Ukraine’s current account surplus swelled to $723mn in May on the back of booming exports and high commodity prices

Ukraine’s current account surplus swelled to $723mn in May on the back of booming exports and high commodity prices
Ukraine’s current account surplus grew to $723mn in May thanks to high commodity prices and especially to mineral exports, up 188% y/y. / bne Intellinews
By bne IntelliNews July 1, 2021

Ukraine’s current account surplus grew to $723mn in May, up from the $443mn the country earned in April (a result revised down from the previously reported surplus of $837mn) mostly due to a trade surplus swollen by strong exports and high commodity prices, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) reported on June 30.

The goods trade balance switched to a surplus of $164mn from a $154mn deficit in April, while the surplus of trade in services declined to $376mn from $461mn in April.

“The boom in Ukraine’s external trade continues. The export receipts are ballooning amid an incredibly favourable global price situation for iron ore and ferrous metals. The growth of Ukraine’s other export items is also strong, and this is not only the result of the low comparative base of the previous year. Goods imports in money terms in May were lower than the local maximum reached in March,” Evgeniya Akhtyrko of Concorde Capital said in a note.

The deficit of the primary income balance shrank to $140mn, from $180mn (revised from the previously reported surplus of $197mn) in the prior month. The surplus of the secondary income amounted to $323mn, staying almost flat month on month.

In 5M21, the current account surplus amounted to $0.1bn (vs. a $4.0bn surplus in 5M20).

Goods exports surged 62% year on year (vs. 36% y/y growth in April) to $5.2bn, renewing the previous month’s record-high since 2014. The growth was mostly driven by a surge in exports of mineral products (188% y/y) and ferrous metals (95% y/y). In addition, food exports jumped 29% y/y, exports of chemicals surged 57% y/y and machinery exports advanced 30% y/y.

Goods imports surged 53% y/y to $5bn in May (vs. 52% y/y growth in April). In particular, imports of machinery jumped 50% y/y, chemical imports surged 69% y/y and imports of mineral products advanced 39% y/y. Imports of foods added 39% y/y.

The financial account switched to the deficit of $1bn from a surplus of $0.3bn in April. In particular, the net outflow from the banking sector was $587mn (vs. $216mn in April), the net outflow under the trading loans amounted to $408mn (vs. $71mn in April).

The deficit of Ukraine’s balance of payments amounted to $280mn in April (vs. a $795mn surplus in April).

In 5M21, the deficit of Ukraine’s balance of payments amounted to $446mn (vs. a surplus of $224mn in 5M20).

“The NBU made significant revisions to the C/A of previous months. According to the new data, the C/A deficit in March grew to $974mn from the previously reported $333mn,” Akhtyrko added. “In addition, the C/A surplus in April was revised to $445mn from [the] previously reported surplus of $837mn. Previously reported surpluses of C/A in January and February were shaved off as well. The revisions were mostly related to investment income under the primary account balance. As a result, the C/A for 4M21 switched to a deficit of $0.6bn instead of the previously reported surplus of $1.1bn.”  

“Given such a significant statistical revision, our forecast of C/A surplus of $0.5bn for 2021 now looks less easy to achieve. However, if external trade remains in its current balance, this forecast will remain relevant,” Akhtyrko concluded.

-

This article is from bne IntelliNews Ukraine monthly country report. Sign up to receive the report to your inbox each month, which covers the slow moving macro- and micro-economic trends, the major political news and a round-up of the main sectors and corporate news. First month is free and you can unsubscribe at any time.

See a sample here

Sign up for a one-month trial here.

Want to see the latest issue? Questions? Get in touch with sales@intellinews.com

Data

Dismiss