FEDERATION OF EURO-ASIAN STOCK EXCHANGES
ANNUAL REPORT APRIL 2011
BAKU STOCK EXCHANGE
ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS
Economic Performance
Despite the global financial crisis and fall in
international oil prices from their 2008 highs,
growth slipped only a little to 9.3% in 2009,
from 10.8% in 2008. Helped by higher oil
prices in the second half of 2009 and by
increased production of hydrocarbons from the
Caspian Sea, the oil and gas sector
(constituting 55% of GDP and 95% of total
export revenue) remained the major driver of
growth.
Overall, non-oil GDP growth at 3.2% of GDP in
2009 was much lower than its 15.7% growth in
2008, as activity was depressed by an
uncertain economic outlook that restrained
domestic demand and curtailed exports.
On the demand side, higher public investment,
which rose to 21% of GDP in 2009, supported
growth, reflecting government moves to
counter the impact of the global crisis. That
impact was, however, seen in falling private
sector investment, which came down to only
6% of GDP in 2009. Lower prices constrained
investment in the oil sector, which
consequently accounted for a smaller
proportion of total investment in 2009 than it
did in 2008.
Higher public investment was partly financed
by the State Oil Fund (SOFAZ), to which a
large part of the government’s oil receipts are
channeled. SOFAZ has become an important
source of financing for important
socioeconomic and investment projects.
With falling international commodity prices, the
consumer price index rose by only 1.5% in
2009, versus 20.8% in 2008. The Central Bank
of Azerbaijan’s heavy market intervention
maintained a stable exchange rate to the dollar
in 2009 (at AZN 0.8/$1), preventing a
depreciation that would have caused inflation
pressure and raised debtservicing costs for
businesses that have sizable foreign-currency
loans. Stable civil service salaries and
economic uncertainty helped bring down
inflation pressure from the demand side.
Falling inflation allowed the central bank to
relax monetary policy through phased but
steep reductions in the refinancing rate, which
ultimately fell to only 2% in 2009 from a high of
15% in 2008. In addition, the central bank
markedly lowered banking sector reserve
requirements to 0.5% in March 2009 from 12%.
Banking sector resilience grew as a result of
monetary policy measures of the central bank.
Despite slow growth, banks maintained strong
loan portfolios, and the proportion of overdue
loans was kept in check, at 4.5% of the total.
As oil export income fell due to sliding
international prices, the trade account is
estimated to have posted a surplus of only
$14.6 billion, down from $23.0 billion in 2008.
This drop was mitigated by an estimated $1.1
billion fall in imports, largely because of lower
food prices and a decline in oil companies’
demand for investment machinery.
Gross international reserves contracted by
$1.1 billion to $5.4 billion at end-December
2009. This decline, in a context of a current
account surplus, reflected a buildup in SOFAZ
investment assets abroad.
Key Information Contacts
National Bank www.cbar.az
State Committee for Securities www.scs.gov.az
Ministry of Finance www.maliyye.gov.az
National Depository Center www.mdm.az
Ministry of Economic Development www.economy.gov.az
PAGE 38
External debt rose slightly to $3.4 billion (8.8%
of GDP) in 2009 from $3.0 billion a year earlier.
Azerbaijan’s debt at these levels remains low
and there are no major risks to debt servicing
in view of the $14.9 billion SOFAZ sovereign
fund and the $5.4 billion in foreign reserves.
Economic Prospects
The focus of monetary policy in 2010 remains
on keeping inflation low. The central bank
currently projects inflation at 3%. However,
rising commodity and food prices and higher
public investment and demand fueled by oil
revenue, along with the current relatively liberal
monetary policy environment, suggest that
estimates of 5.8% (and about 6.0% in 2011)
mark a more likely outcome. However, the
likely appreciation of the local currency on
higher oil revenues this year could complicate
monetary policy if the central bank needs to
intervene in the market to keep a lid on
appreciation.
The external account is expected to remain
strong on higher oil export receipts with the
current account surplus projected at 23.0% of
GDP before easing to 21.7% next year (as
stronger GDP growth sucks in imports). The
recovery of the global economy will boost non-
oil exports, too, while the upturn in the Russian
economy will support higher workers’
remittances. The larger current account
surplus, along with larger transfers from
SOFAZ, will preclude the need for net foreign
borrowing. External debt is projected to fall
over the forecast period.
Information obtained from the Exchange.