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obverse
reverse
Central Bank of Russia

10000 Rubles – Russian Federation

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: The XXVII World Summer Universiade of 2013 in the City of Kazan
Russia
Context
Year: 2013
Country: Russia Country flag
Period:
(since 1991)
Currency:
(since 1998)
Total mintage: 100
Material
Diameter: 100 mm
Weight: 1004.4 g
Gold weight: 1003.40 g
Thickness: 8.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Gold
Standard: Silver kilo
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
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Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard1425
Numista: #95467
Value
Exchange value: 10000 RUB
Bullion value: $167299.81
Inflation-adjusted value: 27898.80 RUB

Obverse

Description:
Center: Bank of Russia emblem (two-headed eagle, wings down, with "БАНК РОССИИ") within a dotted circle. Above: "ДЕСЯТЬ ТЫСЯЧ РУБЛЕЙ". Below left: metal, fineness, mint mark; center: "2013 г."; right: fine metal content and serial number №___.
Inscription:
ДЕСЯТЬ ТЫСЯЧ РУБЛЕЙ

БАНК РОССИИ

• Au 999 СПМД • 2013 г. • 1 кг № ___ •
Translation:
TEN THOUSAND RUBLES

BANK OF RUSSIA

• Au 999 SPMD • 2013 • 1 kg No. ___ •
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Language: Russian
Designer and engraver: Alexander Vasilyevich Baklanov

Reverse

Description:
Center disc: Universiade logo ("UNIVERSIADE KAZAN 2013 RUSSIA" with five asterisks) surrounded by relief athletes in various sports. Around the rim: inscription "XXVII ВСЕМИРНАЯ ЛЕТНЯЯ УНИВЕРСИАДА 2013 ГОДА В Г. КАЗАНИ" with floral ornament.
Inscription:
XXVII ВСЕМИРНАЯ ЛЕТНЯЯ УНИВЕРСИАДА 2013 ГОДА В Г. КАЗАНИ

UNIVERSIADE

KAZAN

2013

RUSSIA
Translation:
XXVII World Summer Universiade 2013 in Kazan

Universiade

Kazan

2013

Russia
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian
Designer: Sergey Kozlov

Edge

360 corrugations

Mints

NameMark
Saint Petersburg(СПМД)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2013СПМД100Prooflike

Historical background

In 2013, the Russian ruble exhibited relative stability, marking a period of calm before the significant volatility that would characterize the following years. The currency traded in a managed float within a dual-currency basket band (55% USD, 45% EUR) set by the Central Bank of Russia (CBR). This stability was underpinned by high global oil prices, which averaged over $100 per barrel for much of the year, ensuring strong foreign currency inflows from hydrocarbon exports. Consequently, Russia maintained substantial foreign exchange reserves, exceeding $500 billion, which provided a robust buffer against external shocks and allowed the CBR to intervene smoothly to curb excessive fluctuations.

However, underlying structural vulnerabilities and external pressures were mounting beneath this stable surface. The Russian economy was experiencing a pronounced slowdown, with GDP growth decelerating to just 1.3% for the year, its weakest pace since the 2009 global financial crisis. This stagnation was driven by a lack of investment, poor productivity growth, and a deteriorating business climate, highlighting the economy's deep dependence on commodity revenues. Furthermore, geopolitical tensions were beginning to simmer, with debates over Ukraine's potential association agreement with the European Union creating unease in financial markets, though the full-scale crisis was still ahead.

By the end of 2013, the ruble's stability was increasingly perceived as fragile and contingent on sustained high energy prices. The CBR was in a transitional phase, gradually widening the ruble's trading band as part of a long-stated policy move towards a free float, aiming to insulate its reserves and shift to inflation targeting. This period, therefore, represented the final chapter of relative calm, with the economy's fundamental weaknesses and looming geopolitical events setting the stage for the currency turbulence that would erupt in 2014 following the annexation of Crimea and the concurrent collapse in oil prices.
Legendary