Moscow Exchange: Changes to the formula for calculating Additional Fee

Source: Moscow Exchange –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

Dear MOEX clients,

Starting from July 25, 2025, a revised formula for calculating Additional Fee will be introduced in the Securities Market section.

  • The coefficient M is reduced fivefold, from the current 1.0 to 0.02, thereby lowering the final Additional Fee.
  • The coefficient k is increased from 0.05 (five hundredths) to 0.07 (seven hundredths).
  • The asset liquidity coefficient L, as previously, takes values of either 0.5 or 1.0 depending on the presence of the market maker flag, but it is now considered at an earlier stage.
  • A new multiplier K_i is introduced to calculate the normalized number of orders related to the Passive Only flag, which can take values of 0.5 or 1.0.
  • The parameter Orders_i_type is introduced to denote the number of orders submitted by the User on behalf of themselves or their Client into the Exchange Trading System for each trading day according to the order type (i).
  • The value of Orders is updated to represent the normalized number of actual orders submitted. This plays a crucial role in recalculating orders exceeding the threshold of 1 million units/day.
  • The daily ceiling for Additional Fee is increased from 300,000 RUB to 1.5 million RUB.

The revised document titled “Additional fees and charges stipulated in the integrated IT Service Agreement” has been published on the Exchange website: https://fs.moex.com/files/18033 (Russian only).

Corresponding changes are being made to the EQM16 report format, “Clearing participant’s liabilities on Additional Fee”. Participants will be able to use the following additional lines of information for Additional Fee calculation verification:

Changes in RECORDS node attributes:

  • New attribute NumOrdersALL: Number of orders for Additional fee calculation
  • New attribute SumNumOrdersMM: The actual number of non-market maker orders, excluding those with the ‘Passive Only’ flag, used for calculating the adjusted count
  • New attribute SumNumOrdersMMPO: The actual number of market maker orders with the ‘Passive Only’ flag, used for calculating the adjusted count
  • New attribute SumNumOrdersPO: The actual number of non-market maker orders with the ‘Passive Only’ flag, used for calculating the adjusted count
  • New attribute SumNumOrders: The actual number of non-market maker orders, excluding those with the ‘Passive Only’ flag, used for calculating the adjusted count
  • The attribute NumOrdersGTA is renamed to NumOrdersALL to display the total number of orders for Additional fee calculation purposes
  • The purpose of the attribute NumOrdersGTA is changed to represent the normalized order count for Additional fee calculation
  • The attribute NumMMOrdersGTA is removed – Number of market making orders for Additional fee calculation

Changes in DETAILS node attributes:

  • New attribute NumOrdersCode: Number of orders
  • New attribute NumOrdersMM: Number of market maker orders, excluding those with the ‘Passive Only’ flag
  • New attribute NumOrdersMMPO: Number of market maker orders with the ‘Passive Only’ flag
  • New attribute NumOrdersPO: Number of non-market maker orders with the with the ‘Passive Only’ flag
  • The purpose of the attribute NumOrders is changed to represent the number of non-market maker orders, excluding those with the ‘Passive Only’ flag
  • The attribute NumMMOrders is removed – Number of market making orders

Updated specifications for report formats are available on the MOEX website: https://fs.moex.com/files/13900.

Updated files containing schemas and styles for printed report forms are available on the MOEX FTP server: https://ftp.moex.com/pub/Reports/Equities.

Please note; this information is raw content received directly from the information source. It is an accurate account of what the source claims, and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Moscow Exchange: REPO risk parameters change for the security MTSS

Source: Moscow Exchange –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

As per the Securities market risk parameters methodology, on 07.07.2025, 10-19 (MSK) the lower bound of the REPO rate for tenor Y0/Y1Dt (up to -70.13 %), penalty rate and IR Risk Rate (up to -0.492 rub) for the security MTSS were changed. New values are available here

Please note; this information is raw content received directly from the information source. It is an accurate account of what the source claims, and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Rosneft Oil Company Shareholders Meeting Adopts Resolutions on All Matters on the Agenda

Source: Rosneft – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

The shareholders approved the payment of dividends for 2024 in the amount of 14.68 roubles per share. July 20, 2025 was set as the dividend record date.

