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Archive for December 8th, 2008
Monday, December 8th, 2008
Well…this move was easy to predict. As reported on www.bloomberg.com, the Ukrainian Government is now restricting bank withdrawals. In some ways, this is like closing the barn door after the horse has already made it out. Many companies had anticpated this change, and have acted already.
Interesting to see if further restrictions are placed in the near term. In the meantime, I am going over to the ATM near my office to make a cash withdrawal.
Ukraine Restricts Bank Withdrawals to Avert Liquidity Crisis
By Kateryna Choursina
Dec. 8 (Bloomberg) — Ukraine’s central bank restricted withdrawals from banks before the maturity date of individual contracts to avert a liquidity crisis.
The Kiev-based Natsionalnyi Bank Ukrainy said in a letter to commercial lenders on Dec. 6 that early withdrawals of deposits “leaves liquidity of some banks under threat,” according to a statement on the bank’s Web site.
The central bank introduced a six-month moratorium for domestic lenders to return deposits to clients before contracts with banks that ended on Oct. 13 after depositors started withdrawing their money. Ukrainians were withdrawing as much as 2 billion hryvnia ($100 million) a day in the first days of October, First Deputy central bank Governor Anatoliy Shapovalov said on Oct. 24.
The regulator also recommended that banks reduce foreign- currency interest rates, according to a statement on its Web site also dated Dec. 6.
Technorati Tags: Banker, www.bloomberg.com, foreign currency interest rates, deposits, domestic lenders, hyrvnia, First Deputy Central Bank Governor, Anatolii Shapovalov, Kiev, Kyiv, Natsionalnyi Bank Ukrainy, liquidity, central bank, Ukrainian Government, Anton Olff,
Tags: Anatolii Shapovalov, Anton Olff, Banker, central bank, deposits, domestic lenders, First Deputy Central Bank Governor, foreign currency interest rates, hyrvnia, Kiev, Kyiv, liquidity, Natsionalnyi Bank Ukrainy, Ukrainian Government, www.bloomberg.com Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, December 8th, 2008
One of the side effects of the Global Economic Crisis-and we have to come up with a new name for this “crisis,” is the steep falloff in the amount of money sent home by immigrants and workers abroad. Many emerging market economies depend on this income to sustain themselves. The fallout from the falloff could be huge…..
| Falling remittances to hit CIS |
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Clare Nuttall in Almaty December 8, 2008
As the world’s rich economies sink into recession, the flow of remittances into developing countries is expected to see a corresponding decrease. In the CIS countries that rely heavily on payments from migrant workers abroad, the effect could be highly damaging. The construction and consumer-related sectors are expected to be particularly badly hit.
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) forecasts a drop of 6% in remittance payments to developing countries from their nationals working abroad in 2009. CIS countries are among the largest recipients of remittance payments measured in comparison to their GDP.
The Remittances Factbook 2008, published by the World Bank, finds that Tajikistan and Moldova are tied as the top remittance receiving countries – remittance inflows amount to 36% of their GDP. One NGO worker in Tajikistan reports seeing a jet leave from Dushanbe every week to Moscow, with 500 young men on board, while observers of the Moldovan market joke that “will the last Moldovan left please turn off the light.” Other CIS countries are also high on the list: Kyrgyzstan was in 4th place, with transfers from migrants equal to 27% of its GDP; in Armenia the figure is 18%. Only Russia and Kazakhstan have net outflows of money.
Speaking at the World Bank/IMF annual meeting recently, Shigeo Katsu, World Bank vice president for Europe and Central Asia, warned: “This money sent back home is second only to foreign direct investment as a source of external finance across the region, and is the largest source of external finance for a number of low income and lower middle income countries.”
Laid low
There are already signs the flow of money into the CIS’ poorer economies is tailing off as the US and West European economies suffer from the second wave of the credit crisis, while the previously strong growth in Russia and Kazakhstan dissipates – forecasts for 2009 are 3% and 2.7-4.1% respectively.
Reliable data on the situation in Central Asia is hard to come by, but anecdotal evidence suggests that migrant workers from Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan were the first to be laid off when work slowed or stopped at Kazakhstan’s construction sites. In Moscow and other Russian cities, many sites are also staffed by workers from other CIS countries. As in Kazakhstan, the Russian government has recently announced it will take measures to shore up the struggling construction sector.
A slowing of growth in the Russian economy is likely to be particularly damaging to Armenia, where 70% of remittances are sent from Russia; the amount is closely correlated with Russian GDP. Meanwhile, Moldova has seen many migrants return home in recent months, according to Matthias Lücke, senior economist at the Kiel Institute and head of the institute’s project on migrant remittances in CIS countries. “Based on the available statistics, the number of migrants is now lower than a year ago, by one fifth,” says Matthias Lücke, though he points out that there has not yet been a decline in remittances, according to available data.
The Kyrgyz government has already sounded the alarm. Economy Minister Akylbek Japarov warned in November that the international crisis could tip the country into financial collapse. He forecast that both FDI and remittances to the country would fall steeply in 2009, with a damaging effect on the already struggling. “Our government is in real terms on the threshold of a financial crisis. A decline in Kyrgyzstan’s economic situation is quite possible by February or March 2009,” Japarov said in a televised address.
