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Russian stocks, ruble jump after report Trump halted further sanctions

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Russian stocks trading in the U. S. and the ruble jumped after a report that President Trump would not extend further economic sanctions on Russia for now.
Russian stocks trading in the U. S. and the ruble jumped after a report that President Donald Trump would not extend further economic sanctions on Russia, contradicting comments from Nikki Haley, the U. S. ambassador to the United Nations.
The VanEck Vectors Russia ETF reversed earlier losses and jumped 1.6 percent, while the iShares MSCI Russia Capped ETF was up nearly 1 percent. The ruble rose 1.5 percent against the dollar.
Haley on Sunday had said new sanctions were coming to punish Russia for its support of Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government over the use of chemical weapons.
But The Washington Post quoted unnamed sources saying that Trump met with his national security team Sunday and told them he was upset about sanctions being officially rolled out, saying he was not yet comfortable with them. The Post quoted administration officials saying that Trump would not likely approve any further sanctions, without another provocative action from Russia that could trigger them.
Russian stocks have been under serious pressure, and the ruble has fallen since the U. S. sanctioned Russian oligarchs and businesses for supporting Assad and also meddling in the U. S. election. Russian stocks are down about 12 percent since the April 6 announcement, and the ruble is down about 5 percent against the dollar in that period.
Peter Donisanu, global market analyst at Wells Fargo, said the sanctions limit liquidity for the financial sector and could potentially strain the sector. He said he is neutral on the emerging European, Middle East and Africa region, of which Russia is a part.
« There’s more going on here than just a couple of tweets, and really, at this point, pay attention to the reaction more than what’s being said, » Donisanu said.
One reaction has been a steep jump of more than 20 percent in aluminum, after Russia’s Rusal, the world’s second-largest aluminum producer, was caught up in the sanctions. Rusal produces about 6 percent of the world’s aluminum.

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