be significant," he said in an analysis.

The United States imported just under $30 billion in goods from Russia last year, including $17.5 billion in crude oil.

The IMF said Thursday that war and the sanctions will lead to a "sharp contraction" of the Russian economy, and slower global growth.

The Washington-based crisis lender this week approved $1.4 billion in fast-disbursing aid for Ukraine, and the World Bank also released nearly $500 million of what is expected to be a $3 billion financing package to aid the war-wracked country.

US lawmakers meanwhile passed a huge spending bill on Thursday, including almost $14 billion in humanitarian and military aid for Kyiv as the Russian invasion entered its third week.

The $13.6 billion relief package is more than double what the Biden administration initially requested, and includes aid for refugees, the military and support for NATO allies in eastern Europe.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)