CyberBerkut: „Ukraine ist pleite !“
Veröffentlicht: 25. Mai 2015 Abgelegt unter: wirtschaftliche Lage | Tags: CyberBerkut Hinterlasse einen KommentarCyberBerkut: „Ukraine ist pleite !“
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Die Hackergruppe CyberBerkut hat Unterlagen veröffentlicht, die nachweisen sollen, dass die ukrainische Regierung kein Geld mehr hat und die Staatsschulden nicht weiter bedienen kann. Die Unterlagen sollen aus den Computern des Finanzministeriums in Kiew stammen.
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Sputnik-News
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Excerpts from interview to German TV channel ARD
Veröffentlicht: 15. November 2014 Abgelegt unter: Crimea - Krim, GAZPROM, Gazprombank, NAK Naftohas Ukrajiny - Naftogaz of Ukraine, sanctions & implications, Ukraine-Konflikt, wirtschaftliche Lage, Wladimir Putin | Tags: Hubert Seipel Ein KommentarVladimir Putin answered questions from Hubert Seipel of the German TV channel ARD. The interview was recorded on November 13 in Vladivostok.
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HUBERT SEIPEL: „After the Crimea joined Russia, the West expelled Russia from the Group of Eight, this exclusive club of industrial states. At the same time the USA and Great Britain imposed sanctions against Russia. Now you are heading to a G20 summit of the most important industrial states on the planet. The focus there will be on economic growth and employment. They say, there is no more growth and unemployment is set to increase; the sanctions are starting to have an effect; both the ruble and the oil price have set anti‑records. This is the exact opposite of what you are going to speak about in Brisbane. The forecast of attaining 2 percent growth in Russia is unfeasible. Other countries are in the same situation. This crisis has a counter‑productive character, including for the upcoming summit, wouldn’t you say?“
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VLADIMIR PUTIN: „You mean the Ukrainian crisis?“
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HUBERT SEIPEL: „Yes.“
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VLADIMIR PUTIN: „Of course, who could benefit from it? You wanted to know how the situation is evolving and what our expectations are. Of course we expect the situation to change for the better. Of course we expect the Ukrainian crisis to end. Of course we want to have normal relations with our partners, including in the United States and Europe. Of course, the situation with the so-called sanctions is damaging for the global economy (it is damaging for us and it is damaging for global economy as well) and it is damaging for the Russian‑EU relations most of all. In this case it contradicts international law, which governs economic relations, the WTO principles and the agreements we will try to reach during the G20summit. It comes into direct collision.
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By the way, according to the European Commission data, the losses from Russia’s counter-measures aimed at protecting our economy are estimated as 5–6 billion euro. Can we estimate the losses that these sanctions have caused Russia? It is rather difficult. To some extent, these are virtual losses. Although we have really sustained losses, it is true. However, there are some advantages as well: the restrictions imposed on some Russian companies on purchasing certain goods from Western countries, from Europe and the United States, have induced us to produce these goods ourselves. The comfortable life, when all we had to do was produce more oil and gas, and to buy everything else, is a thing of the past. Now we must think about producing goods ourselves, not just oil and gas. We have solid science and technology resources, which makes us fully confident of our ability to address any technology issues independently, including in the defence sphere.
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With regard to growth, we should note that this year growth was modest but it was present nevertheless at about 0.5–0.6 percent. Next year we are planning to achieve 1.2 percent growth, the year after that 2.3 percent and 3 percent in three years. Generally, these are not the figures we would like to have but nevertheless it is growth and we are confident that we will achieve these figures.“
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HUBERT SEIPEL: „Another theme to be discussed in Brisbane will be financial stability. The situation in Russia may also be complicated because Russian banks can no longer obtain refinancing on world markets. Moreover, there are plans to close for Russia the international payments system. Do you think that this issue will be discussed at the summit as well? And what do you expect from this summit overall?“
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VLADIMIR PUTIN: „I expect to have frank discussion with my colleagues and not to beat about the bush. In general, such venues, the decisions made there and the discussions at these venues are not binding and unfortunately are often not implemented, for example the decision to change the configuration of the international monetary system, to enhance the role of developing economies due to their changing position in the world economy as a whole. For example, we adopted a decision at a G20 summit to enhance the role of developing economies in the IMF. But the US Congress blocked the decision and everything came to a standstill. The Congress does not endorse the decision, and that’s it. We see what is happening but, of course, we hope to have frank and unbiased discussions.