The shareholders have also elected a new Board of Directors consisting of 11 members:

  • Andrey I. Akimov – Chairman of the Management Board, Gazprombank (Joint-Stock Company);
  • Pedro A. Aquino, Jr. – Chief Executive Officer of OIL & PETROLEUM HOLDINGS INTERNATIONAL RESOURCES LIMITED, Independent Director (Republic of the Philippines);
  • Faizal Alsuwaidi – Representative of Qatar Investment Authority (the State of Qatar);
  • Hamad Rashid Al-Mohannadi – Representative of Qatar Investment Authority (the State of Qatar);
  • Mohammed Bin Saleh Al-Sada – Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Doha University of Science and Technology, Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors of Nesma Infrastructure & Technology, Member of the Advisory Committee of the Governing Body of the Gulf Cooperation Council, Independent Director (the State of Qatar);
  • Viktor G. Martynov – Rector of Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas (National Research University), Independent Director;
  • Alexander D. Nekipelov – Director of Moscow School of Economics at the Lomonosov Moscow State University,  Independent Director;
  • Alexander V. Novak – Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation;
  • Maxim S. Oreshkin – Deputy Head of the Administration of the President of the Russian Federation;
  • Govind Kottis Satish – Managing Director of VALUE PROLIFIC CONSULTING SERVICES PRIVATE LIMITED, Independent Director (Republic of India);
  • Igor I. Sechin – Chief Executive Officer, Chairman of the Management Board of Rosneft Oil Company.

The Meeting of Shareholders has also approved the Annual Report and Financial Statements, and decided to elect an Audit Commission consisting of five members.

Department of Information and Advertising
Rosneft Oil Company
July 4, 2025

These materials contain statements regarding future events and expectations that are forward-looking estimates. Any statement in these materials that is not historical information is a forward-looking statement that involves known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from the expected results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. We assume no obligation to adjust the data contained herein to reflect actual results, changes in underlying assumptions or factors affecting the forward-looking statements.

Please note; this information is the raw content received directly from the information source. This is exactly what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

IMF Executive Board Completes the First Review under the Extended Credit Facility Arrangement for the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Source: IMF – News in Russian

July 2, 2025

  • The IMF Executive Board has completed the first review under the Extended Credit Facility arrangement for the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The decision allows for an immediate disbursement of US$ 261.9 million towards international reserves, to continue building buffers.
  • The DRC’s economy has been resilient in a challenging environment amid the escalation of the armed conflict in the eastern part of the country, which placed significant strains on the budget. The authorities have made good progress on the structural reform’s agenda, but a few quantitative targets were missed.
  • The recent peace agreement signed between the governments of the DRC and Rwanda, mediated by the United States, is encouraging for the prospect of a peaceful resolution of the conflict and renewed focus on development goals.

Washington, DC: The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed the first review under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) Arrangement for the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) approved on January 15, 2025 (see PR 25/003). The completion of the first review allowed an immediate disbursement equivalent to 190.4 million SDR (about US$ 261.9 million) to support balance-of-payment needs, bringing the aggregate disbursement to date to 380.5 million SDR (about 523.4 US$ million).  

The DRC has been facing significant challenges amid the intensification of the armed conflict in its eastern part since end-2024. The escalation of hostilities has claimed thousands of lives and caused severe social and humanitarian damages, including disruptions in access to essential services such as food, water, and electricity. Diplomatic efforts are ongoing to secure a cessation of hostilities and ensure sustainable peace in the region. The signing on June 27, 2025, of a peace agreement between the governments of the DRC and Rwanda, under the mediation of the United States, is encouraging for the prospect of a peaceful resolution on the ongoing conflict and renewed focus on addressing development goals.

Despite the challenging environment, economic activity remained resilient, with robust GDP growth of 6.5 percent in 2024, driven by continued dynamism in the extractive sector.  External stability has strengthened, as the current account deficit narrowed and the accumulation of international reserves continued. Inflationary pressures continue to ease, and year-on-year inflation declined from 23.8 percent at end-2023 to 11.7 percent at end-2024 and [8.5] percent at end-June 2025.

Performance under the program was mixed, as the intensification of the conflict has placed significant strains on the budget. Despite strong revenue collection, the domestic fiscal deficit reached 0.8 percent of GDP in 2024, exceeding the program target of 0.3 percent, owing to spending overruns linked to the escalation of the conflict, including on exceptional security spending and public investments. The program target on the Central Bank of the Congo (BCC)’s foreign exchange assets held with domestic correspondents was missed as well, due to higher-than-expected tax payments in foreign currency on government accounts. Other quantitative performance criteria of the ECF were met. Most indicative targets were also met, except those related to the floor on social spending and the ceiling on spending executed through emergency procedures—owing to elevated exceptional security spending linked to the conflict intensification. Appropriate corrective measures are being implemented by the authorities.

