A man views a digital board showing Russian rouble exchange rates against the euro and the US dollar outside a currency exchange office. On March 2, 2022, the Russian rouble hit record lows with the US dollar and the euro rates reaching 110 and 122 at the Moscow Exchange respectively.
Mikhail Metzel | TASS | Getty Images
A Russian stock market analyst pulled out a bottle and drank to the death of Russia’s stock market during an interview live on local television.
The clip went viral Thursday, a week into the Russian invasion of neighboring Ukraine and as Russia’s economy is hammered with Western sanctions.
“Are stock market strategies outdated now, or do you hope to still remain in the profession?” the show’s host on Russian channel RBC asked Alexander Butmanov, founder of the financial technology firm DTI Algorithmic. The host introduced him as an expert on stock market strategies.
“Worst case scenario, I’m going to work as Santa Claus, as I did 25 years ago,” Butmanov replied, according to a translation verified by CNBC.
“Excluding jokes, let’s do this quickly,” he said. “I send regards to Sergei Usychenko, who drank 12, 13 years ago to the death of the stock market.”
Butmanov reached down, opened up a glass bottle and looked directly into the camera.
“Today, I’m drinking carbonated water,” he said. “Dear stock market, you were close to us, you were interesting, rest in peace dear comrade.”
The host looked on in disbelief, saying, “I’m not going to comment on this stunt, because I don’t want to believe it.”
Russia’s stock market has been closed for five straight days.
In that time, Russian forces have bombed numerous civilian areas all over Ukraine including in its largest cities, Kyiv and Kharkiv, leading to at least hundreds of civilian casualties.
The country’s currency, the ruble, tanked on the news of Western sanctions over the weekend that targeted Russian access to the SWIFT interbank messaging system, its central bank reserves, numerous exports and Russian banks, as well as individuals in the country including Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The ruble is now down 30% on the dollar year-to-date.
The Russian central bank more than doubled the country’s interest rate to 20% on Monday in an effort to calm inflation, and a fully-fledged bank run began this week that saw many people rushing to withdraw cash.
London-listed Russian stocks have collapsed, their trading suspended. The FTSE and MSCI indexes have expelled Russian companies, while ratings agency Fitch downgraded its status to “junk” and analysts say the country’s stocks are “uninvestable.”