MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia’s ruble struck a new record low on Wednesday after fresh falls in world oil prices deepened investors’ worries that the slowdown in the commodity-dependent Russian economy still has further to run.

An employee uses a machine to count Russian roubles at a private company's office in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia, November 6, 2014. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin/Files

The ruble set a low of 80.92 to the dollar before trading down 2.8 percent by 1210 GMT at 80.85. It had lost 2.8 percent to 88.18 versus the euro.

The previous all-time low was 80.10 rubles per dollar, reached in December 2014 when Russia was in the grips of a financial crisis exacerbated by Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis.

Unlike during the prior crisis, there was no sign of panic dollar-buying on Moscow streets on Wednesday.

Many Russian consumers, having spent months already watching the value of the rubles in their pockets fall against the dollar, have adopted a fatalistic approach to the ruble’s decline.

The slide in the currency made it more likely the central bank would have to postpone interest rate cuts badly needed to breathe new life into the economy.

In a country where many consumer goods are imported, the ruble’s drop will also push up inflation, testing the so-far robust public support for President Vladimir Putin in a year when Russia holds a parliamentary election.

Analysts said the rouble is likely to remain on the ropes.

“There’s not a positive catalyst in sight for Russian assets,” said Nicholas Spiro, managing director of Spiro Sovereign Strategy in London.

“With high inflation, the rouble tanking and sentiment extremely volatile, rate cuts are off the table for the central bank,” Spiro said.

The central bank cut rates aggressively in early 2015 to ease the impact of an economic recession but has been forced to leave them on hold since July, despite the prospects for the economy remaining grim.

The regulator next meets on monetary policy on Jan. 29, and market expectations have recently shifted toward a “hold” decision.

GLOBAL GLOOM

The deep pessimism on Russian markets mirrored falls in Asian and European stocks, as well as declines in emerging-market currencies such as the Turkish lira.

Almost $6 trillion has been wiped off the value of global stock markets since the start of the year, and worries over the health of the global economy are growing.

For Russia, the roughly 25 percent fall in Brent crude oil prices since the start of the year is particularly painful, since oil is the key Russian export.

The rouble, by comparison with the oil price, is down by a less severe 9 percent against the dollar since the start of 2016, in part as it had fallen so steeply since late 2014.

Brent was trading 3.3 percent weaker at $27.8 a barrel at 1210 GMT, not far from its weakest since 2003.

Other Russian assets were also affected. The dollar-denominated RTS share index was down 4.6 percent to 629 points, while the rouble-based MICEX was 1.8 percent lower at 1,616 points.

Shares in Sberbank, the country’s largest bank and a bellwether for the economy, were down 4.2 percent.

Bonds also lost ground on Wednesday. The yield on the 2042 dollar bond rose by 7 basis points to 6.51 percent, reflecting a fall in price.

For rouble poll data see reuters://realtime/verb=Open/url=cpurl://apps.cp./Apps/fx-polls?RIC=RUB=

Russia in graphics: link.reuters.com/dun63s