“The euro, in turn, is growing precisely because the dollar is falling in price against a basket of leading currencies,” added Ginko.

At the same time, he noted that the dollar sank 13% since March.

“The dollar is falling especially strongly against the euro, against the British pound and against the Japanese yen ... By the way, if you look at us, over the past 1.5 months there has been a strong strengthening of the ruble against the dollar, about 10%.

It is connected with the fact that in the dollar-to-euro pair, the dollar has fallen very much, while the euro has grown, "the expert explained.

Earlier, the euro rate exceeded 90 rubles during trading on the Moscow Exchange.