Watching the Tube
Oil and Gas: Not a lot to watch on any channel
Some progress on oil and gas agreements was expected from the talks in Kyiv with Azerbaijani officials last week. The most promising progress would have been on an end-around oil deal to circumvent Russia's near monopoly on fuel transport out of Central Asia. The plan calls for oil to be transported by boat across the Black Sea to Odesa, and then up the Odesa Brody pipeline (using an as-yet-nonexistent extension into Poland) and on to Europe. Actual gains appear to be modest, with Yushchenko saying the usual nice things about how relations are so nice now and signing the usual meaningless cooperation agreements. The not very big news on energy concerns was talk about jointly creating a new refining plant (without commitment).
It may mean progress was made behind the scenes that the next day (Friday, May 23), Yushchenko called Russian fuel transport tactics "blackmail" while meeting with President Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia. Admittedly the Georgian president is a very sympathetic audience for this kind of statement, but Yushchenko has always been much more circumspect in his criticism of Russia than Tymoshenko, especially about energy issues. If he feels confident enough to make such statements now, it may mean that the Azerbaijanis have given him good reason for it.
This all makes it difficult to determine if Yushchenko's recent decree to pump oil from Odesa to Brody (currently it's being used by Russia in the opposite direction, because Ukraine has had no oil to fill it with in the forward direction). It could be an indication that he expects oil soon, or could be one of his many "say nice things" decrees, which lacks a proper basis and is meant more like a marketing statement than an expression of political will.
Tymoshenko vs. Vanco
One battle that may have repercussions is Tymoshenko's fight with Vanco over Black Sea shelf drilling rights the company bought in 2005. This has been the topic she's criticized Yushchenko the most directly and strongly about, that I've seen. And, as EDM describes, she has recently engineered to have the company's license revoked.
Tymoshenko seems to have a lot less justification for this overturn than she and Yushchenko had regarding the Kryvoryzhstal privatization of 2004. The Kryvoryzhstal privatization had been for far less than the amount offered by the highest bidder, and hinged on a requirement in the terms of the tender that eliminated all potential buyers except the winning bidder (Akhmetov and Pinchuk). It only went through because it was carried through by Kuchma with help from SPDU(o), his main supporting party.
In contrast, the Vanco deal was not won by such large margins. It took place in October 2005, after Tymoshenko's government was fired by Yushchenko, and NU had gotten its own Prime Minister in place (Yekhanurov) at the cost of allying themselves with Party of Regions to do so. The part of the deal that is Tymshenko's focus is the product sharing agreement that was later signed in 2007, when Yanukovych was Prime Minister. This was signed with a Vanco subsidiary that has partners (only revealed after Tymshenko revoked its license) linked both to Akhmetov (again) and to Russia. She claims this is "selling out" Ukraine's interests.
It is true that Yanukovych's action, selling to partnership of which his own party is a major stakeholder, is highly suspicious and shady, Tymoshenko may not win this one. The business community opinion likely matches that of Forbes: US Driller Falls Victim To Ukraine Political Rivalry. Unlike Akhmetov's threats to go to European courts over Kryvoryzhstal, Vanco's statements that it will seek arbitration or go to court are not idle. She can try to blithely dismiss them, but they remain a real possibility---perhaps an educational one for a woman as gung-ho as Tymoshenko.
The legality of Tymoshenko's move may even be moot: The Prosecutor General's Office has just overturned the revocation of Vanco's license.
Inflation and a Strengthening Currency?
A word about inflation before closing: it continue, largely unabated. A group of officials from the World Bank and IMF issued a warning two weeks ago. Last week Yushchenko recently met with the National Bank governor, Volodymyr Stelmakh, to discuss the issue. And, counterintuitively, the inflation is accompanied by a strengthening of the hryvnia against the dollar. The hryvnia has been within a (National Bank-defined) band of about 5 to 5.1 to the dollar since 2005, but this spring broke through and has dropped to about 4.5 to the dollar, so far. Experts also expect the trend to continue.
How exactly Ukraine can be experiencing such strong inflation (30% yoy to April) and still be appreciating against the dollar is a mystery to me. Sources and acquaintances have blamed any number of factors:
Collapse of the Housing Bubble in the US: It may have collapsed, but certainly not enough to explain away this discrepancy.
Government Machinations: According to this argument, in an effort to clamp down on the semi-legal gray economy (which avoid taxes by paying unreported amounts under the table, usually in dollars), and make inflation seem less onerous by comparison (something Tymoshenko is obviously keen to do), the government is somehow engineering the strengthening of the hryvnia. This argument seems to founder when one considers how many analysts and organizations believe the strengthening of the hrynia is inevitable: a market-driven, not government-driven change.
