Capital flight from Russia in the first quarter almost doubled from a year ago, eating into liquidity stemming from a year-on-year increase in the current account surplus.
Preliminary Central Bank data showed Wednesday that net private-sector capital outflows in the first three months of 2012 totaled $35.1 billion, up from $35 billion in the fourth quarter and $19.8 billion in the first quarter of 2011.
The regulator also revised its assessment of net capital flight in the whole of 2011 to $80.5 billion from $84.2 billion reported earlier.
Capital outflows in 2011 were attributed to lack of investment opportunities in Russia as well as to increased political uncertainty before a parliamentary vote in December and last month's presidential election in which Prime Minister Vladimir Putin secured a six-year Kremlin term.
The current account surplus — the broadest measure of the country's trade balance in goods and services — jumped to $42.3 billion in the first quarter from $30.8 billion seen a year ago, the Central Bank data showed.
Slower growth in imports contributed one-third of the additional surplus for the first quarter, which, however, was largely offset by the capital outflow, analysts at Alfa Bank said in a note.