In completing the first review, the Executive Board also approved the authorities’ request for waivers of nonobservance of the performance criteria on the floor on the domestic fiscal balance at end-December 2024 on the basis of corrective actions, and the continuous ceiling on the levels of foreign currency assets of the BCC held with domestic correspondents on the basis of the temporary nature of the deviation which has since been remedied. Further, the Executive Board completed the financing assurances review under the ECF arrangement. No reform measures under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) arrangement, approved in January 2025, were due for review at this time.

At the conclusion of the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Okamura, Deputy Managing Director and Chair stated:

“The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has been confronted with heightened security challenges since late 2024. The escalation of the conflict in the eastern part of the country has caused serious human, social and economic damage and induced the government to increase spending. Despite these difficulties, the macroeconomic environment of the DRC remained broadly stable. Growth has remained robust, due to the resilience of mining production. Inflation continues to decrease, and the external position has strengthened. The economic outlook remains positive, but is fraught with downside risks related to the persistence of the conflict, declining external humanitarian assistance, global economic headwinds, and potential escalation of geopolitical conflicts. The authorities are committed to closely monitor these risks and to respond proactively to evolving challenges.

“Budget implementation remains challenging in a difficult security context. As a result, the domestic fiscal deficit is projected to be larger than initially projected for 2025, but is expected to return to the path envisaged at program approval starting in 2026, reflecting the authorities’ commitment to carry out measures to enhance domestic revenue mobilization and strengthen the budget implementation process. Additionally, to guard against unforeseen adverse shocks, the authorities have adopted a contingency plan.

“The Central Bank of the Congo (BCC) has maintained a tight monetary policy stance, thereby helping bring inflation down to single digits for the first time in three years. The accumulation of international reserves has continued, on the back of the narrowing of the current account deficit. Efforts must continue, to strengthen the monetary policy implementation framework, refine the foreign exchange intervention strategy, enhance the governance and safeguards of the BCC and ensure its adequate recapitalization.

“The authorities have committed to accompany these efforts to preserve macroeconomic stability with an acceleration of structural reforms in key areas, including strengthening the AML/CFT framework, improving the business climate, enhancing transparency and governance, combating corruption and upgrading national statistics. Efforts to lay the groundwork for a timely implementation of the reform measures underpinning the RSF arrangement approved in January should be stepped up.”

Table 1. Democratic Republic of the Congo: Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2023-26

2023

2024

2025

2026

Est.

CR No. 25/023

Prel.

CR No. 25/023

Proj.

CR No. 25/023

Proj.

(Annual percentage change, unless otherwise indicated)

GDP and prices

  Real GDP

8.5

6.0

6.5

5.4

5.3

5.1

5.3

     Extractive GDP

19.7

11.6

12.2

7.7

8.2

5.2

5.8

     Non-extractive GDP

3.5

3.2

3.5

4.2

3.6

5.0

5.0

  GDP deflator

14.4

17.4

19.9

8.8

8.2

7.4

6.7

  Consumer prices, period average

19.9

17.7

17.7

8.9

8.8

7.3

7.1

  Consumer prices, end of period

23.8

12.0

11.7

7.8

7.8

7.0

7.0

(Annual change in percent of beginning-of-period broad money)

Money and credit

  Net foreign assets

19.9

17.4

23.0

18.2

14.5

23.7

22.7

  Net domestic assets

20.3

4.9

5.6

-3.5

-1.0

-10.9

-10.5

     Domestic credit

34.3

15.4

15.2

9.9

10.5

3.7

4.2

  Broad money

40.3

22.4

28.1

14.7

13.8

12.8

12.3

(Percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated)

Central government finance

  Revenue and grants

14.8

15.6

15.2

15.0

14.8

14.9

14.9

  Expenditures

16.5

16.8

16.5

16.8

17.0

16.6

16.6

  Domestic fiscal balance

-1.2

-0.3

-0.8

-0.8

-1.2

-0.8

-0.8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Investment and saving

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  Gross national saving

9.5

9.1

9.6

12.2

11.2

13.0

12.5

  Investment

15.7

14.2

13.5

15.0

14.4

15.3

14.8

     Non-government

12.0

10.0

10.0

10.0

10.0

10.0

10.0

 