Opportunist Exchange Dealers: This theory has it that when the hryvnia first broke $5, people on the streets panicked, and exchange dealers have simply been taking advantage of their fear. This also seems suspect, in that many of the exchanges have had 4.6-4.7 rates off and on since mid-April. In any case, the foreign exchange dealers almost always get the flack for "opportunism" since they're the last ones holding the hot potatoes. The situation is analogous to the way grain producers get tied up in export restrictions amidst accusations of "speculation" when grain prices are high.
At the end of the day, I haven't been able to understand how a currency could be inflating wildly and still be increasing in strength against foreign exchange. If any of you have an explanation, I'd love to hear it.

Reader Comments (39)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080608/wl_nm/ukraine_mine_dc
Sit on the information for months, refusing to even talk to the company and instead using press conferences and interviews to make them sweat.
Then, in the midst of a political campaign, announce a big revelation, tie it to a main political rival, turn it into part of your stump speech while illegally and unilaterally canceling the deal. Continue to use sound bytes to dig at both your political rivals and the company. Watch the situation devolve into a competition of decrees from various government organs.
In the process, by suggesting Ukrnafta or Naftogaz should somehow be allowed to run the deal, you’re killing your country’s business reputation and going back on the word of the government. By refusing to go through appropriate channels to look into suspicious activities, you also look petty and sensationalist.
I have nothing against investigating potential illegalities. But Tymoshenko is not running an investigation; she’s running a witch hunt.
Which accomplished more in figuring out the RosUkrEnergo situation? Hot air from Tymoshenko or the US DOJ launching an investigation?
The responsible thing would be to notify the company of your hesitations, and potentially suspend the company’s activities (through intervention by the inter-department PSA coordinating committee) while an independent commission investigates the accusations. Give Vanco a chance to appeal the findings in a public hearing. Signify that you are willing to abide by the rule of law. Upon determining the outcome, apply appropriate punishment—particularly to those figures who may have perpetuated illegal acts.
Don’t scrap everything because you think something smells fishy. That sends completely the wrong message and sets the wrong precedent.
What do you think would make Akhmetov sweat more – listening to Tymoshenko’s quotes about “four young female students” and “kamikaze” lawsuits? Or sitting under-oath in front of a government hearing?
This is the same problem with the mayor election. Tymoshenko sacrificed legitimate problems (a shady mayor, a suspicious PSA) for what she thought would be a quick fix (new elections, tossing out the deal) while refusing to go through the proper legal channels (criminal corruption proceedings against Cherno, a systematic investigation into Vanco P.L.). It backfired on her in the Kyiv election. I don’t think it will turn out all that well this time around.
As for Semenyuk, she's certainly not the best looking Ukrainian girl I've seen in a bikini. But I don't think that should be the basis for our criticism of her.
How was Tymoshenko to find out about anything when Ukrainian government is run in secret?
Do you really think the Party of Regions left records for all to see how these deals are done?
Try to find out government information about the previous government - it's all secret.
That's why these things are done on conference calls, outside of government in Ukraine.
It is a cesspool.
Yushchenko does not do a darn thing to stop corruption, and may very well be in on it, directly or indirectly. Noone in parliament is willing and/or able to do anything about corruption, either because they are in on it, or because they are simply part of a party list, and are just going along to get along.
Why do you think that Yanukovych's son, whose only qualification is that he plays billiards, is a member of Ukraine's parliament today, as a member of the Party of Regions?
Hans, Tymoshenko going public is not entirely and totally political. The only place she has left to go is to the public.
She was not digging at Vanco International.
She was digging at Vanco Prykerchenska British Virgin Islands.
And noone has explained how a British Virgin Islands company with virtually no capital stepped into this deal - with 3 other parasites, including Akhmetov and his Russian buddy.
Hans, you are right, there has got to be rule of law.
But what is happening in Ukraine is "you follow the law when it's convenient."
And "we stole everything fair and square."
Cherno was served IN PUBLIC with a subpoena. He simply gave it to his bodyguard, who gave it back to the policeman.
So much for corruption investigations.
The Prosecutor General's office does NOT investigate or prosecute corruption. It is in the hands of Yushchenko and other cronies, and it prosecutes political foes.
It prosecutes slaps in the face by Lutsenko against Cherno.
Yushchenko supported Cherno. Go figure!
Proper legal channels in Ukraine? Hans, you have got to be kidding!
Ukraine has got to start getting its act together somewhere.
And finding out how Vanco Prykecherchenska British Virgin Islands and 3 parasites got into this deal is a good place to start.
And Tymoshenko is the one to do it, Hans. She and Lutsenko are the only ones who have exhibited any willingness to try and fight corruption.
Lutsenko recently tried, and he had to hightail it to Moldova, because the Prosecutor General's office was getting ready to arrest him on high crime charges and put him in jail - for slapping Cherno.
