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Russia's economy is shriveling up

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Russia's economy has contracted the most since 2009 following lower oil.

Russia's gross domestic product shrank by 4.6% in the second quarter from the same period last year, following a 2.2% decline in the previous three months, according to the Federal Statistics Service in Moscow cited by Bloomberg's Anna Andrianova.

This was a greater contraction than expected: Analysts in a Bloomberg survey were forecasting a 4.5% contraction, while Russia's economy ministry projected 4.4%.

Russia's economy has been bruised over the past year, in part because of the double whammy of collapsing oil prices and sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine. Oil prices started to fall once again recently, which is a worrying sign for a country that is heavily dependent on energy.

"Faltering oil prices have increased the risks for the expected economic improvement in the second half," UralSib Capital analyst Alexey Devyatov said in a report before the data release, according to Bloomberg. "Sharp swings in the ruble rate have hit consumer demand and capital investment."

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The ruble recently dropped below 64 rubles to the dollar for the first time since February. The Russian currency is now trading at 64.17 per dollar.

The ruble's drop follows the recent oil plunge: both Brent and West Texas Intermediate have fallen roughly 20% over the past six weeks. Brent is trading around $48.92 a barrel, while WTI is about $43.68 a barrel.

SEE ALSO: Here's what the 'spectrum of pain' looks like for the 12 members of OPEC

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