Balance of payments

  Exports of goods and services

44.0

         45.1

47.4

45.4

46.1

45.5

46.6

  Imports of goods and services

49.9

48.9

50.3

47.3

47.5

46.9

47.0

  Current account balance, incl. transfer

-6.2

-5.1

-3.9

-2.8

-3.2

-2.4

-2.4

  Current account balance, excl. transfers

-7.5

-5.1

-5.0

-2.7

-3.4

-2.3

-2.6

  Gross official reserves (weeks of imports)

8.2

10.0

10.1

11.5

11.8

12.7

12.8

 

External debt

  Debt service in percent of government revenue

7.6

5.7

6.1

6.7

7.1

7.0

7.4

Sources: Congolese authorities and IMF staff estimates and projections.

IMF Communications Department
MEDIA RELATIONS

PRESS OFFICER: Tatiana Mossot

Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/07/02/pr-25238-democratic-republic-of-the-congo-imf-completes-the-1st-rev-under-ecf-arrang

MIL OSI

Kingdom of the Netherlands – Curaçao: Staff Concluding Statement of the 2025 Article IV Mission

Source: IMF – News in Russian

July 2, 2025

A Concluding Statement describes the preliminary findings of IMF staff at the end of an official staff visit (or ‘mission’), in most cases to a member country. Missions are undertaken as part of regular (usually annual) consultations under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, in the context of a request to use IMF resources (borrow from the IMF), as part of discussions of staff monitored programs, or as part of other staff monitoring of economic developments.

The authorities have consented to the publication of this statement. The views expressed in this statement are those of the IMF staff and do not necessarily represent the views of the IMF’s Executive Board. Based on the preliminary findings of this mission, staff will prepare a report that, subject to management approval, will be presented to the IMF Executive Board for discussion and decision.

Washington, DC.

Curaçao’s economic activity expanded by 5 percent in 2024, as strong tourism performance trickled into the wider economy. Stayover arrivals, growing at double digits, continued to outperform Caribbean peers and carried over to other sectors, including whole trade, real estate, and construction. Mostly related to holiday homes and hotels, construction was further fueled by strong mortgage growth and complemented by a resumption of public investments under the Road Maintenance Plan. Average headline inflation declined to 2.6 percent in 2024 from 3.5 percent in 2023, in line with global oil prices and lower US inflation. Real wages increased for the first time in five years but job creation continued to be dominated by informal construction and tourism-related sectors while formal employment declined. The primary surplus continued its upward trajectory on the back of increased tax collection on goods and services. The current account deficit widened due to higher merchandise imports, mainly related to construction activity.

The government is pursuing an ambitious agenda to steer a now tourism-led economy, amidst heightened global uncertainty. Mindful of tourism saturation and a decoupling of local living standards, the authorities strive to improve social conditions while generating sustainable and green growth amid safeguarding solid public finances. The near doubling of the tourism footprint within five years brought profound structural shifts to Curaçao’s economy, including the decline in manufacturing and rise in services, lower overall wages, higher informality, and greater reliance on – more regressive – indirect taxation. Policy responses need to shift accordingly. Priorities are rightly focused on upgrading tourist experiences and diversification, improving skills and labor market conditions, and reforming the tax system in an equitable way while addressing social spending pressures. The administration has delivered on a first round of targeted, one-off pension increases this year, continued reforms to contain health costs, expanded investment in education infrastructure, and came closer to its renewables target with the opening of the latest wind park in 2024. The landspakket, a structural reform package agreed with the Netherlands in 2020, continues to guide structural reforms.

Outlook and Risks

Growth is projected to moderate to 4 percent in 2025, balancing domestic impulses and heightened global uncertainty, before gradually converging to 2 percent over the medium term. Further expansion of stayover tourism and construction activity will continue to support growth in 2025, along with fiscal expansion driven by higher public investments. Potential negative effects of slowing global demand and heightened uncertainty would dampen tourism flows towards the end of 2025 and 2026. Growth is expected to moderate to 2 percent over the medium term, given saturation in tourism and slower global demand, while public capital spending would be carried forward, including in road infrastructure and the energy value chain. Headline inflation is projected to stabilize at 2.5 percent in 2025, subject to oil price-related uncertainty. Fiscal accounts would remain in surplus, fully compliant with the fiscal rule, allowing the government to partially settle a large bullet loan in 2025 with own liquid reserves, thereby accelerating the impressive downward trajectory of debt. The current account deficit would decline in the medium term but remain elevated.

Risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside. External risks include trade policy and investment shocks, which could induce higher inflation and lower external demand, adversely impacting tourism arrivals. Domestic upside risks include faster-than-expected advances in the green hydrogen value chain project and development of other energy sources. On the downside, lower-than-expected disbursements in public investments and delays in infrastructure improvements could set back the expected increase in potential growth from the expansion of hotel capacities. Continued high growth in mortgage credit fueling rising house prices could lead to financial sector as well as household balance sheet vulnerabilities. Buffers include access to favorable refinancing conditions on the Dutch capital market, subject to compliance with the fiscal rule, which grants the island substantial fiscal space, notably for capital and emergency spending.

Tailoring Fiscal and Structural Policies to a Tourism-led Economy

Safeguarding Medium-term Fiscal Sustainability

Reaching the medium-term debt target and further sustaining growth will require weighing the need to boost investments and address social spending pressures while reforming the tax system in an equitable manner.  

Advancing healthcare reforms is an urgent priority to restore the sector’s financial sustainability and limit medium-term fiscal risks. Annual deficits of the SVB healthcare fund amounted to around 5 percent of GDP over the past years, excluding central government transfers, with an additional 1 percent of GDP annual deficit by the Curaçao Medical Center. Transfers to the latter were recently increased to better cover operating costs and invest in new medical equipment, but the health system’s overall finances remain unsustainable. Curaçao’s health expenses, around 13 percent of GDP, stand out relative to regional peers and surpass the OECD average. Possible efficiency gains on the spending side would include additional volume and price measures for pharmaceuticals, re-evaluation of laboratory service tariffs, further expansion of primary care to contain hospital visits, and improvements in preventive care, with the latter likely to materialize over the longer horizon. Revenue reform options would include a broadening of the contributor base, e.g., via the inclusion of migrant workers, increasing co-payments for higher-income households, allowing for price differentiation for the privately insured, exploring options to charge for add-on services, with a possible secondary, private insurance market for these services, and expanding the potential in medical tourism. 

The authorities’ plans to adjust pension benefits for lower-income households in a fiscally responsible manner are welcome and should be accompanied by widening the contribution base. Staff welcomes the intention to reassess benefit levels, given the pausing of indexation and a decline in real per capita benefits by 23 percent between 2016 and 2024. Applying inflation indexation to residents’ pensions only would allow for a broadly balanced budget of the old-age pension scheme (before central government transfers). Considerations to providing a supplement for low-income pensioners, which could cost around ½ percent of GDP per year, should be partially financed by broadening the contributor base. Legalizing predominantly young migrant workers and providing incentives for them and their employers to formalize (see below) would increase revenues by about 0.3 percent of GDP. Ensuring longer-term sustainability of social insurances would likely imply tapping general budget resources, which could be expanded with selected measures while avoiding earmarking (see below). Meanwhile, the current draft law to make second-pillar occupational pension plans mandatory would reduce reliance on old-age pensions and increase private savings, which would also help alleviate the sizable current account deficit.

The authorities envisage the introduction of a VAT while continuing the modernization of the tax authority and improving revenue collection. Given Curaçao’s already significant tax burden and the recent expansion of direct taxation from a pre-pandemic average of 11 percent of GDP to 14 percent of GDP in 2024, plans to design the envisaged VAT reform in a revenue-neutral and equity-enhancing way are welcome. Expanding property taxation on second homes should be prioritized, as well as the purchase and implementation of digital infrastructure to modernize Curaçao’s tax system. Further considerations to introduce a tourism fee (by 2026), end tax holidays on import duties, and adjust permitting fees would lift revenues and contribute to compensating for potential pension increases.

Further efforts are needed to boost investments and improve government service delivery. While capacity constraints were successfully addressed in the ramp-up of investments in 2024, including by hiring external project managers, capacity in planning and execution must be strengthened further to administer the needed investment increase of 2-3 percent of GDP in the coming years, including via a centralized investment planning unit. Implementing multi-year project budgeting and establishing a transparent procurement system will be critical to improve execution, ensure the efficient allocation of financing resources, and grant space to a gradual inclusion of adaptation investments against damage from sea level rise. Efforts to render health and pension spending as well as goods and services taxation more equitable hinge on improving means-testing and maintaining a state-of-the-art registry for lower-income households.  

