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  • Moody's issues annual report on Armenia

    Budapest Business Journal, Hungary
    Dec 19 2008

    Moody's issues annual report on Armenia
    Friday 8:35, December 19th, 2008

    Armenia's Ba2 government bond ratings and stable outlook are supported
    by its manageable debt levels, says Moody's Investors Service in its
    annual report on the country.
    The ratings are constrained by the low level of economic and
    institutional development of the country, along with its concentrated
    economic base and volatile neighborhood.

    `Armenia has not been directly affected by the global credit crunch
    although second-round effects are now being felt from the compression
    of world demand and the difficult conditions in Russia, its primary
    trading partner and the source of large diaspora remittances,' said
    Moody's Associate Vice President Joan Feldbaum-Vidra, Moody's
    sovereign analyst for Armenia.

    She said growth is likely to decelerate sharply in the next few years
    even as the government moves forward with large public sector
    investment projects financed by multilateral funds. The spending on
    such projects should help sustain the growth momentum even as the
    fiscal deficits are set to shrink.

    `The country's low government debt and minimal refinancing risks are
    allowing its rating to maintain a stable outlook in the current
    environment,' said Feldbaum-Vidra. `A weak revenue base is the main
    fiscal risk, although it is ameliorated by the very comfortable debt
    service profile, its good relations with its official creditors, and
    the liquidity provided by the expatriate Armenian community.'

    Moody's reports that Armenia's economic prospects continue to be
    hampered by strained relations with Turkey and Azerbaijan, and that
    the border between Turkey and Armenia is closed, increasing the cost
    of both exports and imports.

    `Armenia's low institutional strength is another constraint on its
    ratings,' said Feldbaum-Vidra. `The authorities are very keen to
    address this, recognizing that high levels of corruption and a
    suboptimal business climate need to be corrected in order to achieve
    long-term sustainable growth and to attract investment.'

    Moody's first-ever ratings for Armenia were assigned in 2006 and
    include a Baa3 ceiling to foreign currency bonds and notes and a Ba3
    ceiling for foreign currency bank deposits, all with stable
    outlooks. (press release)

    http://bbjonline.hu/?col=1001&id=459 21
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