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Russia's fledgling derivatives market may fall victim of a new tough gambling law because the country's courts treat futures and forward contracts as risky bets that should come under gaming rules.
The practice is a legacy of a 1998 financial meltdown when business courts ruled that trading in currency derivatives amounted to gambling. The courts therefore gave no legal protection to the contracts, allowing banks to default.
This month President Vladimir Putin sent parliament a draft law which would force casinos and other gambling institutions to move outside large cities into four gaming zones in remote areas, including one in Siberia.
Traders say there is a risk some judge may rule that trading floors at Moscow bourses which trade $500 million worth of derivative contracts a day will have to follow.
"Everything is in the hands of a judge right now. The judge may decide that derivative trading is not gambling but unfortunately they more often take an opposite view," said Alexei Timofeev, head of stock market lobbying firm NAUFOR.
NAUFOR sent a letter to the financial markets watchdog last week urging it to amend the draft gambling law before it is too late and add a clause specifying the law does not apply to derivatives trading. "If judges maintain their views and regard derivatives trading as gambling, it might have catastrophic consequences," Timofeev said.
The market is regulated by a law from 1993, when commodities and stock exchanges were in their early years, while court decisions after the 1998 crisis dealt a blow to the development of derivative trading and risk management in Russia.
Before 1998 foreign investors hedged their rouble risks by buying non-deliverable forward contracts that enabled them to manage risk without taking delivery of currency. But when Russia devalued the rouble in 1998, banks opted to default.
When investors went to courts they learned they were engaged in risky betting and might not get their money back, which killed their appetite for Russian derivatives for years to come.

Copyright Reuters, 2006

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