Business news from Ukraine

Business news from Ukraine

Line of premium cosmetics based on honey has been created in Ukraine

Businessman Igor Liski’s investment holding EFI Group (Effective Investments) has launched Beehive Cosmetics, a line of premium hair care products based on honey produced by the holding’s Beehive plant.

“A new business is always a love for creating something special. I’d like to introduce you to a new project that came about thanks to my great passion for quality honey. The whole team worked day and night on a unique formula, we are just very proud of its unique natural composition. And it is very, very beautiful! So, we are all in for something special – the presentation of our Beehive Cosmetics brand and a line of premium hair care products,” Liski wrote on Facebook.

The EFI Group press service told Interfax-Ukraine that the Beehive Cosmetics brand is a joint effort by EFI Group founder Igor Liski and former Henkel Ukraine CEO Nina Dombrovska, who have been working together to create the company for three years and are co-owners of the project.

“Our product line is a unique complex of natural honey-based hair care cosmetics that combines the best natural ingredients with state-of-the-art active ingredients and high production technologies. We have a great opportunity to produce high-quality products in Ukraine, which is important for stimulating domestic demand and supporting domestic producers,” Dombrowska said.

She added that the founders of the project aim to build a strong brand that can be competitive in other markets in the future.

The presentation of the honey-based cosmetics line will take place on Monday at the Superwoman forum. In addition, the brand’s Instagram page periodically holds contests among its followers. The winners are given the opportunity to test Beehive Cosmetics.

EFI Group was founded in 2007 and is engaged in the implementation of business projects in Ukraine. The company’s investment areas include healthcare and medtech, paper, food and woodworking industries, and agricultural supplies.

The company’s businesses include Feednova, an animal fats and feed additives producer, Bigaiv honey production plant, Medical Star healthcare network, Zhytomyr Cardboard Mill, Sam Ecopack, a cardboard packaging manufacturer, Forest Technology, an agricultural products supplier, Efi Agro, and Doc.ua, an online medical hub.

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Global grain harvest this year is expected to be higher than year earlier

Global grain production in 2023-2024 may be 1.3% higher than a year earlier and amount to 2.828 billion tons, taking into account the increase in production of corn, rice and wheat, FAO (the UN Food and Agriculture Organization) predicts.

According to its review, world grain reserves at the end of the current marketing year (MY) will amount to 894 million tons, which is 2.3% more than at the beginning of the year, indicating a ratio of world grain reserves to consumption of 31%.

The FAO also forecasts that the world grain trade in 2023/24 MY will increase by 1.7% compared to the previous season to 485 mln tonnes, mainly due to the increase in shipments of coarse grains, while the trade in wheat and rice is likely to decline.

In addition, the FAO revised its forecast for global wheat production in 2024 to 796 million tons, down from a month earlier, but still 1% higher than in 2023.

The forecast indicates that wheat production is expected to decline slightly in the European Union and the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland, where excessive humidity has led to a reduction in wheat crops. At the same time, localized drought is affecting the acreage in the southern and eastern parts of the European Union.

In the U.S., despite the reduction of plantings due to low prices, the total wheat production in the country will continue to grow in 2024 due to the expected increase in yields due to favorable weather conditions. In Canada, where spring wheat will be planted starting in May, experts expect a reduction in acreage due to lower profitability.

The conditions in Ukraine are assessed as unchanged from the previous month, as the war continues to put heavy pressure on the sector and production prospects.

In Russia, the wheat harvest in 2024 is forecast to be above average, although lower than last year.

In Asia, favorable weather conditions will boost grain production in India and Pakistan. A record wheat harvest is likely in 2024.

At the same time, a significant shortage of precipitation and hot temperatures across North Africa will lead to extremely low production in 2024 after the already poor results of last year.

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JSC “Ukrzaliznytsia” will not receive funding from state budget this year

Ukrzaliznytsia (UZ) will not receive funding from the state budget in 2024; at the same time, in 2023, it decreased by 2.4 times compared to 2022, to UAH 4.179 billion, according to a presentation made by Yevhen Lyashchenko, chairman of the board of UZ, during a conversation with journalists.

In 2022, UAH 10.095 billion was allocated from the state budget for UZ. The funds were allocated for the uninterrupted operation of rail transport under martial law, as well as for emergency repair work at railway infrastructure facilities, repair of traction and rolling stock, and payment of wages, UZ said.

In addition, the funds allocated from the state budget financed the design and implementation of work to restore the European standard 1435 mm railway track from Chop station to Uzhhorod station with the extension to the platform of Uzhhorod railway station. UAH 6 million was allocated for these purposes. Almost UAH 83 million was used as a postpaid payment for a batch of passenger railcars delivered under the contract signed in 2021.

Of the UAH 4.179 billion received from the state budget in 2023, UAH 1.905 billion was an advance payment for passenger railcars under the 2023 supply contract, UAH 1.736 billion was a postpayment for passenger railcars under the 2021 supply contract, and UAH 538 million was used to finance infrastructure projects.