Labor Market Policies to Address Informality and Improve Education

Informality could be addressed by strengthening incentives for formal work, improving enforcement and monitoring, and tightening eligibility criteria for receiving benefits. Decomposing changes in the formal workforce over the past decade, the strong decline in formal employment was mostly driven by a drop in registered jobs among men, especially in prime working age. Half of this decline cannot be explained by demographics, migration, or unemployment, and is likely attributed to the transition to informality. Tourism and construction sectors offer relatively more opportunities for informal work, making it harder to design the right incentives for formalization. Incentivizing formality, however, is crucial to maintaining government revenues and ensuring social protection for workers, and could be fostered by: facilitating access to education, increasing formal sector productivity, introducing more in-work benefits for workers with incomes between minimum and median wage, and stricter eligibility criteria for monthly assistance, along with strengthening enforcement and monitoring.

Skill deterioration compounded by population aging is a key drag on long-term potential growth. The 2023 census showed that education levels of new entrants to the labor force are below the level of the pre-retirement cohort, and young employees tend to work in more precarious positions. Ongoing investments in education, in line with landspakket recommendations, including in schools’ physical as well as digital infrastructure, are very welcome. Recent initiatives to attract graduates back to the island, including with tax incentives, and an expedited labor permitting process for high-skill workers are important steps in the right direction. These could be complemented by vocational training to lift the overall skill level and reduce skill mismatches, in line with government’s proposed stimulation package with incentives for employer-led vocational education. Integrating migrants into the workforce would grant them perspectives to grow and invest in their skills.

Fostering Competitiveness and Diversification

Bracing for slower growth and mindful of market saturation and the global context, the authorities’ focus is rightly on tourism value added and diversification of source markets. Roads and transportation are among the key bottlenecks of the island, and more public investments are needed to improve the connectivity within the island for tourists to venture out. Public and private investments should also be directed to maritime infrastructure to attract more yacht tourists and move up the tourism value chain. Increasing the number of taxi licenses is welcome and will improve tourist experiences through better mobility. Efforts to tap markets in South America have proven successful, and new flight routes opened from Brazil, Argentina, and Colombia, countries with a large consumer base and rising purchasing power.

Fostering non-tourism sectors in areas of competitive advantage would help build resilience against global shocks and attract additional investments. Building on recent successful reforms to expedite business permits and promote digitalization, more progress is needed to achieve the authorities’ goals as outlined in the National Export Strategy. Curaçao’s connection to a new submarine cable throughout the Caribbean and Miami from 2027 onwards could help expand the island’s data center industry – conditional on sufficient absorption capacity of the electricity grid and a moderation in electricity prices, which remain among the highest in the region. Planned investments in the grid by Aqualectra would be supported by funding from the Netherlands and provide the basis for lifting renewables electricity production to 70 percent by 2027 from around 50 percent currently. The envisaged floating offshore wind park of 3-10 GW would help cover Curaçao’s entire electricity demand and create new export opportunities, in addition to exploratory investments in other energy sources.

In the presence of global uncertainty, diversification of trade as well as regional integration are key for mitigating Curaçao’s exposure to external shocks. Curaçao’s imports remain concentrated on advanced markets, providing ample room to expand goods imports from neighboring countries, such as Brazil and Colombia. As a new associate CARICOM member and acknowledging limitation of independent trade policy given Kingdom laws, Curaçao should continue strengthening regional cooperation and trade integration with neighboring states.

The authorities’ commitment to lower corruption vulnerabilities are welcome. The online gaming law has been approved by parliament in end-2024, an important step towards meeting the landspakket’s rule of law target. Curaçao’s recent accession to the UN Convention Against Corruption and delisting from the EU grey list of non-cooperative jurisdictions, following key legal updates in 2024, is another step in the right direction and opens doors for further international cooperation and bilateral tax treaties, as pursued by the authorities. The mutual evaluations of the AML/CFT frameworks for both Curaçao and Sint Maarten are underway, with results expected to be published in mid-July 2025.

