(Bloomberg) -- Panic reached the inner sanctum of the Russian central bank. It was Dec. 16 -- the day Russian traders would later christen Black Tuesday -- and the ruble was in a freefall.
Intervene! Intervene! a central bank official shouted. Governor Elvira Nabiullina watched the currency on her tablet screen react to her emergency rate increase. No, she said, not this time: Russia would no longer fight the market. Speculators needed a cold shower, she said.
That daring decision, related by two people with knowledge of the meeting, has begun to pay off for Nabiullina, 51, and her patron, President Vladimir Putin. Despite sanctions meant to punish Russia for its foray into Ukraine a year ago, the ruble has stabilized. Since Black Tuesday, when it plunged to a record low, the ruble has rebounded 19 percent against the dollar, the most among 24 emerging-market currencies.
Russia still confronts a painful recession brought on by the collapse in oil, and many of its banks are hurting. But for now, at least, the economy has stepped back from the abyss. Finance Minister Anton Siluanov last week declared the worst was over.
Inside the central bank, near Red Square, the lull passes for victory. Nabiullina no longer has to squander foreign-exchange reserves in vain attempts to prop up the ruble. Now she faces the equally daunting task of binding up the wounded economy.
While her central bank is nominally independent, analysts agree Putin is ultimately in charge. Yet Nabiullina has emerged as a power in her own right, with a direct line to the president. Nabiullina isnt afraid to speak up. When aides urged Putin to impose capital controls last year, she fought against the move and pushed for a freely floating ruble, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Putin heeded her advice -- and then let Nabiullina sort out the details.
It was a historic moment because she convinced Putin to accept a market solution to a problem that threatened the whole banking system, UBS AG Russia Chairman Rair Simonyan said. Russia might well have veered into economic isolation, he said.
What Nabiullina came up with turned out to be one of the biggest financial gambles of Putins 15-year rule. First she raised interest rates to punishingly high levels, lifting the benchmark rate to 17 percent from 10.5 percent in one stroke. Then she stepped back from intervening on the currency market.
Talk Strategy
Putin regularly uses a hotline to the central bank to talk strategy with Nabiullina, a former economy minister and presidential adviser who became governor in 2013. When the dedicated phone on her desk rings, everyone else leaves the room, the people said.
He cant interfere in the day-to-day business of the central bank, said Dmitry Peskov, Putins spokesman. He doesnt have that right. With oil prices holding steady since January and the threat of further sanctions on hold, Nabiullina can now attend to the first recession in six years. Emboldened by Putins support, she surprised analysts by reducing the benchmark rate to 15 percent in late January, followed with a cut to 14 percent this month.
The negative peak is behind us, Siluanov said March 19.
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