24/12/2014 01:12 AST

China is stepping up its role as the lender of last resort to some of the world’s most financially strapped countries.

Chinese officials signalled on the weekend they are willing to expand a $24bn currency swap programme to help Russia weather the worst economic crisis since the 1998 default. China has provided $2.3bn in funds to Argentina since October as part of a currency swap, and last month it lent $4bn to Venezuela, whose reserves cover just two years of debt payments.

By lending to nations shut out of overseas capital markets, Chinese President Xi Jinping is bolstering the country’s influence in the global economy and cutting into the International Monetary Fund’s status as the go-to financier for governments in financial distress. While the IMF tends to demand reforms aimed at stabilising a country’s economy in exchange for loans, analysts speculate that China’s terms are more focused on securing its interests in the resource-rich countries.

“It’s always good to have IOUs in the back of your pocket,” Morten Bugge, the chief investment officer at Kolding, Denmark-based Global Evolution who helps manage about $2bn of emerging-market debt, said by phone. “These are China’s fellow friends and comrades, and to secure long-term energy could be one of the motivations.”

The rouble jumped 4.9% to 55.8 per dollar in Moscow on Monday after Hong Kong-based Phoenix TV cited China’s Commerce Minister Gao Hucheng as saying that expanding the currency swap between the two nations would help Russia.

The rouble has gained 10% over the past two days, paring a selloff that’s made it the world’s worst performing currency over the past six months.

Unlike Ukraine, where the pro-west government received a $17bn IMF-led bailout this year, Russia, Argentina and Venezuela are often at odds with the US and its allies, essentially keeping them out of the reach of the Washington- based institution. At $3.89tn, China holds the world’s largest foreign-exchange reserves, allowing it to fill the void.

China and Russia signed a three-year currency-swap line of 150bn yuan ($24bn) in October, a contract that allows Russia to borrow the yuan and lend the rouble. While the offer won’t relieve the main sources of pressure on the rouble - which has lost 41% this year amid plunging oil prices and sanctions linked to Russia’s annexation of Crimea - it could bolster investors’ confidence in the country and help stem capital outflows.

Two phone calls to China’s central bank seeking comment on the terms of its currency swaps weren’t returned. Russia isn’t in talks with China about any financial aid, Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for President Vladimir Putin, said on December 20.

Funding from China has helped raise Argentina’s foreign reserves to a 13-month high of $30.9bn, a boost for a country that has been kept out of international capital markets since defaulting on foreign obligations in 2001.

Argentina received $1bn worth of yuan earlier this month as part of the three-year currency-swap agreement with China, a central bank official in the South American country, who asked not to be identified because he isn’t authorised to speak publicly, said. That extended the funds transferred to Argentina to $2.3bn since October. The swap is for a maximum of $11bn over three years.

In Venezuela, President Nicolas Maduro last month added $4bn he borrowed from China to the country’s reserves after they fell to an 11-year low. The country now has about $21bn in its coffers, equal to the amount of debt it has coming due in 2015 and 2016.


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