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Armenian Business Confidence Sinks In Q4

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  • Armenian Business Confidence Sinks In Q4

    ARMENIAN BUSINESS CONFIDENCE SINKS IN Q4
    Venla Sipila

    World Markets Research Centre
    Dec 18 2008

    The newest confidence survey by the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA)
    signals weakening sentiment among the country's producers. ARKA
    News reports that the economic performance indicator, which measures
    overall confidence on a 100-point scale, in the fourth quarter of the
    year measured 40.7, falling by a fourth in annual comparison and by
    around 38% from the third quarter of 2008. Meanwhile, the business
    sentiment indicator slid by some 12% year-on-year (y/y) and 16%
    quarter-on-quarter (q/q), standing at 41.5 in the fourth quarter. Only
    the composite consumer confidence index managed to avoid an annual
    fall, rising by a marginal rate of 0.3% y/y, but also this indicator
    fell from the third quarter, its level of 48.7 marking a decrease of
    5.6% q/q. The CBA has conducted quarterly confidence surveys since
    2005. Over 800 industrial, construction and service companies and
    nearly 1,900 households were surveyed.

    Significance:While consumer confidence remained virtually stable
    in annual comparison, all components of the survey signal weakening
    sentiment. Moreover, the values of all three components stand below
    the critical 50-point mark, signalling negative sentiment. The newest
    official data put Armenian GDP growth in January-October 2008 at 9.2%
    y/y (see Armenia: 24 November 2008: ). After growing at double-digit
    rates for the past several years, the Armenian economy finally looks
    set to cool, and the official growth projection of over 9% for 2009
    seems overly optimistic to us, while we do not see recession likely
    in Armenia as domestic demand, still rising from a relatively low
    base, should still remain strong enough to support growth at positive
    rates. The global financial crisis will not have any notable direct
    impact on Armenia, due to the still-undeveloped and relatively isolated
    nature of its financial sector. However, indirect negative effects
    from the international crisis will likely be felt as moderating
    investment and current transfer inflows, while the country's already
    meagre export prospects have also weakened further.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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