The whole thing not only smells fishy, it is fishy, and it also stinks like a cesspool.
Hercules had to clean out stalls, Hans.
Cleaning up Ukraine is a Herculean task.
You've got to start somewhere.
She "runs" the privatization ministry.
She told people she was going out of the country for medical tests. She wound up in a resort in Turkey.
Funny how Ukraine's government ministers and officials can't seem to find any doctors in Ukraine.
Yanukovych went to Spain for knee surgery, and then to Russia to recuperate, for example.
But there simply don't seem to be any Ukrainian doctors in Ukraine.
More on Vanco -
It was Yushchenko who pushed the idea of separation of business and government.
That is, government is viewed by a few oligarchs in Ukraine as a means of getting, preserving and enhancing their own business interests.
As one US president said: "The business of government is business."
In Ukraine, and in Mexico, they take that to heart, and you get - oligarchies, and brutal pie fights between oligarchs in government.
So I say again - a crucial issue here, a crucial question is Akhmetov being on both sides of this deal - on the government side which approves the deal for him, and on the business side, as a beneficiary of a deal approved for him by - him and his buddies.
What happened to Yushchenko's separation of business from government?
Never-never land.
To see Cherno rejecting a subpoena - with a contemptuous look on his face, as if he's bothered by a trivial, questionable matter - go over to the Ukrainiana blog. Taras has it on video.
Our channels — except for the TV channels run by the oligarchs — simply don’t work. Our legal system doesn’t work. Blowing the whistle is the only thing that works. Occasionally.
Throughout Ukraine’s 17 years of independence, there hasn't been a single conviction in a high-profile white-collar crime case. In Ukraine, we let crooks off the hook. The Enrons we have control our economy and enjoy immunity from prosecution. No wonder we’ve had a net population loss of 7 million people. How much more depopulation does it take for stabilnist to reach its full potential?
Indeed, our evaluation of Semenyuk should center around her job performance, not her physical appearance. The role she played in the sale of Luhanskteplovoz and Dniproenergo certainly meets the above criteria.
Undoubtedly, Tymoshenko and Klychko screwed up the Kyiv municipal election by splitting the vote and packing their tickets with aggressive developers. Not only has Kosmos reelected himself, but he has also reappointed his right-hand man, with three votes coming from the Katerynchuk Bloc.
With the smell of shyrka in the air and a YushChe tandem sweating in a tug of war with Tymoshenko, finding those proper channels can be harder than contacting extraterrestrials.
Represented by a US=based law firm, he has won an in absentia judgment against a Ukrainian news web site - $100,000.
That means that the court proceedings took place with the defendants in absentia - not there.
Knowing how this big US law firm operates, it probably cost Akhmetov at least $100,000 in legal fees (cha-ching - that's the sound a cash register makes as Akhmetov pays his legal fees to this big law firm) to get $100,000 judgment - against somebody who wasn't there to defend themselves.
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Field is the name of the US law firm. Bob Strauss, the name in the middle, used to be very, very big in the Democrat Party a few years back.
It just so happens that I was in their Dallas offices on business quite a few years ago. On the walls of one of their conference rooms were 2 Russian war bonds, certificates from the early 1900's, framed very nicely and decoratively hanging on the wall.
They are touting this as a HUGE victory due to the sterling efforts of this fairly large law firm.
The English Court, in the absence of a defendant, and with only one side presenting evidence, nevertheless limited the damage award to only $100,000. I'm sure Akhmetov was asking for far more.
Now they claim that they are going to collect on the judgment in Ukraine, and that Akhmetov is going to donate whatever he collects to "charity."
I am really looking forward to these shysters based in the US (with a London office to make themselves feel important) collecting on an English judgment in Ukraine.
We'll get to see how much control Akhmetov has over the Ukrainian courts.
The default judgment was obtained in favor of Akhmetov for reporting on the life of Akhmetov.
Apparently, some US shysters will represent anyone, as long as they have lots of money for legal fees.
Ah, so nice when thieving thugs give to charity, ain't it?
Especially when it's the type of charity typically seen in Ukraine - either nothing, or at the most, free rock concerts.
Except for the charitable organizations that pay for things like Yanukovych's van.
http://ukraine-observer.com/index.php?c=1784
Tycoon Akhmetov wins libel case against website in London court
LONDON, June 10: A court in London has ruled that Ukrainian MP Rinat Akhmetov, who also a well-known businessman, should be paid 100,000 dollars in damages and costs "in a libel case" against the Ukrainian website Obozrevatel (Observer). The lawsuit was sent to the court in June 2007, the law firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, which represented the plaintiff's interests in court, confirmed.
"The ruling on damages by the High Court of Justice of June 5 2008 was also handed down against two editors of Obozrevatel, Oleh Medvedev and Yaroslav Bilyk, as well as against Tetyana Chornovil, a journalist responsible for articles containing false allegations," Akhmetov's lawyers said in a statement.
