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What To Expect From The Armenian Dram In 2015

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  • What To Expect From The Armenian Dram In 2015

    WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE ARMENIAN DRAM IN 2015

    Lragir.am
    Business - 29 December 2014, 12:59

    Haypost and Russian Post signed an agreement to implement "Forsage"
    money transfer system between Armenia and Russia

    Chart A

    1 / 6

    It is important to understand where the Armenian economy is headed
    and what is going to be the effect on the Armenian economy due to the
    sanctions imposed on Russia. Intelligently predicting the economy
    will help to get better prepared for what is coming and hopefully
    find ways to minimize the impact.

    To evaluate possible movements of the Armenian Dram, unfortunately
    we need to look closely at the Russian Ruble since historically the
    Dram has closely followed the Ruble.

    To understand correctly where the Russian Ruble is headed, we have
    a perfect historical model that is not usually available to us in a
    lot of cases. The Russian economy in many ways is very similar to the
    Iranian economy in that the Iranian economy is heavily dependent on
    oil. To make it a more usable model, interestingly enough it has gone
    through the similar US and European Union sanctions as the Russian
    economy is going through now.

    Chart A

    As the 5 year IRR (Iranian Rial) devaluation Chart (Chart A)
    is showing, the IRR devaluated at around 150% during the peak of
    sanctions against the Dollar; however at the same time lower oil
    prices in 2014 are not showing Russian Ruble like devaluation due to
    lower oil prices, which somewhat proves that primarily the sanctions
    (and not oil prices) are the cause of the current Ruble devaluation.

    Furthermore below is the chart comparing IRR to the Ruble.

    Chart B

    It is clear that the IRR regained its pre-sanction levels compared
    to the Ruble, and is now trading even lower than the pre-sanctions era.

    Basically Chart B is showing that after sanctions against Russia,
    Iranian IRR and RUB reached pre-sanction level, oil prices being
    the same for both countries, the chart is showing that the sanctions
    (and not the oil prices) are the main cause of Ruble devaluation.

    Chart C

    To estimate the Russian Ruble devaluation, we can use Iranian analogy
    to estimate where the Russian Ruble will end up. The Iranian Rial
    jumped up to 150% in the midst of US and EU sanctions against Iran,
    where the Russian Ruble's initial jump was 185%. Even if after a few
    days by drastically increasing interest rates to 17% in Russia, the
    Ruble settled at 104% devaluation, which seems to be not the natural
    devaluation equilibrium of the Ruble. It will be very interesting to
    follow the next few weeks of developments of the exchange rate of
    the Ruble against the dollar; if devaluation continues despite the
    drastic measures, the Ruble will end up at around 150% devaluation
    or about 70 Rubles per dollar, or even higher. It is costing too much
    for Russia to keep the Ruble in the current levels; it would have been
    wiser for Russia to let the dollar reach its natural 150% devaluated
    level. From there on the devaluation would have continued at about 20%
    for the next year reaching to around 85 Rubles per dollar. However
    with decision to raise the interest rates and slow down the economy,
    hoping that the oil prices will bounce back in the next 3 to 6 months,
    Russia is taking a huge gamble in putting its economy in an extremely
    and potentially unrecoverable state. The outlook of higher oil prices
    is at best murky. The survey of 30 economists and analysts projected
    Brent to average $74.00 a barrel next year and $80.30 in 2016. The
    forecast for 2015 is $8.50 below the average projection in the previous
    Reuters poll. The November poll number was down $11.20 from October,
    marking the biggest downgrade in average forecasts since the 2008
    economic downturn. With these numbers, Russia will most probably
    default on its loans and the downgrade of Russian credit rating seems
    to be highly possible.

    Chart D

    If Russia did not take drastic measures of spending reserves and
    increasing the interest rate, we would have seen a devaluation curve
    as shown in Chart D which is very similar to the IRR devaluation of
    Chart A, ranging around 85 Rubles per Dollar exchange rate. Even with
    the drastic measures, Russia is only postponing the devaluation of
    the dollar, and we will most probably see the RUB following one of
    the curves (A, B, C) in Chart D in the next 3 to 6 months to reach
    its natural levels.

    At the same time, with simple Chart analysis, it is noticeable that
    stress levels are much higher on the Ruble than IRR. As is evident from
    the yellow lines at the top of Chart E and blue lines on the bottom,
    both the IRR and Ruble had similar devaluation correlations before
    the sanctions kicked in against both countries. However, as it is
    evident in the case of IRR at the top of Chart E, if the IRR moved
    vertically to its devaluation level, the Ruble is fighting back with
    steep upwards curve (shown in red lines in Chart E). Even with chart
    analysis, it seems that the Ruble situation is much more critical and
    if the Ruble will not be able to break out from this steep upward
    movement within the next few months, we might see an unpredictably
    high devaluation of the Ruble.

    Chart E

    If pre-sanction periods for both the RUB and IRR were devaluating at
    a similar rate and the sanctions caused a somewhat similar jump in
    devaluation with the only difference being that Iran did not fight
    the devaluation while Russia is unwisely fighting by depleting its
    economy from reserves and stagnating the economy. It is also safe
    to assume that after the initial jump corrects itself at the 150%
    level, the further devaluation of the Ruble will continue at the
    same post-sanction levels of about 20% reaching around 170-180%
    devaluation compared to pre-sanction periods.

    Historically, the Armenian Dram has closely followed the Russian Ruble,
    as seen on Chart F. At the current state, the Dram is 30% higher
    compared to the Ruble, which is temporary, since Armenia has also
    joined the EEU (Eurasian Economic Union) and the close relationship
    between Ruble and Dram is going to be more correlated than ever.

    Chart F

    Taking that into consideration with the current Ruble levels, the
    Armenian Dram should be at around 580 Drams per dollar, however the
    Armenian economy is not as closely integrated with other countries,
    and temporarily the Armenian government is able to keep the Dram from
    devaluation. However it will take a very short time, in the next 3 to
    4 weeks, where we will see the Dram reaching the 580 per dollar level.

    Furthermore, closely following the Russian Ruble, in the next 3 to
    6 months, the Russian Ruble reaching 85+/- 5 level, the Armenian
    dram will reach 900+/- 50 level. This analysis assumes somewhat
    flat or slightly improved oil prices in the market, in the case that
    oil prices go slightly downwards or even stay at the current levels
    for more than 12 months, we might see the Ruble reaching 120 per US
    Dollar levels, in which case Dram levels of 1200 per Dollar is not
    a farfetched prediction, if Armenia is not able to break away from
    the EEU and continue to suffer from the indirect sanctions.

    Aram Ter-Martirosyan

    Geopolitical Club, Armenian Desk

    http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/economy/view/33367#sthash.RjpuV2HW.dpuf

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