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TBILISI: Georgian Lari Climbs Up

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  • TBILISI: Georgian Lari Climbs Up

    GEORGIAN LARI CLIMBS UP
    Manana Vardiashvili

    Georgian Business Week
    http://www.gbw.ge/news.aspx?sid=2232e1fe-d678-455 4-9623-759dfa3f2056
    March 16 2009
    Georgia

    The government remains optimistic

    Nukri Javakhishvili, 38, took a loan from a Georgian bank 10 months
    ago when 1USD stood at 1.40 GEL. He says the credit became a heavy
    burden now as he has to pay 1.70 for it.

    "If the lari slips further the prices on the market will go up. I am
    not sure whether I will be able to pay back the loan. I am not sure
    either whether I will have this job," Nukri told GBW adding that his
    company had already cut his pay.

    Georgian people have been carefully watching the devaluation of the
    Georgian currency after November 7, 2008 when GEL dropped 25 points
    in just a day from 1/1.40 USD to 1/1.65 USD. Because of the dramatic
    fall experts even dubbed the day as Green Friday.

    The NBG then opted to follow the policy of creeping devaluation. As
    a result, the Georgian lari, like many other foreign currencies in
    the world, goes down gradually.

    People's confidence in the national currency is also changing. Bank
    customers are now more inclined to keep their savings in dollars:
    statistics as of February 1, 2009 show that the deposits in USD jumped
    9.3 percent to 76.2 percent in a year despite the fact that the banks
    were paying higher interest rates on deposits placed in lari. Average
    weighed interest rate on deposits in foreign currency was 8.9 percent
    while it was 11.2 percent for those in the national currency.

    Georgian depositors started to favour the Euro as last year's results
    show: while a year ago, by February 1, 2008, 76.1 percent of deposits
    were placed in the American dollar and 23.2 percent in the Euro,
    the dollar's share shrank to 74.6 percent in a year while the Euro
    climbed to 24.9 percent.

    The Georgian lari dipped 3 points two weeks ago to 1.70 GEL which
    marks the sharpest drop after the Green Friday of 2008.

    Analysts say that the devaluation of currency is a problem for
    many countries in the world and ensues from the global financial
    meltdown. Many countries had to resort to reserve funds to keep the
    currencies stable. But the government started to reduce their efforts
    of intervention into the currency markets as experience showed great
    costs to the national budgets.

    For instance, the Russian ruble lost one third of its value in several
    months. Millions were injected from the Russian currency reserves and
    gold fund to keep the rate at 1USD / 23 ruble. The Russian government
    then decided to let the ruble slip further, then cut its reserves. The
    Russian ruble is currently traded at a rate of 1/35.11.

    Times have been hard for the Armenian dram as well as it devaluated
    21.82 percent against the USD. The Armenian currency plummeted after
    the Chairman of the Armenian Central Bank Artur Djavadian said that
    'the National Bank of Armenia is back on track for a floating exchange
    rate.' As a result, the dram fell from 1USD/305 to 1USD/370 dram. The
    Armenian Central Bank forecasts that this year one American dollar
    will be standing somewhere between 387 to 440 dram.

    Azerbaijan has the same concerns. The Azeri media cites experts
    saying that the Azeri National Bank will have to spend 2b USD from
    its reserves to stabilize the currency. Experts note that the crisis
    is likely to begin in autumn. Statistics show that the Azeri National
    Bank has already invested 700m USD but it is not a risky move as the
    country's currency reserves stand as high as 17.18b USD.

    Georgian analysts blame the deficit for the devaluation. That the
    Georgian lari remained stable since 2004 should be credited to
    growing FDI.

    But the situation changed in the aftermath of the August war and
    the world economic crisis: the dwindling foreign capital failed to
    compensate for the deficit of the currency balance. Banks started
    to sell less and buy more currency. The NBG spent 300m USD from its
    reserves to curb inflation. Then instead of creeping devaluation,
    the lari dropped in just a day.

    The NBG now states that the lari will remain stable as the central
    bank took some preventive measures against devaluation in November
    last year.

    "It's impossible to make short-term forecasts of the lari rate when
    there is a floating exchange rate. The supply and demand on the
    market define the exchange rate and therefore we expect that the rate
    can follow either direction," a spokesperson for NBG told Georgian
    Business Week.

    Asked whether the NBG plans to use currency reserves to fix the
    exchange rate, NBG said: " Georgia currently has sufficient currency
    reserves. In the last five months of last year we really made big
    interventions which were necessary to maintain financial stability. But
    we have reduced intervention this year."

    Independent expert Nodar Khaduri casts doubt on NBG's optimism:
    "In the last week, the Georgian lari weakened 3 points from 1/1.67
    USD to 1/1.70 GEL." According to him, the NBG is opting for creeping
    devaluation and the Green Friday scenario is unlikely to reoccur.

    As the FDI and foreign remittances are declining, donor assistance is
    something which can buttress the national currency unlike the Armenian
    dram or Russian ruble. It is believed that the USD 4.5b financial
    aid which will be provided in the next three years is enough to cover
    the deficit, should they come in a timely manner.

    "I believe that the GEL will finally be fixed at 1/1.80 rate - in
    the best case. But if our government fails to secure the pledged
    assistance, forecasts about the Georgian lari will be dismaying,"
    Khaduri added.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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