The Monetary Union of Curaçao and Sint Maarten

The external balance of the Union is expected to improve, following a mild deterioration in 2024. The Union’s current account deficit widened to around 17 percent of GDP in 2024 driven by higher imports, mainly related to construction on Curaçao, and despite strong growth in tourism receipts. Going forward, stronger travel receipts, moderation in construction-related imports, and an increase in renewables would support a contraction of the Union’s current account deficit towards 10 percent of GDP in the medium term. The deficit will continue to be financed by private investment inflows and decumulation of assets abroad. The stock of international reserves would remain broadly stable and adequate over the medium term. Given still sizable deficits and a sustained real effective exchange rate appreciation, staff’s preliminary assessment suggests that the external position in 2024 was weaker than the level implied by fundamentals and desirable policies in Curaçao and broadly in line in Sint Maarten, albeit subject to high uncertainty given persistent measurement biases. The assessment for the Union is the same as for Curaçao due to its larger size and current account deficits.

The monetary policy stance is appropriate and continues to support the peg. Following developments in the US, the CBCS cut its benchmark pledging rate by a cumulative 100 basis points in September and November 2024 to 4.75 percent, and has kept it unchanged since then, in line with the pegged exchange rate regime. Transmission to banking sector interest rates continues to be weak, as deposit rates stayed broadly constant throughout the recent tightening and easing cycles, with a mild uptick in late 2023 driven by time deposits, and Union lending rates declined between 2018 and end 2024. Excess liquidity is the key impediment to the transmission, further exacerbated by the absence of interbank and government securities markets.

With lending rates declining, credit growth has accelerated, entirely driven by mortgages in Curaçao. Mortgage credit in the union, the second highest in the Caribbean, has been growing by double digits in real terms post pandemic, while real overall credit growth has been negative. Driven by Curaçao, mortgages are expected to remain on an upward trajectory, including financing for the construction of second homes and vacation rental apartments. In Sint Maarten, on the contrary, mortgage credit growth turned negative in 2024, possibly reflecting delays in construction projects and cross-border financing on the French side. With the islands’ financial sectors predominantly financing tourism-related activities, credit to non-tourism sectors is declining in real terms.

The financial sector is broadly sound and systemic risks are contained, but mortgage growth needs to be monitored closely while a macroprudential toolkit is further developed. Banks are well capitalized, among the highest in the region, but both NPLs and provisioning remain weaker than the CBCS early warning signal – and with respect to peers. Liquidity is abundant and has further increased, but the Union’s banks are somewhat less profitable than the Caribbean median and concentration remains high. Closely monitoring mortgage growth to detect overheating in the real estate sector and possible vulnerabilities in household balance sheets should become a priority, in particular given continued data gaps. Overcoming these gaps and further developing a macroprudential toolkit towards the introduction of CCyBs, and thresholds for the loan-to-value and debt-service-to-income ratios are warranted to detect vulnerabilities and ensure timely response to potential shocks. Caps on mortgage credit growth or mortgage loan exposure could be applied should the positive mortgage credit gap widen further.

The IMF mission would like to thank the authorities for their cooperation and the candid and constructive discussions that took place during June 18-25.

IMF Communications Department
MEDIA RELATIONS

PRESS OFFICER: Reah Sy

Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/07/02/07022025-curacao-staff-concluding-statement-of-the-2025-article-iv

MIL OSI

Moscow Exchange: REPO risk parameters change for the security LSNGP

Source: Moscow Exchange –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

As per the Securities market risk parameters methodology, on 03.07.2025, 10-05 (MSK) the lower bound of the REPO rate for tenor Y0/Y1Dt (up to -69.04 %), penalty rate and IR Risk Rate (up to -0.511 rub) for the security LSNGP were changed. New values are available here

Please note; this information is raw content received directly from the information source. It is an accurate account of what the source claims, and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

Expert RA affirms MKB’s credit rating at ruA+

Источник: Credit Bank of Moscow – Московского Кредитного Банка –

Важный отказ от ответственности находится в нижней части этой статьи.

Expert RA affirms MKB’s credit rating at ruA+

10.06.2025

Expert RA has affirmed MKB’s national scale credit rating at ruA+ (“Moderately high level of creditworthiness / reliability / financial strength”). The outlook is “Stable”.

Expert RA’s analysts note that the rating reflects, in particular, MKB’s moderately strong market position, satisfactory funding and liquidity profiles, fair asset quality, and fair corporate governance practices.

As for MKB’s market standing, the agency points out that it enjoys notable competitive positions in the corporate lending and cash management segments and a rather broad base of large- and mid-cap borrowers across many sectors, giving it an important role at the federal level. The analysts also note a low level of overdue debt.