Aside from consumption, the sector that has benefited the most from remittance inflows is real estate. Poor business environments and under-developed stock markets mean there are few alternatives to investing in real estate - aside from saving abroad or keeping their money under the mattress. As a result, the housing sectors in most of these countries have boomed lately, out of proportion to continuing low wage levels.
“What do migrants do with their money? The business climate in Moldova is so awful that unless you are well connected, you can’t invest it in the country since everyone will be demanding payoffs,” says Lücke. “The options are to renovate your house, to keep it under the mattress or to save it abroad in preparation for when you emigrate permanently. People are also buying real estate in the capital – there is a real property bubble for apartments in Chisinau.” The cost of an apartment in Chisinau increased on average by 5.5% in September 2008, and new buildings are still going up – the city mayor recently unveiled the Malldova shopping centre and at one upscale estate, developers are throwing in a free car with each house bought.
Real estate prices in both Bishkek and Dushanbe have increased rapidly in recent years. In Armenia, where money transfers are highly correlated to real estate prices, according to the IMF the construction sector overtook industrial production this year to become the largest sector of the economy, accounting for 23.2% of GDP. But just as this happened, the trend started to reverse. After seven years of continuous growth in real estate prices, a slight fall was recorded in 2008, said government agency State Real Property Cadastre. Prices in central Yerevan have fallen by an average of 3%, while in the rest of the country they are down by an average of 1.5%. There was also an 11% year-on-year decrease in the number of property deals registered from August through September. A similar story can be expected in other economies highly reliant on remittances.
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Technorati Tags: Global Economic Crisis, State Real Property Cadastre, Bishkek, Chisnau, Kyrgyz Republic, Akylbek Japarov, Armenia, Matthias Luke, Kiel Institute, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, construction, Russian government, Anton Olff, external finance, Russia, United States, Western Europe, Dushanbe, World Bank, IMF, Shigeo Katsu, Tajikistan, Moldova, NGO, CIS countries, recession, Clare Nuttall, Almaty, Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), remittance payments, emerging markets,
Tags: Akylbek Japarov, Almaty, Anton Olff, Armenia, Bishkek, Chisnau, CIS countries, Clare Nuttall, construction, Dushanbe, emerging markets, external finance, Global Economic Crisis, IMF, Kazakhstan, Kiel Institute, Kyrgyz Republic, Matthias Luke, Moldova, NGO, Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), recession, remittance payments, Russia, Russian government, Shigeo Katsu, State Real Property Cadastre, Tajikistan, United States, Uzbekistan, Western Europe, World Bank Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, December 8th, 2008
The Kyiv Post is reporting that the Ukrainian Government will intervene this week to prevent the continued slide in the hryvnia.
The people we speak with throughout Ukraine, are not confident that this will be anything more that a temporary halt to the decline. Those Ukrainians that can afford to, are buying dollars in expectations of continued weakness in the currency. It is also becoming very difficult to find dollars at ATMs and exchange kiosks……..
National Bank Of Ukraine Will Intervene This Week To Strenghten, Stabilize Hryvnia
KIEV, Ukraine — The National Bank of Ukraine has unveiled its intentions to intervene Dec. 8 through Dec. 12 so as to revaluate the hryvnia.Anatolii Shapovalov, the NBU first deputy governor, also expressed hope the national currency has bottomed out in value.
“We will hold interventions next week in addition. As soon as people understand that the exchange rate [of foreign currencies] goes down and start to sell the dollars, everything will become calm,” Shapovalov said.
Shapovalov did not disclose how many interventions there will be next week and on which days the National Bank will intervene.
He noted that the devaluation of the hryvnia stopped in early December and a trend for the revaluation of the national currency emerged then.
“The exchange rate trend has swung round. Possibly, this is the bottom we wanted to reach. As soon as people stop [purchasing foreign currency], there will be a result. There are no economic preconditions for the current exchange rate,” the NBU first deputy governor said.
According to Shapovalov, the difference between the value of foreign currency bought by the Ukrainian population and the value of foreign currency sold by the population was USD 2.7 billion in January through September. This index grew to USD 6 billion in October and November.
As Ukrainian News earlier reported, the National Bank of Ukraine has said Ukrainian population sold more foreign currency than bought as registered on December 3 for the first time over the past few weeks.
The balance of the value of foreign currency sold by the population over the value of foreign currency bought by the population on December 3 was equivalent of USD 15.6 million.
The balance of the value of the cash dollars sold by the population over purchased cash dollars was USD 13.5 million on December 3. The trend has been registered for the first time over the past two months.
The cash sell rate for US dollars in Kyiv forex outlets fell by 1.2 kopeck to 7.5600 UAH/USD on December 5, as of 10:30, compared with data as of 9:30.
The National Bank of Ukraine has set its official exchange rate of UAH7.3614/USD1 for December 5 through December 7 and of UAH7.3598/USD1 for December 8.
Technorati Tags: Anatolii Shapovalov, Anton Olff, ATMs, currency, exchange kiosks, exchange rate, foreign currency, forex outlets, hryvnia, Kyiv Post, National Bank of Ukraine, NBU, U.S. dollar, Ukraine, Ukrainian Government
Tags: Anatolii Shapovalov, Anton Olff, ATMs, currency, exchange kiosks, exchange rate, foreign currency, forex outlets, hryvnia, Kyiv Post, National Bank of Ukraine, NBU, U.S. dollar, ukraine, Ukrainian Government Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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