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Central Bank Of Armenia Keeps Interest Rates Stable In November

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  • Central Bank Of Armenia Keeps Interest Rates Stable In November

    CENTRAL BANK OF ARMENIA KEEPS INTEREST RATES STABLE IN NOVEMBER

    World Market Research Centre
    Global Insight
    November 11, 2009

    The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) in its meeting yesterday decided
    to keep its refinancing interest rate unchanged at 5%, Reuters reports.

    The CBA had taken a similar decision also last month, while September
    had seen it cut the rate by 25 basis points, in the seventh monthly
    easing in a row (seeArmenia: 9 October 2009:). While announcing its
    decision, the CBA expressed its confidence on Armenia's ability to meet
    the inflation target this year. The CBA's monetary policy programme
    specifies the planed end-year consumer price inflation at 4% plus/minus
    1.5 percentage points. The central bank added that the current level
    of interest rates was low enough to provide for support for economic
    recovery. The latest inflation data put annual consumer price growth
    in October at 3.5%, in some moderation from the September rate of 3.7%
    (seeArmenia: 3 November 2009:).

    Significance:Given the extremely severe economic contraction that has
    gripped Armenia this year as foreign currency inflows have dried up,
    demand-side inflation pressures remain very muted. On the other hand,
    the same does not hold true for cost-side inflation. Indeed, strong
    upward pressure on annual service price inflation has resulted from
    the increase of Russian gas prices enacted earlier this year.

    Moreover, imported inflation risks are posed by the vulnerability
    of the dram exchange rate to the shock of the sharp reduction in
    investment and remittance inflows, and the resultant wide external
    financing gap. Indeed, ARKA News reports that the CBA again had to
    defend the external value of the dram with foreign currency sales,
    as the relative exchange rate stability that had resulted from the
    CBA's imposed limits on commercial banks' hard currency holdings proved
    only temporary, prompting even expectations that the CBA may have to
    require commercial banks to sell their foreign currency reserves.

    Thus, the CBA may soon again face the trade-off between supporting
    growth on the one hand, and seeking to control inflation and
    buttressing the dram on the other. Then again, due to the undeveloped
    state of the financial sector, the role of Armenian refinancing
    still remains mainly an indicator of the Central Bank's inflation
    expectations, rather than an effective policy tool that would have
    a clear impact on market interest rates.
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