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Russian stocks edge lower in volatile trade, rouble stabilises

Russia's rouble is holding on to its recent gains today
Russia's rouble is holding on to its recent gains today

Russian stocks edged lower today in a volatile second session of trading after a nearly month-long suspension, while the rouble held on to recent gains, holding near 97 to the dollar.

The benchmark MOEX stock index was down 1.4% at 2,542.6 points after hitting a peak of 2,761.17 points yesterday. The dollar-denominated RTS index was down 2.4% to 832.1 points.

Before yesterday's restart, stocks had not traded on Moscow's bourse since February 25, the day after Russian President Vladimir Putin sent troops into neighbouring Ukraine

This prompted Western sanctions aimed at isolating Russia economically and then Russian countermeasures.

More securities, including corporate bonds and Eurobonds can be traded, in Moscow today.

33 blue chips had traded on the Moscow Exchange yesterday, with restrictions on trade with foreigners and a ban on short selling.

Commodities stocks had led yesterday's rebound with double-digit growth, but moves were smaller today.

Oil major Rosneft was up 0.5%, while Lukoil was 1.9% lower.

With most European airspace closed to Russian planes, flagship carrier Aeroflot extended its slide lower, dropping around 9.3%.

Meanwhile, the rouble was up 0.3% against the dollar at 96.75.

The rouble on Wednesday hit its strongest level in three weeks at 94.9875 after Putin said Russia would start selling its gas to "unfriendly" countries in roubles.

Against the euro, the rouble was up 0.4% at 106.40, far from both an all-time low of 132.4 it hit earlier in March and from levels of around 90 seen before February 24.