In addition, part of the funds was allocated for the reconstruction of facilities with electrification of the Vasylkiv – Vasylkiv II, Cherkasy – Taras Shevchenko section; reconstruction of facilities with electrification of the Vasylkiv – Vasylkiv II. Taras Shevchenko; reconstruction of the railway track on the section Goskordor – Mostyska II – Sknyliv (Lviv) with the construction of a new terminal at Sknyliv station; construction of a railway road bridge over the Dnipro in Kyiv (with approaches) on the railway section Kyiv-Moskovsky – Darnytsia.

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Sense Bank and FUIB note demand for BNPL service and allow its implementation in Ukraine

Nationalized Sense Bank (Kyiv) and FUIB (Kyiv) note the demand for the buy now pay later (BNPL) service, which differs from traditional bank installment plans, and allow its introduction in Ukraine in the near future.

“We think that the client has a request for such a product as a purely European BNPL. (…) Therefore, we are now working with two fintechs, studying this model together with them and the possibility of joining them, because they have just implemented the European BNPL model,” said Inna Tiutiun, a member of the Sense board, at the Digital Lending 2024 conference initiated by the Ukrainian Association of Fintech and Innovation Companies (UAFIC) in Kyiv.

FUIB’s Deputy Chairman of the Board Dmytro Polishchuk, for his part, noted that there is “definitely a demand for the service.”

“And the most important thing is that when we talk about BNPL or installment payments, etc., we forget that the key client of this story is the merchant. (…) There is a very high demand from large retailers for this model, so if there is demand, there will always be a supply,” the banker added.

“I think that this year either we or Sense (Bank – IF-U) or someone else … one of us will show something this year. Because there are a lot of ideas, research, experience and a desire to try, because no one in Ukraine has actually tried this (implementation of the BNPL service – IF-U),” suggested Polishchuk.

According to him, FUIB has already tested a large number of customer experiences with full-fledged BNPL models, in particular, the bank’s team has worked out the legal component, which raised certain questions.

“(…) because in fact, BNPL in its purest form is the provision of a short-term loan to a non-bank customer and without onboarding in Diia, BankID, identification, passports. That is, it is not actually a loan, but a payment method with a certain installment plan for several weeks,” explained FUIB’s Deputy Chairman of the Board.

“We are very positive about this story. I think that this year there will be surprises in Ukraine (in the financial services market – IF-U),” the banker summarized.

According to the National Bank of Ukraine, as of February 1, 2024, Sens Bank ranked 8th (UAH 131.89 billion) among 63 banks operating in the country in terms of total assets, while FUIB ranked 6th (UAH 158.86 billion). Sense Bank was among the three leaders in terms of net profit for 2023, it amounted to UAH 5.04 billion, while FUIB’s net profit was UAH 3.96 billion.

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Oil prices are falling, with Brent trading below $90 per barrel

Oil prices, which ended last week at their highest levels since October, are falling on Monday.

The cost of June futures for Brent on the London ICE Futures exchange as of 8:10 a.m. is $89.91 per barrel, which is $1.26 (1.38%) lower than at the close of the previous trading. On Friday, these contracts rose by $0.52 (0.6%) to $91.17 per barrel.

Futures for WTI for May in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) have fallen by $1.15 (1.32%) to $85.76 per barrel by this time. As a result of the previous trading, the value of these contracts increased by $0.32 (0.4%) to $86.91 per barrel.

Last week, Brent rose in price by 4.8%, WTI – by 4.5%.

Traders continue to monitor geopolitical news, given Iran’s threats to retaliate against Israel for the attack on the Iranian consulate in Damascus. Despite the sanctions, Iran is the third largest oil producer in OPEC, Market Watch notes.

Meanwhile, the Israeli Defense Forces withdrew all units from the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday night, The Jerusalem Post reported. According to the newspaper, only one Israeli army brigade has remained in place, tasked with ensuring the security of the corridor linking southern Israel with the Gaza coast.

“A concession such as the withdrawal from Gaza is in no way a reason to discount the threat of a more direct conflict between Israel and Iran,” said Vishnu Varathan, an analyst at Mizuho Bank in Singapore. – “The volatility of oil prices remains, and this is mainly due to geopolitics.

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EU ambassadors to continue discussing restrictions on Ukrainian agricultural imports on Monday

European Union ambassadors will continue discussing the introduction of restrictions on Ukrainian agricultural imports on Monday after Poland and France decided that the previously reached agreements were insufficient, Interfax-Ukraine reports citing Politico..

The publication notes that the European Council’s opinion on the need for tougher restrictions practically coincides with the position of the European Parliament. Last month, the European Parliament adopted the initiative of the European People’s Party, which is convinced of the need to strengthen import restrictions and expand them to more products, particularly grain.

It is a victory for the influential European farmers’ association Copa-Cogeca, which persuaded the European Parliament to partially reject trade liberalization with Ukraine.

“But while the result is great for the lobby group and its members, it is bad not only for Ukraine, which depends on income from agricultural exports, but also for EU citizens, who will face higher food prices due to less competition and supply,” the publication noted.

There is still no unified position in the European Parliament. Its two largest groups, the European People’s Party and the Socialists and Democrats, are ready to sign up to additional restrictions, while others, including Renew Europe and the Greens, insist on approving the initial compromise.