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Posts Tagged ‘natural gas’

Beggar Thy Neighbor

Monday, February 9th, 2009

OK…it is one thing for Ukraine to send letters begging for money to the USA, the EU, even China…but Russia? What are they thinking in Kyiv? Sure…Russia will loan you the money. They may be running a bit short due to propping up rubles and oligarchs, but they will find some spare cash as they know they will gain considerably from any arrangement.

 

After all, they promised the Kyrgyz Republic some money too. However, the conditions-regardless of what is officially denied-is that a U.S. base be closed. Imagine what they will demand of Ukraine?

 

From www.ft.com:

Ukraine pushes for loans to meet shortfall

 

By Roman Olearchyk in Kiev

 

 

 

Ukraine has appealed for emergency loans from the world’s richest countries to help support its economy, which has been battered by the global financial crisis.

 

Yulia Tymoshenko, prime minister of Ukraine, said her government had sent letters to the US, Russia, China, Japan and the European Union asking for loans to fill a shortfall in budget revenues for this year.

 

 “We have already received a positive response from some countries, including Russia,” Ms Tymoshenko said at the Munich Security Conference at the weekend. “Russia is ready to sign such loan agreements.” She did not clarify how much Kiev was seeking to borrow but reports in Ukraine suggested Russia could lend $5bn (€3.9bn, £3.4bn).

 

Ms Tymoshenko said Ukraine was keen to harmonise relations with Moscow, soured after last month’s gas prices dispute. She insisted Kiev would stick to a western integration agenda that included efforts to join the European Union and Nato.

 

News that Ukraine was seeking emergency loans amid frozen credit markets comes days after a senior International Monetary Fund delegation warned of “serious problems” brewing in Ukraine’s economy.

 

The fund delegation ended its one-week visit to Kiev last week but provided no clear signal on whether it would grant further disbursements from a $16.5bn standby facility agreed last year.

 

Ukraine received a first tranche of $4.5bn last November. Future disbursements depend on the implementation of tough conditions and are needed to keep Ukraine’s currency, the hryvnia, stable. It lost nearly 40 per cent of its value in 2008.

 

The IMF’s concerns centre on Kiev’s 2009 budget, which has a 3 per cent deficit in spite of a fund stipulation it be deficit-free. It also seeks a freeze on social spending at a time when more than 1m out of a population of 46m have lost their jobs.

 

Ukraine’s gross domestic product is expected to contract by around 5 per cent this , thus curbing budget revenues, complicating the state’s ability to rescueshaky banks and to provide unemployment benefits.

 

Ukraine is struggling to tame annual inflation of more than 20 per cent and toadjust to a fourth stiff price rise on natural gas imports from Russia in as manyyears.

 

The US and other western nations are keen to stabilise Ukraine for geopolitical as well as economic purposes, given its important position in Eastern Europe as a neighbour of Russia.

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From Russia with Interest

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Although this article from the Russian News & Information Agency at www.en.rian.ru states that money will make its way to Switzerland and Cyprus. OOPS!! They don’t actually say that…but wherever it winds up, it will not be in Russia.

We believe that capital outflows will be higher than $90 billion if the crisis continues. On the other hand, much of this capital will eventually return to the Russia when the crisis passes as investors see beyond the current mess to burgeoning opportunities in this emerging market.

Russia’s capital outflow expected to hit $90-91 bln

in 2009


MOSCOW, December 18 (RIA Novosti) - Capital outflow from Russia is expected to continue, and hit $90-91 billion next year, a deputy economics minister said on Thursday.

Andrei Klepach said Russia’s international reserves are expected to decline $110-140 billion amid the ongoing global financial crisis, but remain above $300 billion.

Russia’s Central Bank announced on Thursday that its international reserves, which hold foreign exchange and gold, stood at $435.4 billion as of December 12, down $1.6 billion against $437 billion on December 5.

International reserves declined $28.9 billion in November, $71.5 billion in October, $25.6 billion in September and $14.3 billion in August. The reserves had been increasing in the months prior to August.

Inflation in Russia in 2009 could drop to 10-12% from the economics ministry’s revised 2008 forecast of 13.4%, Klepach said.

Russia is expected to keep its foreign trade balance favorable at $18 billion, with $303 billion in exports and $283 billion in imports, Klepach said.

In its macroeconomic forecast for next year, the ministry also said that crude exports from Russia were expected to decline 3.8%, year-on-year, in 2009 to 235 million metric tons (1.7 billion barrels).

Natural gas exports from Russia are expected to grow from 203 billion cubic meters in 2008 to 208 billion cubic meters in 2009, the ministry said.

Russia’s oil production is expected to decline 1.6%, year-on-year, in 2009 to 480 million metric tons (3.5 billion barrels) while natural gas output is likely to increase 0.7% to 670 billion cubic meters, the economics ministry said.

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