The document outlines Ukraine's data release calendar for August 2019. It shows that the Ministry of Finance will release data on outstanding domestic government bonds on August 1st and debt payments on August 5th. The State Statistics Service will publish inflation figures for July 2019 on August 8th. The National Bank of Ukraine will release preliminary international reserve figures for July 2019 on August 12th and revised figures on August 23rd. The State Treasury Service will publish budget execution data for Q2 2019 before August 8th and for June 2019 before August 29th.
De 2004 a 2019, las agencias de calificaci坦n crediticia S&P, Fitch y Moody's revisaron repetidamente las calificaciones crediticias de Ucrania, que oscilaron entre grado de inversi坦n y no inversi坦n. Las calificaciones reflejaron la inestabilidad pol鱈tica y econ坦mica del pa鱈s durante este per鱈odo.
This document summarizes credit ratings for Ukraine from various rating agencies between 2004 and 2019. It shows foreign currency ratings, local currency ratings, national scale ratings, and outlooks assigned by Standard & Poor's, Fitch, Moody's, and other agencies over this period. Ratings fluctuated with changes in Ukraine's economic and political situation, moving between investment grade to non-investment grade levels.
Le document semble principalement constitu辿 de chiffres et de symboles sans contexte explicite. Il n'y a pas suffisamment d'informations pour en tirer des points cl辿s ou un sens clair. L'absence de texte compr辿hensible rend le r辿sum辿 difficile.
The document outlines Ukraine's data release calendar for August 2019, listing various economic reports being released each week by Ukrainian government agencies. Key reports include budget execution for Q2 2019 to be released by August 8; international reserves and inflation for July 2019; a meeting of the National Bank of Ukraine board on monetary policy on August 12; revised international reserves for July and budget execution for June to be released by August 29; and state debt data as of the end of June.
This document lists 47 Ukrainian domestic bond issues outstanding as of August 1, 2019. For each bond, it provides the ISIN, tenor in days, currency, auction and interest payment dates, maturity date, nominal yield, coupon amount, and amount outstanding. The bonds vary in tenor from 119 to 3,724 days, with currencies of UAH, USD, and EUR. Nominal yields range from 3.85% to 19.5% and amounts outstanding range from 100 to 9,950,000 units.
The document lists details of various international government bonds, including identifiers, currencies, amounts outstanding, coupons, issue dates, maturity dates, and links to associated prospectuses. Specified are bonds denominated in euros and U.S. dollars issued between 2015 and 2028 by the same corporate entity, with coupons ranging from 0.00-9.75% and maturities from 2020-2040. Prospectus dates range from 2016 to 2019. Two U.S. aid bonds from 2015-2016 are also included, with coupons of 1.847% and 1.471% and maturities in 2020 and 2021 respectively.
This document provides economic forecasts and indicators for Ukraine from 2019-2022. It predicts that Ukraine's nominal GDP will grow steadily from UAH 4035.2 billion in 2019 to UAH 5617.3 billion in 2022. Inflation is expected to remain under control between 5.3-7.4% annually. The unemployment rate should gradually decrease from 8.6% to 7.9% in 2022. The current account deficit is projected to increase from USD -12.5 billion to USD -16.1 billion over the period. Key factors like commodity prices, foreign investment, agricultural production and fiscal indicators are also forecasted.
Central fiscal revenues in Ukraine increased in the first four months of 2019 primarily due to a transfer of profits from the national bank, wage growth, and increased natural gas extraction. However, revenues were also lower than expected in some areas like VAT and tobacco taxes. Government expenditures were largely financed as planned, with the largest allocations going to wages, social protection, defense, and debt servicing. The budget surplus decreased compared to the same period in 2018. Ukraine recently transitioned from an IMF Extended Fund Facility program to a new 14-month Stand-By Arrangement.
This document summarizes Ukraine's medium-term state debt management strategy from 2019 to 2022. Key points include:
- Ukraine's total state debt as of end-2018 was $67.2 billion, with 59.1% from external sources and 40.9% domestic.
- The strategy aims to gradually decrease debt levels, extend maturities, increase domestic debt denominated in local currency, and develop systematic investor relations.
- Major risks to debt include refinancing, liquidity, foreign exchange, and interest rate risks. The strategy seeks to mitigate these through domestic market development, liability management, and cooperation with international financial institutions.
This document lists 36 outstanding domestic bond issues in Ukraine as of July 1, 2019. For each bond issue, it provides details such as the issue number, tenor in days, currency, auction and interest payment dates, maturity date, nominal yield, coupon amounts, and outstanding amount. The bonds differ in terms of currency (UAH, USD, EUR), tenor (ranging from 112 to 2,534 days), and annual nominal yields (ranging from 4.12% to 19.50%). The total outstanding amount across all 36 bond issues is over 100 million units of various currencies.
This calendar outlines economic data releases from Ukraine's government agencies in July 2019, including international reserves, inflation, monetary policy meetings, budget execution, outstanding government bonds, debt payments, and state debt figures, with scheduled release dates from the Ministry of Finance, National Bank of Ukraine, State Statistics Service, and State Treasury Service.
1. Ukraine's economy has been recovering well, with real GDP growth of 3.3% in 2018, driven by strong consumer demand and increasing investments.
2. Key reforms have supported Ukraine's economic recovery and established irreversible steps toward change, while fiscal consolidation has helped prudent debt management.
3. Continued support from economic partners has also contributed to Ukraine's solid economic recovery track over recent years.