The law firm said the court ruling followed a decision which had been taken earlier in absentia and which would be sent to Ukrainian judicial institutions for its implementation and payment of damages.
Akhmetov's US lawyer, Mark MacDougall of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, said: "Mr Akhmetov is pleased with the ruling by the High Court. We intend to resolutely ensure that the ruling in this libel case against Obozrevatel and other defendants in Ukraine should be implemented." The statement also reiterated that Akhmetov earlier said that all the money he receives as damages would be spent on charity in Ukraine.
Akhmetov was represented by a US-based law firm. In the US, everyone touts freedom of the press and freedom of speech.
One of the named partners in the law firm (Strauss) was a big cheese in the US Democratic Party, which also pretends to tout freedom of speech and freedom of the press.
Akhmetov employs a common tactic seen in former sovok republics - he sues Obazravetel in England (or outside of Ukraine) in order to create a monetary burden on them, and to try and drive them out of business.
Because they started reporting on his personal life, and he did not like that.
Akhmetov, as a pal of Kuchma, got himself some VERY lucrative privatization deals, including, as we all recall, Kryvorizhstal.
Soooooooo - a US-based law firm participates, via lawsuit, in repression of the press and of reporters in Ukraine by suing them in England.
Ain't US law firms just grand?
Is she on both sides of the transaction?
Is she using Vanco Energy as a vehicle for her own personal financial gain?
By insisting that there be some explanation as to how the deal was mysteriously transferred from Vanco International to Vanco Prykerchenska British Virgin Island, how is she "tilting things her own way"?
Do tell, please. I am ALL EARS.
if Akhmetov got out of government, I would have no problem with Vanco Prykerchenska British Virgin Islands Company being part of the deal.
As long as we knew who Integrum, from Austria, is.
Akhmetov needs to choose whether he wants to be in government, or in business.
But he can't be on both sides.
Please explain.
Yushchenko himself has talked about the need to separate business and government.
Your answer implies that somehow, if Akhmetov leaves government, Tymoshenko or someone else would take away Akhmetov's property. (????)
It also implies that Ukraine's richest Tatar, worth $31 billion dollars, who hires US law firms in England and other places, has no means of defending himself.
Such implications or suggestions, are, of course, nonsense.
Soooo - please explain why Akhmetov has "no choice."
And how that somehow negates his corruption - being on both sides of the Vanco deal.
Beatle Paul gave a concert in Ukraine.
Me wonders whether it might not be more direct and simpler to fix the government in Ukraine, and actually deliver the money budgeted for medical care to the doctors and hospitals, rather than government officials stealing it.
After all, Moroz and others repeatedly campaigned on the idea that money budgeted for medical care ought to actually get where it's intended.
Instead of having to rely on Pinchuk's "charity."
Instead of having to pay doctors under the table in order to receive medical care.
In the meantime, it sems that some Ukrainians want to join the rest of the world after all:
http://www.upi.com/Entertainment_News/2008/06/15/McCartney_plays_first_Ukrainian_concert/UPI-65481213562083/
Fans told the BBC the concert was a sign that Ukraine, which gained its independence in 1991, was truly free of the Soviet Union.
"We have always been somewhere behind the iron fence and we'd like to join the rest of the world now," festival attendee Oxana Bulan said.
From a Bloomberg article:
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Polish Lessons
European history also offers painful lessons regarding veto powers. Starting in the 16th century, the so-called liberum veto gave each member of the Polish nobility the right to dissolve parliament and nullify legislation. The result was political gridlock. Poland ceased to exist after being partitioned by its neighbors Russia, Prussia and Austria in the late 18th century.
Now, and "interdepartmental commission of experts" has decided that all was fair and square.
Here it is, folks, the conclusion of these experts. How could anyone possibly question how the deal wound up in the hands of Vanco British Virgin Islands and Akhmetov and Novitsky and an unknown Austrian entity, Integrum?
http://ukraine-observer.com/index.php?c=1835
"Borys Sobolyev, the secretary of the interdepartmental commission said: “All members of the working commission confirmed that Vanco had provided enough proof that it had technical and technological capabilities to carry out works and to explore difficult areas and deposits of the sea shelf in general.”
See, see - they stole it fair and square. Akhmetov stole it fair and square, and his buddy Yanukovych probably thinks so too, since Yanukovych was the one who approved the deal.
And Yushchenko is trying to get "political capital" out of Ukraine's richest billionaire, worth $31 billion.
The experts said so, and that's that.
Sovok habits die hard.
http://www.iie.com/publications/opeds/oped.cfm?ResearchID=903
In general, strong growing emerging economist have often high inflation, often resulting in overheating.