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As for the international financial architecture, the current problem is not new; it concerns the fact that developed economies have a surplus of capital that the Western economies do not know where to invest efficiently and reliably. The developing economies have commodity imbalance because they produce and sell goods using low-cost labour and some other production instruments that are cheaper than in Europe and the United States. So, there is a capital imbalance on one side and a commodity imbalance on the other side. It is difficult to agree on joint efforts in this area because the developing economies are always uncertain about the rules of the game concerning the allocation of this capital. The sanctions you have mentioned are a vivid negative example of our partners‘ behaviour.
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By the way, you have mentioned Ukraine, which is a striking example of the current situation in this sphere. Russian banks have currently extended a $25 billion loan to the Ukrainian economy. If our European and American partners want to help Ukraine, how can they undermine the financial base limiting our financial institutions’ access to world capital markets? Do they want to bankrupt our banks? In that case they will bankrupt Ukraine. Have they thought about what they are doing at all or not? Or has politics blinded them? As we know eyes constitute a peripheral part of brain. Was something switched off in their brains?
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The bank that I mentioned is Gazprombank, which only this year, this calendar year, has extended a loan of $1.4 plus $1.8 billion to the Ukrainian energy sector. How much is that in total? $3.2 billion. This is the sum it has allocated. In one case, it issued a loan to Ukrainian Naftogaz, which is a public company; in the other case, it allocated $1.4 billion to a private company in order to support Ukraine’s chemical industry. In both cases, today this bank has the right to demand early repayment because the Ukrainian partners have violated their loan agreement. As for Naftogaz…“
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HUBERT SEIPEL: „The question is if they are paying or not?“
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VLADIMIR PUTIN: (In German) „They are paying at the moment. (Continues in Russian) They are servicing the loan. Naftogaz is servicing one of the loans. However, there are some conditions that are being violated. Therefore, the bank has the formal right to demand early repayment.
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In the second case they are doing nothing to repay the $1.4 billion. The government is holding the gas in an underground storage facility and does not give it to its industry. It is their own business that they are crippling their chemical industry. It is also not good to leave people without jobs, but it is their business. However, as the gas does not reach the consumer, as it is not paid for, our bank does not get the money back. It has the right to demand an early repayment. But if we do it, the whole Ukrainian financial system will collapse. And if we don’t do it, our bank may collapse. What should we do?
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Moreover, when we extended a $3 billion loan a year ago, there was a condition that if Ukraine’s total debt exceeded 60 percent of GDP, we, the Russian Ministry of Finance, would be entitled to demand an early repayment. Again, if we do it, the whole financial system will collapse. We have already decided that we will not do it. We do not want to aggravate the situation. We want Ukraine to get on its feet at last. As for the bank, it is a financial institution, a joint-stock company whose shareholders include foreigners.
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This is basically an answer to your question: any restrictions are counterproductive and in the long run cause damage to all international economic or financial actors.“
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HUBERT SEIPEL: „Not all G20 countries hold the same positions. For example, we have the BRICS states, including Russia, which have united to promote economic cooperation. Last year, you established your own BRICS Development Bank to provide an opposition to the West in the international financial sector in the future. Is this another split in this market?“
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VLADIMIR PUTIN: „No, you should not see it like that. The issue is as follows. Indeed, the decision was made at the last BRICS summit in Brazil to create several financial instruments, to be more precise, two instruments – the BRICS Development Bank and the Contingent Reserve Arrangement. This Contingent Reserve Arrangement is being established along the same principles as the IMF and in a sense it may be considered its analogue, but it is being created for completely different purposes. It is being created to promote development in the BRICS countries only, or primarily development in the BRICS countries, and it is not going to replace such global institutions as the IMF.
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What is the danger, in my opinion? It is to start separate international economic relationships. This concerns not only the monetary component but also trade.
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As you know, the negotiations within the WTO, the so-called Doha Round, have come to a deadlock. Developed and developing economies cannot agree on the rules of the game in the agriculture sector and on some other issues. Today we hear some hints from our partners, first of all from the United States, concerning the creation of an Atlantic Alliance on the one side and a Pacific Alliance on the other, with those who meet certain requirements, as our partners see it. And the WTO does not seem to be such an important organisation anymore. I believe this is quite dangerous because the developing economies play an increasingly important role in the global economy as a whole and it is dangerous to ignore this.