They also mention MKB’s high systemic importance. Its share of the banking system’s total deposits by private individuals and sole proprietors was 1.5% as at 01.04.2025.

Click here for more details.

Примите к сведению; Эта информация является необработанным контентом, полученным непосредственно от источника информации. Она представляет собой точный отчет о том, что утверждает источник, и не обязательно отражает позицию MIL-OSI или ее клиентов.

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MKB paid the coupon and principal on Eurobonds CBOM 05/25

Источник: Credit Bank of Moscow – Московского Кредитного Банка –

Важный отказ от ответственности находится в нижней части этой статьи.

MKB paid the coupon and principal on Eurobonds CBOM 05/25

02.06.2025

Please be informed about the status of the 16.5% subordinated RUB 5 bln Notes, issued in November 2014 (ISIN: XS1143363940) (CBOM 05/25).

On June 2, 2025 MKB (“the Bank”) paid out coupons and the principal on Eurobonds CBOM 05/25. The payment was made in Russian rubles in favour of the all noteholders in Russian depositaries as at 23 May 2025, in accordance with the Executive Order dated March 5, 2022 No. 95 “On Temporary Procedures for Meeting Loan Obligations to Certain Foreign Creditors” and the Executive Order dated July 5, 2022 No. 430 “On the Repatriation by Residents Participating in Foreign Economic Activity of Foreign Currency and the Currency of the Russian Federation”.

Fulfillment of payment obligations under Eurobonds remains a priority for MKB. For any additional information, please contact us via e-mail: capital_markets@mkb.ru.

Примите к сведению; Эта информация является необработанным контентом, полученным непосредственно от источника информации. Она представляет собой точный отчет о том, что утверждает источник, и не обязательно отражает позицию MIL-OSI или ее клиентов.

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Moscow Exchange: Risk parameters change on the Securities market

Source: Moscow Exchange –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

CCP NCC changes the following risk parameters on Securities market starting from July 03, 2025:

Ticker Current market risk rates, % Market risk rates from 03.07.2025, %
S1_min S2_min S3_min S1_min S2_min S3_min
1 RU000A109R19 70% 90% 100% 52% 55% 58%
2 RU000A10BG62 50% 60% 70% 54% 57% 60%

Please note; this information is raw content received directly from the information source. It is an accurate account of what the source claims, and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

RUDN University hosts the first youth forum “Russia – Asia: human resources potential of the nuclear industry in the region”

Source: Peoples’Friendship University of Russia –

An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

The forum attracted over 400 representatives from 36 countries, including delegates from 16 Asian countries, experts from the nuclear industry, supporting and partner universities of Rosatom.

This forum brought together leaders who are committed to stating their ideas and forming teams. You can connect with like-minded people and explore new areas for collaboration. It is essential to support the initiatives of talented students from Asia, who will return to their home countries and develop the nuclear industry in the region.

Vladimir Filippov

President of RUDN University

With the support of Rosatom State Corporation, more than 800 students from Asia are studying in Russia in nuclear engineering programs.

Rosatom is a global leader in nuclear energy. We successfully export both advanced technologies and best educational practices. Our unique educational ecosystem enables us to train top-class specialists starting from school. Within the framework of joint educational initiatives, we collaborate with 17 Asian countries, including Bangladesh, India, Vietnam, and Uzbekistan. We offer comprehensive solutions for human resource development – ranging from staff training and university education in Russia to advanced professional development and joint research projects. We take into account the specific needs of each partner country and through transfer of education and technologies we generate new industries and job opportunities.

Tatyana Terentieva

Rosatom Deputy Director General for HR

The forum featured presentations across seven thematic sections covering nuclear energy and its related applications: Nuclear Reactors, Radiation Safety, Agrotechnologies, Environmental Science, Nuclear Medicine, as well as Youth and Public Organizations and Contribution of Alumni to Regional Development.

Speakers included students and young researchers from the supporting and partner universities of Rosatom: MEPhI, TPU, UrFU, NNSTU n.a. R.E. Alekseev, Yuri Gagarin SSTU, Peter the Great SPbPU, BMSTU, IKBFU, LETI and RUDN.

The forum spanned 36 countries, with 16 of them representing Asia. Participants and experts came from Vietnam, India, Indonesia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, and other Asian countries.

Please note; this information is raw content received directly from the information source. It is an accurate account of what the source claims, and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.