Page 34 - bne IntelliNews George country report Sept 2017
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began   to   oscillate   again   in   early   2017,   prompting   more   monetary   tightening. According   to   the   central   bank,   the   rise   in   inflation   will   be   temporary,   and   it   is expected   that   the   upward   trend   will   reverse   in   the   second   half   of   2018.
"Hence,   other   things   being   equal,   there   is   no   need   for   further   policy   tightening. Given   the   absence   of   additional   shocks   and   with   the   elimination   of   the   impact of   the   one-time   factors   affecting   inflation,   the   policy   rate   in   the   medium   term   is expected   to   decrease   to   its   neutral   level   in   the   medium   term,"   its   statement read.
The   regulator   said   it   would   monitor   developments   in   the   economy,   after receiving   "mixed   signals"   from   demand-side   factors   affecting   consumer   prices. "On   the   one   hand   according   to   the   preliminary   estimates   economic   growth slowed   down   in   April,   compared   to   previous   months;   on   the   other   hand   export revenues   (including   those   from   tourism)   have   grown   at   a   high   rate.   The   volume of   remittances   has   also   been   growing.   If   the   growth   trend   in   external   demand is   maintained,   the   gradual   decrease   in   the   current   account   deficit   can   be expected,"   it   concluded.
8.3    Stock   market
Georgia   has   been   the   beneficiary   of   not   one,   but   two   lari-denominated bonds   issued   by   the   EBRD   in   the   last   year.    On   April   25,     the   bank   issued   the first   lari-denominated   Eurobond ,   worth   GEL120mn   (€46.7mn),   on   the   London Stock   Exchange.   The   move   came   after   the   EBRD   made   a   GEL107mn   public bond   issuance   on   the   Georgian   Stock   Exchange   (GSE)   in   Tbilisi   last   June.
Part   of   the   bank's   drive   to   develop   local   capital   markets,   the   bond   issuances are   bound   to   spur   investor   confidence   in   the   Georgian   economy,   George Paresishvili,   GSE's   CEO,   told    bne   IntelliNews    in   a   telephone   interview.   The privately-owned   Georgian   bourse   has   seen   activity   on   it   dwindle   in   the aftermath   of   the   Russian   invasion   of   2008   and   the   economic   crisis   of   2009. While   before   2008,   the   volume   of   trading   on   the   stock   exchange   exceeded $100mn   per   year,   it   almost   came   to   a   halt   in   2009   and   has   never   fully recovered.
34       GEORGIA  Country  Report   September  2017                                                                                                                                                                                www.intellinews.com


































































































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