Ukraine Currency
Falls 11%, Exchange Control in Place
· IMF Announces $17.5bn Bail Out
· Country Going Bust with No Money in Sight
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.
Central bank Governor Valeriya Gontareva announced new
limits on the amount of foreign exchange available to importers and banned
banks from lending money for clients to buy foreign currency. More restrictions
may follow as the country’s economy contracts amid a deadly conflict with
pro-Russian rebels in the country’s east, Gontareva
said on Monday. The hryvnia fell as much as 11 percent per dollar and bonds tumbled.
“Aid can’t come fast enough,”
Richard Segal, head of emerging-markets credit strategy at Jefferies
International Ltd. in London, said by phone Monday. “The way things are going,
the central bank may need to declare a moratorium on money leaving the country,
perhaps through an interruption in debt servicing as Argentina did.”
Ukraine’s $2.6 billion of 9.25
percent bonds due in July 2017, the sovereign’s
benchmark security for foreign investors, dropped for a seventh day to an
all-time low of 41.5 cents on the dollar at 7:24 p.m. in Kiev, increasing the
yield to 56.43 percent. The hryvnia
weakened to a record 31.5 per dollar on Monday before recovering to 28, the
same level at which it closed on Friday, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg.
Stalled Payouts
The IMF-led aid package,
announced on Feb. 12, totals $40 billion when including bilateral deals with
nations as well as about $15 billion in savings expected from negotiations the
country is pursuing with bond investors.
The Washington-based lender
has stalled payouts under a previous funding plan as
the nation held presidential elections in October, lawmakers delayed the
passage of this year’s budget and while the sides negotiated the second
bailout.
“The implementation of strong
policies and reforms under the new IMF program, including a flexible exchange
rate, will help the economy adjust and lay the basis for a return of growth and
confidence,” an IMF spokesman said by e-mail on Monday. “However, in the short
term, tightening of the administrative measures on a temporary basis may be
necessary to support the foreign exchange market.”
IMF Lifeline
“Ukraine is bankrupt and the
only reason the bonds are trading at 40-45 is because of IMF involvement,”
Dmitri Barinov, a money manager who oversees $2.6
billion, said by e-mail on Monday. “Ukraine has neither the possibility nor the
willingness to pay its debt, but will be forced to restructure under IMF
conditions.”
The hryvnia’s
44 percent depreciation per dollar this year,
following a 48 percent drop in 2014, is driving up
the prices of imports and energy, while making external debt payments more
difficult for Ukraine. Governor Gontereva yielded
control of the currency earlier this month, allowing it to weaken in an
IMF-backed move which helped eliminate an unofficial street market for currency
transactions.