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Raising Our Longer-Term Growth Outlook

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  • Raising Our Longer-Term Growth Outlook

    Caucasus Business Forecast Report
    January 1, 2013 Tuesday


    Raising Our Longer-Term Growth Outlook



    BMI View: Economic growth in Armenia will slow from 2011-2012 levels
    as the favourable net export contribution to growth begin s to unwind.
    We believe that robust economic growth is being driven by a sharp
    decline in imports. However, as fixed investment begins to pick up
    again, capital goods imports will unwind these favourable statistical
    contributions to Armenia's economy. Over the longer term, we have
    raised our growth forecast as the economy continues to emerge from a
    very low base. Key will be whether major military hostilities with
    Azerbaijan can be avoided over the next few years.

    Economic growth in Armenia is set to adjust moderately lower over the
    next couple of years, as a recovery in fixed capital investment
    remains elusive and the robust net export contribution to headline
    real GDP growth is set to unwind. Having said that, we have raised our
    longer-term growth proje ctions for Armenia ' s economy in line with
    our generally positive outlook on the country ' s external accounts.
    Having previously raised our 2012 real GDP growth forecast to 4.3% (
    see our online service, July 11, ' Major Risks Remain Despite Upward
    Growth Revision ' ), we forecast economic growth to slow to 3.4% in
    2013, and gradually return to 4.0% by 2016. Further ahead, we see
    growth remaining comfortably above 4.0%, peaking at 5.1% in 2018 on
    account of robust export growth, an improvement in household
    consumption and crucially, gross fixed capital formation growth.

    A significant divergence in the real growth of exports and imports of
    goods and services in Armenia has helped to push overall GDP growth
    firmly higher in recent quarters. Headline GDP growth was revised up
    for the first quarter of 2012 from 4.7% year-on-year (y-o-y) to 5.6%,
    and latest data from Armenia's statistical institute (Armstat) show
    that growth jumped in the second quarter to 6.6% y-o-y. Primarily, the
    latest surge in real GDP growth has been driven by average real export
    growth of 17.4% y-o-y in the first two quarters of 2012, compared with
    an average contraction in imports of 1.2% y-o-y for the same period.

    Already, average real GDP growth in H112 on an annual basis, came in
    substantially higher than during the equivalent period in 2011.
    Headline GDP growth averaged 6.1% y-o-y in H112, up from 2.7% in H111,
    placing upside risks to our full-year 4.3% economic growth projection.
    Nevertheless, we currently forecast a gradual pick-up in import growth
    in the second half of 2012, which should see headline growth come
    within range of our full-year forecast.

    Strong Growth Figures Are Misleading

    The strong performance of the Armenian economy in recent quarters is
    directly linked to the unabated decline in fixed investment levels,
    which have substantially reduced local demand for capital goods
    imports into the economy. Indeed, imports of goods and services
    continued their recent decline, despite signs that final household
    consumption growth has accelerated in recent quarters ( see chart).

    Crucially, however, we observe that gross fixed capital formation
    (GFCF) growth has remained firmly negative in real terms on a y-o-y
    basis - with the exception of H110 - ever since the onset of the
    global recession, during which Armenia's economy contracted by a
    whopping 14.1% in 2009. Much of this ongoing decline in fixed
    investment is down to the implosion of Armenia's construction sector,
    which has shown few signs of a recovery thus far.

    The volume of construction-related loans to the private sector have
    remained mostly flat, measuring AMD100,402.9mn in August 2012, while
    consumer loans, trade credit and loans to industry continued to expand
    at a rapid pace since the economic contraction of 2009. This further
    strengthens our long-held belief that the Armenian economy is
    predominantly driven by goods exports to Russia, while household
    consumption is firmly underpinned by remittance inflows. However, we
    will be watching for a gradual resumption in construction-linked fixed
    investment growth over the coming quarters.

    For the time being, we forecast another year of negative gross fixed
    capital formation growth (-5.0%), before fixed investment returns to
    positive growth for the first time in five years at 4.0% in 2013. This
    will coincide with a gradual pick-up in import growth to 4.0% from
    zero growth in 2012 (in real terms), while we see exports of goods and
    services growth declining to 6.0% in 2013, down from a projected 12.0%
    in 2012.

    Regional Tensions Biggest Risk To Outlook

    We note that our outlook on Armenia's economy is predicated on
    avoiding a resumption of military hostilities beyond the ongoing
    border skirmishes with Azerbaijan over the coming years. For the time
    being, we maintain that a war with Azerbaijan over the breakaway
    Nagorno-Karabakh region, which Armenia has controlled since the war
    ended in 1994, is not inevitable. However, tensions have been rising
    and the risk of a miscalculated response that would eventually lead to
    another war between both sides is at its highest since the ceasefire
    was signed 18 years ago.

    Both sides are better armed than during the collapse of the Soviet
    Union and a full-blown military confrontation would have unforeseeable
    economic and social consequences. As a result, we would have to
    revisit the majority of our economic forecasts for Armenia in the
    event of major military hostilities with Azerbaijan.

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