MOSCOW: Russia's ruble on Thursday continued to plummet to new record lows against the dollar, tumbling by over 4 percent beyond 85 to the greenback on falling oil prices.
The ruble -- which has already been battered over the past 18 months by low energy prices and Western sanctions over Ukraine -- also weakened to over 93 against the euro.
Russia's recession-hit economy relies on oil and gas for over half of its budget revenues and the authorities are coming under increasing pressure to act to stave off further damage to the currency.
The Kremlin insisted that the ruble's plunge was "not a collapse", insisting the authorities would be able to stop the rot.
"The exchange rate is really changing, the rate is volatile, but it is far from being a collapse," spokesman Dmitry Peskov was quoted as saying by Russian agency Interfax.
"There is no basis to suggest the central bank does not have plans drawn up to avoid a collapse."
With oil hitting 12-year lows, the ruble on Wednesday slipped past its previous weakest point of 80.1 rubles to the dollar that it crashed to during a dramatic slump in December 2014.
The Russian currency has so far this year lost over 12 percent of its value against the dollar, meaning that a recession officials had been claiming was essentially over looks set to last longer.
Russia's Central Bank has shrugged off the latest ruble slump and insisted it is not preparing to repeat the major rate hike it made in late 2014 as it struggled to save the currency.
Analysts, however, said that while the fall was down to factors mostly beyond Moscow's control, the authorities would have to react in some way to reassure the markets.
"It is understood that this is happening against a background of an international collapse with local factors being a part of it, but the lack of a reaction from the Central Bank and authorities raises some questions," Anton Tabakh from Moscow's Higher School of Economics told AFP.
The government has already admitted that tumbling oil prices will have to see them slash government spending as they struggle to keep the deficit to under 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).
The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday downgraded its forecast for Russia, predicting that the country's economy would contract by 1 percent this year.
The IMF warned that slower Chinese growth, a stronger US dollar and the collapse in oil prices could all wreak further havoc in struggling economies like Russia's.
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