20 Apr 2024
Thursday 15 September 2016 - 12:30
Story Code : 231247

Russian-Iranian banking partnership aims to ditch Dollars for Rials and Rubles

Russian banks are welcome in Iran, where the Russian-Iranian Chamber of Commerce is actively working on opening a joint Russian-Iranian bank, Bahram Amirahmadiyan of the Russia-Iran Friendship Society told Sputnik Persian.

Last week the Russian newspaper Izvestiya reported that Russian banks are atthe front ofthe queue toenter Iran's banking sector afterthe partial lifting ofsanctions.

"Iran is emerging fromyears ofsanctions, the quality ofbanking services there has declined and Russian players can enter the market withinteresting products forbusiness and the public," Anatoliy Aksanov ofRussia's Association ofRegional Banks told Izvestiya. The newspaper reported that the two countries' central banks recently held talks onthe management ofcloser financial cooperation, and ten ofRussia's largest banks are preparing financial services forthe Iranian market.

Former President ofthe Russia-Iran Friendship Society Bahram Amirahmadiyan told Sputnik Persian that banking cooperation betweenRussia and Iran has a long history. "This is really a very important topic, particularly inthe context oftrading and economic links betweenRussia and Iran. Even underthe Shah, beforethe 1979 Islamic revolution, Russian-Iranian banking cooperation was very active. There was even a joint bank which conducted trade operations," he explained.

In 1924 two bilateral institutions were set up, the Russian-Persian Commercial Bank and the Russian-Persian Trade Company. "After the 1979 that bank, alongwith many other joint banks, was closed, and bilateral transactions stopped," Amirahmadiyan explained. The volume ofbilateral trade betweenRussia and Iran is currently four tofive billion dollars, which is conducted using dollars or euros, and mostly throughintermediate countries such asCyprus or the UAE.

Russia's trade representative inIran Andrey Lugansky told Rossiyskaya Gazeta that followingthe lifting ofsanctions, many Iranian companies conducting business throughoverseas subsidiaries will return their business toIran and conduct their trade directly.

"We want tocarry outall our trade operations inour national currencies, (although) this issue has not been resolved yet," Amirahmadiyan said. "Of course, the prospect ofRussian banks opening inIran is very attractive and important because it can widen and improve our economic cooperation. At the moment, all banking operations betweenRussia and Iran are carried outin dollars or euros. It's very inconvenient, because all these operations are controlled either bythe EU or US central banks."

Amirahmadiyan said that the Russian ruble could also benefit fromthe banks' entry tothe Iranian market, which would enable Iranian companies tobuy Russian goods inrubles.

"I also think that the Russian ruble can strengthen a lot onthe Iranian currency market, and become a very attractive currency. There currently aren't any Russian banks inIran, and the Russian currency is not very well known onthe market. When Russian banks begin tooperate inIran, there will be more currency operations and the ruble will strengthen. I hope the same will happen tothe Iranian rial inRussia. That's why we are waiting impatiently forthis initiative togo ahead," Amirahmadiyan said.

A single Iranian bank currently operates inRussia, called "Mir Business Bank." The bank is a subsidiary ofBank Melli Iran and 70 percent ofits customers import and export goods such asgrain, timber and food products betweenRussia and Iran. According toofficial figures fromRussia's Federal Customs Service, Russian-Iranian trade asa proportion ofRussia's international trade increased from0.2 to0.4 percent inthe first half ofthis year, followingthe partial lifting ofsanctions. Between January and June, the total turnover oftrade betweenthe two countries was $923.7 million. "Iranian businessmen and entrepreneurs often tell me that the key problem inthe way ofincreasing the volume oftrade betweenthe two countries is the lack ofa single joint banking mechanism. This is a very valuable and rational initiative fromRussian banks, and I am sure it will succeed inpractice.

The Russian-Iranian Chamber ofCommerce is actively working onopening a joint Russian-Iranian bank," Amirahmadiyan said. In January the US and EU announced the lifting ofall economic and financial sanctions againstthe Islamic Republic associated withits nuclear program, enabling Tehran toaccess previously frozen assets, use international financial messaging services such asSWIFT, and sell oil and other raw materials toEU countries. While Russian firms are keen toincrease trade withIran, their Western counterparts still appear fearful ofrepercussions fromthe authorities.

In March Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Iranian television that US authorities are dragging their feet onlifting sanctions, and that Iran's international financial transactions face problems because banks "fear the Americans." "The Americans have not acted ontheir promises and (only) removed the sanctions onpaper," Khamenei said.

While they have lifted some sanctions followingthe July 2015 nuclear agreement betweenTehran and the 5+1 countries, the US and EU continue to impose some sanctions againstIran associated withits ballistic missile program, which Tehran maintains has purely defensive purposes. In July the US House ofRepresentatives blocked a deal between Boeing and Iran Airtosupply 118 passenger planes toreplace Iran's ageing fleet. The move also prevents a similar deal betweenIran Air and French manufacturer Airbus, sinceits planes use some parts fromBoeing. The US representatives claimed Iran could modify the jets and use them formilitary purposes.

By Sputnik
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