Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
It was expected to rise to $21.7 billion in the year. 2016 budget revenues were estimated to be 13.7 trillion rubles (200 billion US dollars) or 17.5% of GDP, while spending is planned to be 16 trillion rubles (roughly 233 billion dollars) [1] or 20.5% of GDP. The budget deficit is thus 2.35 trillion rubles (33 billion dollars) or 3% of GDP. [2]
From July 1992, when the ruble first could be legally exchanged for United States dollars, to October 1995, the rate of exchange between the ruble and the dollar declined from 144 rubles per US$1 to around 5,000 per US$1. Prior to July 1992, the ruble's rate was set artificially at a highly overvalued level.
For 2024, Russia changed the funding rules again, so that the NWF will not receive the expected 2024 11.5 trillion rubles of oil revenue, which will go directly to the Russian budget instead, with just 1.8 trillion rubles projected to be being given to the National Wealth Fund in 2025. [10]
The 2024 budget expects revenues of 35 trillion rubles ($349 billion) with expenditure of 36.6 trillion, based on a Urals oil forecast of $71.30 per barrel, a 90.1 rubles to USD 1 exchange rate and inflation of 4.5%. Defence spending will double to 10.78 trillion, 29.4% of expenditure.
The rapidly devaluing Russian ruble is related to Western sanctions on the Russian central bank’s $630.2 billion in reserves, which would otherwise have helped the country stabilize the currency.
To get to a market cap of $1 trillion, I think it needs to generate at least $25 billion in net income, which would give the stock a price-to-earnings ratio of 40 at a trillion-dollar market cap ...
With a market cap of about $47 billion, the stock would have to increase by more than 20-fold to reach $1 trillion. The company is projected to generate approximately $2.7 billion in revenue this ...
Year World market cap Number of listed companies Millions of US$ % of GDP; 1975 1,149,245 27.2 14,577 1980 2,525,736 29.6 17,273 1985 4,684,978 47.0 20,555