Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

IHS Global Insight Revises Armenian Sovereign Outlook To Negative As

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • IHS Global Insight Revises Armenian Sovereign Outlook To Negative As

    IHS GLOBAL INSIGHT REVISES ARMENIAN SOVEREIGN OUTLOOK TO NEGATIVE AS LIQUIDITY PRESSURES KEEP INTENSIFYING
    Venla Sipila

    World Markets Research Centre
    Global Insight
    June 15, 2009

    In our second-quarter sovereign risk review round, IHS Global Insight
    has adjusted the outlook on our Armenian medium-term sovereign
    rating to negative from stable. The rating itself is kept at 60 (B-
    in the generic rating scale), signifying a very high payments risk
    in lending to the sovereign. In addition, we downgraded Armenia's
    short-term sovereign rating by two notches to 30 from 40, as lower
    foreign currency inflows have resulted in ever-tightening liquidity
    pressure on the economy. Moreover, the outlook for the short-term
    sovereign rating was also retained at negative. The rating revisions
    follow a one-notch downgrade in our Armenian sovereign rating only
    last round, when the rising risks to creditworthiness became evident
    amid weakened supply of foreign currency (seeArmenia: 24 March 2009:).

    Significance:The downward outlook revision highlights intensifying
    financial pressures from the sovereign's external financing gap, now
    that the availability of foreign investment remittance inflows are
    considerably suffering under the global economic downturn, leading to
    rising challenges in financing the wide external gap and covering
    the rising fiscal spending needs, and increasing needs to seek
    external loans (seeArmenia 3 June 2009: ). Armenia is particularly
    strongly dependent on workers' remittances from Russia. According
    to figures from the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) quoted by ARKA
    News, these have declined by nearly 36% in annual comparison for the
    January-April period. With Russian remittances making up nearly 80%
    of total non-commercial remittance inflows, this drop has a severe
    negative impact on Armenian external finances. However, official data
    on remittances received through the local banking system may somewhat
    underestimate inflows.

    In addition, another mitigating factor in assessing Armenian
    sovereign risk is that, while external debt is rising, mostly it
    has been extended by multilateral creditors, thus carrying very
    soft terms. Thus, Armenia still is likely to be able to service its
    external obligations.
Working...
X