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Iran Conflict 2026
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Russia raids reserves to cover deficit

3 min read
11:45UTC

Russia's Finance Ministry credited FX and gold into the National Wealth Fund in June, lifting its liquid portion 45% to RUB 4.13tn, enough to cover the full-year deficit from savings.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Russia is covering its half-year shortfall from savings, which buys time, not security.

Russia's Finance Ministry credited delayed foreign-exchange proceeds and gold into the National Wealth Fund in June, lifting its liquid portion from RUB 2.84 trillion to RUB 4.13 trillion, a 45% jump in a single month 1. The National Wealth Fund (NWF) is Moscow's sovereign rainy-day reserve. The one-off injection of RUB 1.3 trillion is enough to cover the full-year budget deficit without a formal revision.

The accounting move matters more than the headline rise. Crediting existing FX and gold shifts assets across the ledger; it does not book new earnings. Oil and gas revenue for the first half came to RUB 4.73 trillion against a RUB 10.94 trillion annual forecast, a shortfall of RUB 2.62 trillion now filled from savings rather than sales. The last clean Urals print was $82.02 in May , still above the $60 fiscal-rule floor that would force deeper spending cuts, so the pressure is on revenue mix and refining, not a sub-floor price.

Reshetnikov warned in early May the liquid NWF could fall to roughly $12.5bn by year-end, and a top-up that papers a half-year gap fits that trajectory rather than refuting it. The sanctions plumbing behind the price, the lapsed crude waiver and shadow-fleet listings, sits with the oil-market desk . What the war briefing tracks is plainer: the cost is real, and Moscow is paying it in reserves and petrol queues, not a revenue crash.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia has a 'rainy-day fund' called the National Wealth Fund (NWF), built up from oil revenues over many years. In June 2026, the Finance Ministry moved RUB 1.3 trillion (roughly $14 billion) into this fund from other government accounts, a 45% jump in one month. Russia's oil and gas revenues in the first half of 2026 came to RUB 4.73 trillion, about RUB 2.62 trillion below the government's annual target. To close that gap without publicly revising the budget, the government transferred reserves from elsewhere on the balance sheet. Russia's NWF still holds roughly $46 billion in liquid assets, but those assets are being drawn down rather than replenished.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Russia's H2 oil and gas revenue must produce approximately RUB 6.21 trillion to meet the annual forecast, roughly 31% more than H1 delivered under current conditions.

  • Risk

    If H2 revenue shortfall is comparable to H1, the NWF liquid portion falls to a level where a formal budget revision becomes politically unavoidable.

First Reported In

Update #21 · Ukraine's drones reach Russia's petrol pumps

Ukrainska Pravda· 24 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Russia raids reserves to cover deficit
Moscow is meeting a half-year oil-and-gas shortfall by spending reserves rather than earning more, which is strain rather than collapse.
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