The Russian rouble has plunged to its lowest level against the dollar since the early days of the war in Ukraine, breaching the 100 mark with a thud that reverberates through Moscow’s financial corridors. For a currency already battered by sanctions and capital controls, this is not merely a statistical blip. It is a vote of no confidence in the Kremlin’s economic management.
Let us strip away the pretence. A weakening currency is not, in itself, a catastrophe. It can boost exports and make domestic goods more competitive. But when the rouble falls this sharply, it signals something far more troubling: capital flight. Investors, both foreign and domestic, are dumping rouble-denominated assets and scrambling for hard currency. The central bank could raise interest rates to stanch the bleeding, but that would choke off the very growth the economy so desperately needs.
The market is pricing in risk. The yield on Russian sovereign bonds has spiked, reflecting a premium for uncertainty. Inflation, always a spectre in this economy, is now a certainty. The Bank of Russia’s attempts to manage the exchange rate through interventions have the whiff of desperation, like a man bailing water from a sinking ship with a teacup.
Prime Minister Mishustin has promised to stabilise the currency, but his toolbox is limited. Deeper capital controls might plug the leaks temporarily, but they strangle the economy in the long run. The alternative, an alliance with other BRICS nations to create an alternative reserve currency, is a fantasy that ignores the dominance of the dollar and the euro in global trade.
Make no mistake: this is a crisis of confidence. The Kremlin’s fiscal profligacy, the endless war spending, and the isolation from Western capital markets have all converged. The rouble’s retreat is a mirror of Russia’s economic trajectory. And the only question that matters now is whether the central bank has the nerve to let the currency find its own level, or whether it will burn through reserves in a futile defence.
For the ordinary Russian, the impact is immediate. Imported goods become more expensive, savings erode, and the cost of living rises. The regime may double down on propaganda, but the rouble does not lie. It speaks the language of the bottom line, and right now, that line is pointing sharply downwards.