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Incidentally, the combined GDP of the BRICS countries calculated using purchasing power parity is already bigger than that of the so-called G7 countries. As far as I know, the BRICS countries have more than $37 trillion calculated using purchasing power parity, while the G7 has $34.5 trillion. And this upwards trend is in favour of the BRICS, not vice versa. That is why I think we should not follow the way of creating powerful but local associations but try to reach consensus within global organisations.
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We spoke about what is happening in trade, how harmful what is currently happening is or isn’t. You know, if our banks are even partly cut off from international financing, they receive fewer resources. This means that our economic entities can purchase fewer goods from you. After all, our cooperation, say, between the Federal Republic of Germany and the Russian Federation, provides hundreds, thousands of jobs in Germany. Some experts believe that nearly 300,000 jobs are maintained through our commercial and economic relations, through large quantities of Russian orders, through joint ventures. If the resources of our financial institutions are cut off, they can extend fewer loans to the Russian companies that work with German partners. Sooner or later, it will begin to affect you as much as us.“
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November 15, 2014, 16:20 – Vladivostok
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President of Russia – Kremlin.ru
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Pressemitteilung des NDR – 15.11.2014 | 12:59
Exklusiv für die ARD hat NDR Autor Hubert Seipel den russischen Staatspräsidenten Wladimir Putin interviewt. Das Interview wird am Sonntag (16. November) um 21.45 Uhr in der Sendung „Günther Jauch“ im Ersten zu sehen sein. Danach diskutiert Günther Jauch mit seinen Gästen über das, was Putin sagt. Dabei sind die Bundesministerin der Verteidigung Ursula von der Leyen (CDU), die ehemalige Moskau-Korrespondentin der ARD und heutige WDR-Chefredakteurin Sonia Seymour Mikich, der Historiker Heinrich August Winkler und Hubert Seipel. „Günther Jauch“ hat ausnahmsweise eine Länge von 75 Minuten.
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Presseportal
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An ETF investor’s guide to the current tensions in Ukraine
Veröffentlicht: 22. Mai 2014 Abgelegt unter: FINANZ-MÄRKTE, wirtschaftliche Lage | Tags: Redemption, Sovereign Bonds Hinterlasse einen KommentarBackground
Ukraine, a country of 46 million, is currently in recession. It has become a battleground for the European Union and Russia in the pursuit of political and economic influence over the country. Having Ukraine as a clear political ally is critical for Russian President Vladimir Putin’s quest to integrate and regain influence over ex-Soviet states. However, Ukraine has also been an important target for an EU program aimed at encouraging democratic change in the region in return for free trade agreements.
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What’s happening in Ukraine?
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The current situation
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Market reaction
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Why Ukraine’s $3 billion bond affects the world bond market
Ukraine’s loan
As part of its $15 billion assistance package to Ukraine, Russia lent $3 billion to Ukraine in December last year, for $3 billion worth of eurobonds issued by the Ukrainian government. The deal was cleverly crafted.
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Advantages to Ukraine
Since Ukraine already had billions of eurobonds outstanding, issuing more may have appeared easier than writing up a new loan agreement. Plus, the deal would lifted the prices of Ukraine’s other eurobonds, which were already suffering from the growing political turmoil in the country.
The prices of ETFs like the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Eastern Europe ETF (ESR), and the Market Vectors Russia ETF (RSX), which are exposed to Ukraine’s equity, have seen their prices tumble over the last three months.
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Advantages to Russia
Though Russia didn’t demand the writing of a new loan agreement, it did include a provision in the new bond offering. As part of the bond deal, Ukraine has to keep its debt-to-GDP level below 60%. If it rises above that level, Russia has the right to demand the bonds be repaid immediately in full.
The provision serves Russia’s near-term objectives well. Russia seems to have formally annexed Crimea. Russia intends to take that portion of Ukraine’s economic activity with it. So Ukraine’s debt-to-GDP ratio, near 40%, is likely to be in the 60% range or more by the next reading or the following reading. This would mean that Russia would be eligible to ask for its money back and, at the same time, add more economic hardship to Ukraine as it struggles to rebuild.
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Implications for the bond market
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Why Ukraine’s real problem is liquidity, not solvency
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Why is the yield curve for Ukrainian bonds inverted?
