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MOSCOW: Russia’s central bank said Friday it was cutting its key interest rate for a second straight time as risks of price rises and financial instability were no longer rising.

The Bank of Russia said it was slashing the rate from 17 percent to 14 percent from next week, a greater cut than predicted by many analysts.

It said this was because “price and financial stability risks (are) no longer on the rise”, following a period of emergency measures due to Russia’s military action in Ukraine.

The bank had hiked the rate to 20 percent in late February, four days after President Vladimir Putin sent in troops.

This came after Western nations imposed sanctions that largely cut Russia’s financial sector off from the global economy.

The central bank cut the interest rate to 17 percent earlier this month, however, saying that risks to financial stability had “ceased to increase” for now.

Analysts surveyed by Russian media had largely predicted a 15-percent cut for the latest rate decision.

“It now looks likely that rates will fall towards 10 percent by year end,” Liam Peach, an analyst at Renaissance Capital, said in a note after the decision.

The central bank nevertheless struck a cautious note, saying the country’s economy faces a “challenging” situation due to sanctions and could see a sharper decline than its base scenario predicts.

“We are in a zone of colossal uncertainty,” both in terms of supply and demand, the bank’s governor Elvira Nabiullina told journalists after the announcement.

Ratings agencies have downgraded Russia and warned that payments of dollar-denominated debt in local currency would constitute a sovereign default, the country’s first in decades.

Nabiullina insisted that the finance ministry has resources to make such payments and “from the economic point of view, there cannot be any talk of default”, while admitting that there were “difficulties with payments that we see”.

“I hope that will all also pass and end with success,” she said.

The central bank said that imports to Russia are declining more markedly than exports, due to external trade and financial restrictions.

It released a baseline forecast for this year for imports to fall by up to 36.5 percent and exports by up to 21 percent.

It said Friday that while still high, current growth rates of consumer prices have “slowed significantly” from a peak in March, due to a “strengthening of the ruble and a cooling of consumer activity”.

The ruble plunged to historic lows against the dollar and the euro in March, from which it has since rebounded.

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