Fitch upgrades Armenia to `BB’, outlook stable

Fitch upgrades Armenia to `BB’, outlook stable

YEREVAN, July 4. /ARKA/. Fitch Ratings agency has upgraded Armenia’s
long-term foreign and local Issuer Default ratings (IDRs) to `BB’ from
`BB-‘ (BB minus). The Outlooks have been changed from Positive to
Stable. The agency has also upgraded the Country Ceiling to `BB+’ from
`BB’ and affirmed the Short-term IDR at `B’, says the Fitch report on
Armenia.

Fitch experts say that the upgrade of Armenia’s sovereign ratings
reflects the economy’s rapid growth, rising incomes and strong policy
framework, which the agency cited as potential triggers when it placed
the ratings on Positive Outlooks in May 2007. The Armenian economy grew
13.8% in 2007, extending a five-year rolling average of 13% annual
growth. This buoyed average incomes to around the `BB’ median of USD
3,000 in 2007, easing a previous rating weakness.

According to Fitch, Armenia scores relatively favourably on the World
Bank’s Doing Business survey, where the country ranks 39th out of 178
economies, well above the `BB’ median of 98th place.

The budget deficit has run at or below 2% of GDP since 2003,
contributing to a drop in general government debt to 65% of fiscal
revenues by 2007 from 139% in 2004, helping to make Armenia’s public
finances a clear rating strength, the Fitch experts say. The central
bank has allowed the dram to appreciate, driven by remittance incomes
and increasingly by strong capital inflows, helping to contain
inflationary pressure. Average annual inflation in 2007 of 4.4% was
below the `BB’ median of 7.9%.

According to Fitch, Armenia faces some risk of overheating, although
pressures are moderate relative to `BB’ peers.

Annual inflation was 9.9% in May 2008, boosted by rising food prices
(54% of the basket). Armenia’s central bank cites the strong seasonal
component to inflation, and 275 bps of policy rate hikes since June
2007 (to 7.25%), in support of its view that inflation will fall back
to around 6% by end-year.

Credit growth of 79% in 2007 is concerning, although Fitch bank
analysts note improvements in system quality, while the banks’ small
size remains the key weakness. Total credit to the private sector was
just 14% of GDP at end-2007. Strong bank credit expansion contributed
to the widening of the CAD from 1.8% in 2006 to 6.2% in 2007, although
strong capital inflows drove an improving external liquidity position.
According to Fitch, the violent crackdown on post-election protests in
March 2008 has made political risk more salient in the credit profile.
However, tensions appear to have eased and the government has promised
some structural reforms to help address social grievances, while
political risk in Armenia is not out of line for the `BB’ range.

`Sustained growth and disciplined macroeconomic policies, and concrete
action on the new government’s reform agenda, could exert more upward
pressure on Armenia’s ratings in the long term. A failure to contain
overheating pressures, problems in the banking system, or signs of a
breakdown of political stability could be negative for the ratings,’
said Andrew Colquhoun, Director in Fitch’s Sovereigns Group. N.V. `0–