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Ukraine crisis: Must-know implications for US bond investors
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Stephanie Johnson – Market Realist
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follow-up, 13.09.2014
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Putin zieht den nächsten Joker: Russland kann Staats-Pleite der Ukraine auslösen
Die Ukraine hat bei ihren Staatsschulden einen Passus übersehen, der es Russland ermöglichen könnte, die Staats-Pleite des Landes auszulösen. Russland ist einer der größten Gläubiger der Ukraine. Doch Präsident Wladimir Putin hat offenbar kein Interesse an einem Crash des Nachbarlandes: Denn durch das Vorpreschen der EU sind die gewaltigen Schulden der Ukraine plötzlich nicht mehr Putins Problem, sondern das der europäischen Steuerzahler.
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DWN
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Anmerkung
(und bislang unveröffentlichter Kommentar zum DWN-Artikel)
13. September 2014 um 14:32
Oeconomicus sagt:
“Die Ukraine hat bei ihren Staatsschulden einen Passus übersehen, der es Russland ermöglichen könnte, die Staats-Pleite des Landes auszulösen.”
Mit Verlaub, das halte ich für ein Gerücht.
Im Rat und Management der ukrainischen Notenbank (NBU) gibt es -auch diesbezüglich- ausreichend Erfahrung.
Es darf weiterhin davon ausgegangen werden, dass zumindest Yatsenyuk (Diplomökonom mit den Schwerpunkten Unternehmensrechnung und Revision, von Jan 2003 bis Juli 2004 Vizepräsident der NBU und von Juli bis Dezember 2004 kommissarischer Bankpräsident) mit diesen Vorgängen bestens vertraut war und ist.
Im übrigen gab es zahlreiche Konsultationen zwischen IMF und diversen Regierungs- und NBU-Vertretern. Somit darf man darauf wetten, dass dieses Thema zwischen den Parteien intensiv erörtert wurde.
Soweit der Kommentar für DWN
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feedback der DWN-Redaktion:
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13. September 2014 um 23:09
Redaktion sagt:
„Danke für den Hinweis, wir haben es in den Artikel eingearbeitet.
Die Redaktion“
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Im einleitenden Text des DWN-Artikels heißt es nun:
„In den ukrainischen Staatsschulden findet sich ein Passus, der es Russland ermöglichen könnte, die Staats-Pleite des Landes auszulösen. Russland ist einer der größten Gläubiger der Ukraine. Doch Präsident Wladimir Putin hat offenbar kein Interesse an einem Crash des Nachbarlandes: Denn durch das Vorpreschen der EU sind die gewaltigen Schulden der Ukraine plötzlich nicht mehr Putins Problem, sondern das der europäischen Steuerzahler.“
.. und im Artikel selbst wurde eingearbeitet:
„Ob diese Pflichtverletzung irrtümlich geschieht – oder aber, wie der Blog Oeconomicus beschreibt, der Banker Jazenjuk und die ukrainische Notenbank sich dieser Tatsache bewusst sind, kann nicht abschließend beurteilt werden.“
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Außerdem gibt es reichlich Fachliteratur, die sich eingehend mit der Redemption-Thematik beschäftigt und beispielhaft auch auf entsprechende Verträge und Emissionsbedingungen ausleuchtet (nachfolgend einige Beispiele):
- Arellano C, Ramanarayanan A. 2012.
Default and the Maturity Structure in Sovereign Bonds. Journal of Political Economy 120: 187-232 - Bedford P, Penalver A, Salmon C. 2005.
Resolving sovereign debt crises: the market-based approach and the role of the IMF. Financial Stability Review: 91-99 - Benjamin D, Wright MLJ. 2008.
Recovery Before Redemption: A Theory of Delays in Sovereign Debt Renegotiations. UCLA Working Paper. - Erce A, Diaz-Cassou J. 2011.
Selective Sovereign Defaults. Unpublished manuscript, Banco de España - Finger H, Mecagni M. 2007.
Sovereign Debt Restructuring and Debt Sustainability: An Analysis of Recent Cross-country Experience. IMF Occasional Paper 255 - Anna Gelpern, 2013 – Georgetown University Law Center, „Contract Hope and Sovereign Redemption“
- Uses an Abuses of Collective Action Clauses in Sovereign Bonds, Academic Jounal Article, Business Law International, Vol. 14, No. 3, September 2013
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Man darf wohl mit an Sicherheit grenzender Wahrscheinlichkeit auch davon ausgehen, dass die russisch-ukrainischen Anleihebedingungen und die daraus evtl. entwachsenden Konsequenzen den Fachkreisen in Berlin, Brüssel und Washington ebenso bekannt sind.
