Breaking News : Likes our Facebook page and join us as members, you will receive email updates and instant updates in Telegram group.
Ukraine’s
currency touched record lows Monday as continued violence in the rebel-held
east fueled pessimism about the country’s economic future. The currency slump
came as the Ukrainian military said it will not pull back its heavy arms from
the front lines until attacks by pro-Russian rebels cease completely. Rebel
leaders said they have agreed to begin a fuller withdrawal starting Tuesday.
A
pullback of heavy weaponry is a key step in a cease-fire deal reached this month, but both sides
have said that fighting is continuing, casting doubt on efforts to quell the
10-month-old conflict.
Less than two weeks after the
International Monetary Fund announced a $17.5 billion bailout loan for Ukraine,
the central bank tightened capital controls to prevent the country from running
out of foreign currency.
In spite of what has been pledged,
Ukraine hasn’t received a major injection of IMF cash since a $1.4 billion
disbursement on Sept. 3, the lender’s website shows. With its foreign reserves
dropping 61 percent to $6.4 billion in the four months through January, the
country’s “cupboard is basically bare,” said Timothy Ash from Standard Bank
Group Plc.
The
Ukrainian central bank moved to impose currency controls as the hryvnia plunged
another 10 percent against the dollar on Monday -- a move analysts said would
do little to bolster the currency.
The hryvnia's decline came amid
growing concern a ceasefire in eastern Ukraine will not hold. The currency has
now lost half its value in 2015, after falling by 50 percent over all of 2014.
"We will not allow the situation
to get out of control," the head of the central bank, Valeriia Gontareva,
said at a press briefing. There were no fundamental reasons for the hryvnia to
weaken further, she said.
The average hryvnia rate slid 10
percent on Monday to a fresh-record low of 30.55 to the dollar as of 1400 GMT,
after Ukraine's military said ongoing rebel attacks were preventing it from
withdrawing its heavy weapons from the front line in eastern Ukraine.
A trader at a large foreign bank in
Ukraine said he was seeing market rates at around 31.3-31.8 to the dollar.
"For now, the market is weakening
and there's no reason to see it stabilising so long as the war rolls on,"
he said.
The latest hryvnia level is nearly 30
percent weaker than the 21.7 rate foreseen in Ukraine' 2015 budget. If the
weakness persists, it will upset the government's strict austerity plans.
"They plan to raise (energy)
tariffs. But if hryvnia devaluation continues, they will have to increase
tariffs again in two to three months," said Vasyl Yurchyshyn, the director
of economic programmes at the Razumkov Centre think tank in Kiev.
The currency’s nose dive puts even more pressure on government
finances, making it harder for the country to buy energy, military hardware and
the basics necessary for a war-hit population. It also sends prices of imported
goods skyrocketing, meaning that ordinary Ukrainians need to pay far more for
their groceries.
The
plunge calls into question Ukraine’s ability to repay money borrowed from
global creditors. The central bank’s reserves of foreign currency are depleted,
raising the prospect that the nation could soon go bankrupt. Ukrainian military officials said Monday
that the ongoing violence means they cannot pull back their weaponry.
No comments:
Post a Comment