Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Tech Sovereignty
17MAY

Russia's wealth fund sheds $4.8bn

2 min read
14:28UTC

Rising oil prices could not prevent Russia's National Wealth Fund from haemorrhaging reserves as the business climate index turned negative for the first time in three years.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Russia's financial buffers are shrinking despite oil prices above budget assumptions.

Russia's National Wealth Fund shed 400 billion roubles ($4.8 billion) in January and February 2026 1. The country's business climate index turned negative in March for the first time since October 2022. Fixed capital investment fell 2.3% in real terms during 2025.

The Urals benchmark has risen $11.30 to $73.24 per barrel, well above Russia's $59 budget assumption. Yet rising prices did not prevent the fund's decline. Russia is spending 38 to 40% of its federal budget on defence, the highest proportion since the Soviet era . Moscow dropped planned 10% cuts to non-military spending after the Iran-war oil price surge, only to face a revenue squeeze from the opposite direction: not low prices, but destroyed export capacity at Baltic ports.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia has a 'rainy day fund' called the National Wealth Fund, similar to a national savings account. It lost $4.8 billion in just two months at the start of 2026, even while oil prices were high. Why? Russia is spending 38-40% of its entire government budget on the military, the highest proportion since the Soviet era. High oil prices were supposed to offset that. But Russia is spending the money faster than it earns it. Now the oil export damage from the Baltic port strikes compounds the problem: Russia has high oil prices but can't ship as much oil. The business climate index turned negative in March for the first time in years, suggesting the civilian economy is feeling the strain.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Russia's fiscal deterioration reflects the simultaneous pressure of three forces. First: record defence spending at 38-40% of the federal budget, consuming reserves faster than revenues replenish them.

Second: investment collapse, with fixed capital investment down 2.3% in 2025, meaning Russia is not building the productive capacity needed to sustain long-term revenue growth. Third: the Baltic port disruption now compressing both the volume and revenue sides of the oil export equation simultaneously.

The business climate index turning negative for the first time since October 2022 is the civilian economy signal. It precedes consumer confidence deterioration by two to three quarters. If sustained, it indicates Russian business investment is contracting under war conditions despite high nominal oil prices.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    At current NWF depletion rates, Russia may need to cut non-military spending or increase deficit financing within 12-18 months, creating domestic economic pressure on the war effort.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Ukraine halves Russia's Baltic oil exports

Moscow Times· 1 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
OpenForum Europe / open-source community
The EUR 350m Sovereign Tech Fund has no Commission host, no budget line, and no commissioner's name attached six weeks after the April conference, while Germany is already paying maintainers to staff international standards bodies. The CRA open-source guidance resolves contributor liability but leaves the financial-donations grey area open with the 11 September reporting clock running.
ASML / Christophe Fouquet
ASML / Christophe Fouquet
ASML's Q2 guidance miss of roughly EUR 300m below consensus reflects DUV revenue compression set by US export controls, not European policy. Fouquet said 2026 guidance accommodates potential outcomes of ongoing US-China trade discussions; a bipartisan US bill to tighten DUV sales further would accelerate the cross-subsidy thinning Chips Act II's equity authority is designed to address.
Anne Le Henanff / French G7 Presidency
Anne Le Henanff / French G7 Presidency
Le Henanff chairs the 29 May Bercy ministerial two days after Brussels adopts the Tech Sovereignty Package, making the G7 communique the first international read of the Omnibus enforcement split and CAIDA's scope. France's Cloud au Centre doctrine is already operational via the Scaleway Health Data Hub contract.
German federal government
German federal government
Berlin operationalises sovereignty through procurement mandates (the ODF requirement and the Sovereign Tech Standards programme) rather than waiting for Commission legislation. The Bundeskartellamt has still not received the Cohere-Aleph Alpha merger filing, leaving Germany's flagship AI champion in structural limbo six weeks after the deal resolved.
US Trade Representative
US Trade Representative
The USTR Section 301 investigation into EU digital rules closes with a 24 July 2026 final determination. CAIDA's public-sector cloud restriction sits within the criteria that triggered the 2020 Section 301 action against France's digital services tax, and the US has not signalled whether the Thales-Google S3NS arrangement resolves CLOUD Act jurisdiction concerns.
CISPE / Valentina Mingorance
CISPE / Valentina Mingorance
CISPE shipped its own pass-fail sovereignty badge in April to establish an industry-auditable floor the Commission could adopt. Whether CAIDA inherits the CISPE binary or the multi-tier SEAL approach will determine whether certification is enforceable by public contracting authorities or requires Commission discretion.