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Ihr Oeconomicus
Russland hat in 20 Jahren 200 Mrd. Dollar in Ukraine investiert
Veröffentlicht: 19. Mai 2014 Abgelegt unter: wirtschaftliche Lage | Tags: Alexej Uljukajew Ein KommentarRussland hat laut Wirtschaftsminister Alexej Uljukajew in den zurückliegenden 20 Jahren 200 Milliarden US-Dollar in die ukrainische Wirtschaft investiert – unter anderem durch eine künstliche Senkung der Gastarife.
„Vielleicht begreifen unsere europäischen und amerikanischen Freunde nicht, dass wir die ukrainische Wirtschaft unterstützt haben, indem wir die Preise für Gas und andere Ressourcen künstlich herabgesetzt, der Ukraine Kredite eingeräumt haben und so weiter“
sagte der Minister am Montag im TV-Sender RT.
„In den letzten 20 Jahren haben wird dort rund 200 Milliarden Dollar angelegt.“
„Russland ist daran interessiert, dass in der Ukraine Frieden und Gedeihen einkehren“
sagte er weiter.
„Wir werden weiter nach einem Ausweg aus der Ukraine-Krise suchen, uns aber auf die Regionen und die sozialen Gruppen orientieren, die selbst über ihre Zukunft entscheiden müssen.“
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RIA Novosti
EBRD will jährlich eine Milliarde Euro in Ukraine investieren
Veröffentlicht: 15. Mai 2014 Abgelegt unter: wirtschaftliche Lage | Tags: European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Ein KommentarDie Europäische Bank für Wiederaufbau und Entwicklung (EBRD) will laut ihrem Präsidenten Suma Chakrabarti jährlich eine Milliarde Euro in die Wirtschaft der krisengebeutelten Ukraine investieren.
„Die ukrainische Wirtschaft ist mit ernsthaften Herausforderungen konfrontiert“
sagte Chakrabarti am Donnerstag. Die EBRD sei der größte institutionelle Investor der Ukraine außerhalb des Öl- und Gassektors und habe bestimmte Verpflichtungen.
„Wir haben zurzeit vor, jährlich eine Milliarde Euro zu investieren. Ich kann nicht voraussagen, wie lange die Wiederherstellung der Wirtschaft dauern wird.“
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RIA Novosti
Jetzt wird die Beute aufgeteilt: Biden’s family business
Veröffentlicht: 14. Mai 2014 Abgelegt unter: 02.10.2014: Joe Bidens Bekenntnis zur Verhängung von Sanktionen gegen Russland, BEWERTUNGEN ZUM ZEITGESCHEHEN, Burisma Holdings, Joe Biden, Vice-President, sanctions & implications, wirtschaftliche Lage | Tags: Alan Apter, Burisma, Devon Archer, Hunter Biden 2 Kommentare.
Jetzt wird die Beute aufgeteilt:
Biden’s family business
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Wie die ukrainischen Burisma-Holding mitteilte, hat Hunter Biden, der illustre Junior des US Vizepräsidenten das Management des im zyprischen Limassol registrierte Unternehmens ‚verstärkt‘.
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Dort trifft Hunter Biden auf Alan Apter (seit 2013 Vorstandsvorsitzender), der seit den 90ern für Merrill Lynch und später für Morgan Stanley in leitender Position für den osteuropäischen Markt zuständig war. Apters Geschäft besteht vor allem darin, ehemals staatliche Betriebe im Auftrag seiner Geldgeber „marktreif“ zu machen – dafür werden die Betriebe zerschlagen und die Filetstücke werden weit unter Wert von westlichen Finanzkonzernen übernommen und dann mit einem sagenhaften Gewinn an andere westliche Konzerne verkauft oder an die Börse gebracht.
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Ebenfalls neu im Burisma-Vorstand ist Devon Archer, ein Yale-Absolvent, der als Partner verschiedener New Yorker Kanzleien bestens mit dem Finanzsektor vernetzt ist. Archer war 2004 bei den US-Präsidentschaftswahlen leitender Berater von John Kerry und gilt seitdem als einer der wichtigsten Wahlkampffinanziers der Demokraten. Hunter Biden, der – neben zwei zypriotischen „Strohmännern“ – den Burisma-Vorstand komplettiert, ist ebenfalls Yale-Absolvent, Jurist und namhafter Wahlkampffinanzier der Demokraten im Allgemeinen und seines Vaters im Speziellen.
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Über das Geschäftsmodell der Burisma-Holding, die Förderlizenzen für Erdgas in drei ukrainischen Regionen hält, lässt sich trefflich spekulieren, zumal die Eigentümer-Strukturen des Unternehmens nicht zu ermitteln sind.
