๐Ÿšจ Russiaโ€™s Yuan Move Isnโ€™t Freedom โ€” Itโ€™s a Trap

Russia just borrowed $2.6B in yuan, but despite the headlines, this isnโ€™t de-dollarization โ€” itโ€™s a new dependency.

On December 2, 2024, Russia issued its first yuan sovereign bond (CNY 20B). Many celebrated it as a blow to the U.S. dollar, but the reality is far less flattering:

โŒ Chinese investors are not allowed to buy the bonds

โŒ Moscow Exchange remains under U.S. sanctions

โŒ The only buyers are Russian oil companies holding yuan they canโ€™t use anywhere else

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The Numbers Reveal the Hidden Risks

Russiaโ€“China trade (2024): $245B, 99% in local currencies

September 2024: Moscowโ€™s yuan repo rates exploded to 212%

Chinese banks rejected 98% of Russian payment requests

Russiaโ€™s central bank had to supply emergency yuan โ€” a currency it cannot print

Russia didnโ€™t break free of the dollar โ€” it simply traded one dependence for another.

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Global Picture

Dollar reserves: 56.3% (lowest since 1994)

Yuan share: just 2% (completely stalled)

Gold purchases: 1,000+ tonnes per year for three consecutive years โ€” the highest since the 1960s

Reserve managers arenโ€™t shifting from dollars to yuan.

Theyโ€™re shifting from sanctionable currencies to sanction-proof assets like gold.

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Consequences for Russia

2025 budget deficit: 5.7T rubles (5ร— initial forecast)

National Wealth Fund: down 68% since the invasion

Yuan bond yields: 6% vs ruble bonds at 16%

Russia is choosing the yuan because itโ€™s the only option left โ€” not because itโ€™s the right one.

๐Ÿ’ฅ The sovereignty trap is real.

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Token Signals

$SXP โ€” Short Signal ๐Ÿ”ด Target: 0.0567

Current: 0.0681 (+27.76%)

$SAPIEN โ€” Short Signal ๐Ÿ”ด Target: 0.15021

Current: 0.15253 (โˆ’11.86%)

$AT โ€” Long Signal ๐ŸŸข Target: 0.1950

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