Tag Archives: currency

Azerbaijan drops currency tax

FEB. 23 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Azerbaijani parliament formally dropped a plan to impose a 20% tax on all deals in foreign currencies. It voted to drop the bill, which had passed earlier in the year, after President Ilham Aliyev refused to sign it. The motive for the bill had been to protect Azerbaijan’s manat currency which has lost around half its value but critics said it was unfair and unworkable. Low oil prices have hit Azerbaijan hard. It is reliant on oil to earn export revenue.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 269, published on Feb. 26 2016)

 

Kazakhstan slips towards recession

FEB. 23 2016, ALMATY/DUSHANBE (The Conway Bulletin)  — Kazakhstan verged on acknowledging that its economy may actually shrink this year and a Tajik Central Bank official said it was in talks with the IMF for an emergency loan, more signals that a sharp regional economic crisis was deepening further.

Normally bullish about its own GDP growth predictions, the reconfigured Kazakh government GDP growth estimate of 0.5% is an important sign of the severity of the economic downturn linked to low oil prices. Kazakhstan had earlier predicted GDP growth in 2016 at 2.1%.

“If the cost of a barrel of oil is $40, GDP growth will be 2.1%, but we’ve taken the conservative approach and have assumed that the price of oil will costs $30 per barrel and that GDP growth will hit 0.5%,” journalists quoted Yerbolat Dosayev, the economy minister as saying. Oil is currently around $35/barrel.

Importantly, this new GDP growth estimate is far closer to that of international economist who have said that Kazakhstan’s economy could shrink in 2016. The last time that Kazakhstan’s economy dipped into a recession was in 2008.

Low oil prices and a recession in Russia which has wiped out essential remittance and business investment flows have hit Central Asia hard. The scale and speed of the downturn appears to have wrong-footed leaders, including Kazakh president Nursultan Nazarbayev and his advisers.

They have slashed government budgets and also sold off chunks of state-owned companies, but they haven’t been able to prevent the tenge from losing 50% of its value and inflation rising. Officials are now worried about anti-government protests.

On the southern fringe of Central Asia, Tajikistan, the world’s most remittance-reliant economy, has also been reeling from the impact of the downturn. It has called in the IMF to try to organise an emergency loan.

Jamoliddin Nuraliev, deputy head of Tajikistan’s Central Bank, told the FT that talks with the IMF had begun.

“It’s crisis time,” he said.

Tajikistan has depleted its currency reserves in its Central Bank trying to defend the value of it somoni currency. At the same time, data has shown that the flow of remittances from Russia have dropped by around half.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 269, published on Feb. 26 2016)

 

Azerbaijan’s CBank increases rates

FEB. 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan’s Central Bank raised its key interest rate for the first time since 2011 to try to bolster its ailing currency. It raised its key interest rate to 5% from 3%. The manat has lost 50% of its value over the past year as oil prices fall. Oil is Azerbaijan’s key export.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 268, published on Feb. 19 2016)

 

Inflation jumps in Azerbaijan

FEB. 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Prices in Azerbaijan jumped by 5.8% in January compared to December, according to the national statistics committee. The statistics committee said food prices rose 8.7% last month. In December the Central Bank allowed the manat currency to float free against the US dollar. This triggered a 35% devaluation in its value, putting prices under enormous pressure to rise.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 267, published on Feb. 12 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan bans dollar mortgage

FEB. 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan’s Central Bank said that it had banned commercial banks from handing out US dollar mortgages to customers. The ban is designed to stop the economy from accruing more bad debt. Like its neighbours the Kyrgyz som has been under increased pressure to devalue. Over the past couple of months, the Central Bank has intervened heavily in the currency markets to protect its value but analysts have said that this policy is unsustainable and a devaluation is inevitable.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 267, published on Feb. 12 2016)

 

Azerbaijan’s President dismisses tax code

FEB. 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev refused to sign into law a bill that would have imposed a 20% tax on all foreign currency investments, media reported, an apparent U-turn on a much-heralded government strategy unveiled last month to head off a worsening currency crisis. Azerbaijan’s currency lost around half its value in 2015 and the Central Bank has been under pressure to stop businesses cashing out of manat into other currencies. By refusing to sign the bill, though, Mr Aliyev is effectively saying that law- makers and the Central Bank have to re-think their policies.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 267, published on Feb. 12 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan imposes fines for USD

FEB. 3 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan’s anti-monopoly said it would start to impose fines against shops, companies and people selling products in US dollars rather than the local som currency. The new rules appear designed to boost the use and the strength of the Kyrgyz som. The som has lost around a third of its value.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

Exchange booth volumes in Kazakhstan

JAN. 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The volume of sales of US dollars at kiosks in Kazakhstan rose by $600m in December to $1.7b, media quoted government data as showing. The data underlines the lack of confidence that Kazakhs have in the tenge. It has lost half its value in the past 12 months, a drop linked to a fall in oil prices. The 52% rise in US dollar sales in December was likely due to a sudden rise in tenge’s value.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

Kyrgyz CBank should cut spending, says IMF

FEB. 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan’s Central Bank needs to slow its interventions in the currency market in order to avoid depleting its reserves, the IMF said at the end of a mission to Bishkek. The IMF had been on a fact-finding mission ahead of a meeting in April when Kyrgyzstan hopes to extend its borrowing. Its Central Bank has been buying som heavily to support its value.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

S+p downgrades Azerbaijan’s debt status

JAN. 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s downgraded Azerbaijan’s debt status to junk and said that its economy would contract for the first time in a decade. The downgrade from BBB- to BB+ comes off the back of a 35% collapse in the value of the Azerbaijani manat, growing internal dissatisfaction and concern over disappearing jobs. Azerbaijan is reliant on oil exports for revenues.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)