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Nach Informationen des Unternehmens haben sich die Erdgas-Fördermengen seit 2010/2011 mehr als verfünffacht. Man erwartet eine weitere Verdoppelung für 2014/2015. Aktuell werden täglich rd. 10,5 Mrd m³ Gas gefördert und an die ukrainische Industrie verkauft. Hochgerechnet ergibt dies einen Jahresumsatz von schlappen US$ 1,5 Mrd.
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Nach der Preisanpassung durch Gazprom könnte sich die Ertragslage von Burisma geradezu explosionsartig steigern. Allerdings ist das Fördergebiet im „Azow-Kuban-Becken“ durch den Anschluss der Krim an Russland bereits verloren gegangen und das „Dnjeper-Donezk-Becken“ befindet sich zum großen Teil mitten in den umkämpften östlichen Regionen der Ukraine.
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korrespondierende Ergänzungen
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Joe Biden sprach in einer Rede am 3. Oktober 2014 vor Studenten der Harvard-Universität Klartext und zeigte, was er wirklich von seinen „europäischen Verbündeten“ hält. Nämlich nichts als Verachtung.
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Nicht minder ausdrucksvoll Bidens Rede vom 02.10.2014 vor der JFK School of Governance, in welcher er freimütig bekennt, dass die EU von der Obama Regierung gezwungen wurde, Sanktionen gegen Russland zu verhängen.
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Makroökonomische Indikatoren der Ukraine
Veröffentlicht: 9. März 2014 Abgelegt unter: makroökonomische Indikatoren | Tags: Average monthly wages, Consumer price indices, Core inflation, Industrial Producer Price Indices Hinterlasse einen KommentarDer State Statistic Service der Ukraine liefert regelmäßig zahlreiche Übersichten und Indikatoren zur ökonomischen Entwicklung des Landes.
Bis auf weiteres sollten die publizierten Veröffentlichungen hinsichtlich ihrer Aussagekraft mit der gebotenen Skepsis zur Kenntnis genommen werden.
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Nachfolgend eine offizielle Liste aktueller Veröffentlichungen:
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07.03.2014
Industrial Producer Price Indices in 2014 (to previous month)
Industrial Producer Price Indices in 2014 (to December of previous year)
Industrial producer price indices in 2014 (to corresponding month of previous year)
Industrial producer price indices in 2014 (to corresponding period of previous year)
Core inflation (to previous month and to December of previous year)
Volume of industrial products sold, by types of activity for January 2014
Index of turnover of products of mining and manufacturing, by types of activity for January 2014
Volume of industrial products sold by region for January 2014
Starting from the report for January 2014, the State Statistics Service of Ukraine places the data on volume of products sold outside of Ukrainein the table „Volume of industrial products sold, by types of activity“.
06.03.2014
Consumer price indices for goods and services, 2014 (to previous month)
Consumer price indices for goods and services, 2014 (to corresponding month of previous year)
Consumer price indices for goods and services, 2014 (to corresponding period of previous year)
Consumer price indices for goods and services, 2014 (to December of previous year)
Consumer price indices for goods and services (to December of 2010)
Price indices for construction by types of dwellings and buildings in 2014 (to previous month)
04.03.2014
Volume of industrial products sold, by types of activity in 2013 (refined data)
Index of turnover of products of mining and manufacturing in 2013 (refined data)
Volume of industrial products sold by region in 2013 (refined data)
Administrative units, as of 1 January 2014
03.03.2014
New orders for production by selected type of economic activity of manufacturing for January of 2014
Average monthly wages, by types of economic activity from the beginning of year in 2014
Average wages, and salaries by types of economic activity (monthly information) in 2014
Average monthly wages by type of industrial activities from the beginning of year in 2014
Average wages, and salaries by type of industrial activities in 2014 (monthly information)
Average monthly wages and salaries by region, from the beginning of year in 2014
Average wages and salaries by region, 2014 (monthly information)
Indices for real wages by region, 2014 to the same period of the previous year
Indices for real wages by region, 2014 to the previous mounth
Rates of growth nominal and real wage (1995-2013)
Time series of avarage monthly wages by types of economic activity (2010-2013)
Time series of avarage monthly wages by region (1995-2013)
Time series of avarage monthly wages by types of economic activity in industry (2010-2013)
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Quelle: State Statistic Service of Ukraine