Ukrainian developers have concluded the first housing purchase and sale agreements using housing certificates issued as compensation for destroyed housing under the eRestoration program.
Today, housing certificates are used to purchase apartments in completed projects, Anna Laevska, commercial director of Intergal-Bud, told Interfax-Ukraine.
“Buyers are mostly focused on affordable housing in the economy and comfort segments. As of now, ready-made apartments in buildings that have already received a certificate of commissioning are available for participation in the program in the capital region. However, we plan to expand the offer with facilities under construction. We are talking about projects in Lviv,” she said.
According to Laevska, the first transaction under the program concerned a two-room apartment with turnkey renovation in the Syretsky Gardens residential complex.
According to the developers interviewed by Interfax-Ukraine, buyers with certificates are offered installment purchases and loans, the possibility of using the certificate as a down payment, and in some cases, individual offers and discounts.
Developer Alliance Novobud has also concluded the first deal under the eRestoration program: a family from Kyiv region purchased a three-bedroom apartment in a finished building in the Madison Gardens residential complex in Brovary using a housing certificate.
“There are requests, certificate holders are interested in different formats and classes of housing. With the eRestoration certificate, you can purchase any residential property in all Alliance Novobud projects. We have individual offers for each individual request. For example, a discount, installment plan, or lending for the remaining amount by partner banks on special terms,” said Iryna Mikhalova, CMO of Alliance Novobud.
According to the press service of Kovalska Real Estate, when buying a home using a certificate in the developer’s projects, all available promotions and discounts are available to customers, including a loyalty program for military personnel and rescuers. There is also an option to purchase by installments at 0% for up to 3.5 years for an amount exceeding the value of the certificate.
According to the company, customers are interested in purchasing two- and three-bedroom apartments in ready-made buildings. At the same time, in January, apartments were already reserved for two certificates.
The developer also expects to expand its offer with the help of newly constructed facilities.
“At present, the certificate can be used to purchase an apartment in three commissioned houses by Kovalska. We are actively working, and soon it will be possible to apply the certificate to the objects under construction,” the company explained.
The DIM Group also offers to use installment purchase programs from the developer for up to five years if the amount of the certificate does not exceed the cost of the selected apartment. The program covers both already built residential complexes in Kyiv and the region and buildings at the final stage of construction.
“We are already working with the first applications from certificate holders who have chosen an apartment in our residential complexes and applied for a deposit. In the near future, we are waiting for the approval of applications and the receipt of funds,” said Daria Bedia, Marketing Director of DIM.
In general, the surveyed developers assess the housing certificate program with cautious optimism, noting its social importance.
“This is a very important government initiative aimed at helping Ukrainians who lost their homes during the full-scale invasion. It is difficult to overestimate the social component of eRestoration. However, it is difficult to predict whether the certificates will have a significant impact on the primary real estate market,” said Ms. Laevska.
According to the expert, the certificate program can be developed following the example of the eOselya affordable mortgage program, where the share of transactions in the primary market is no more than 2%.
At the same time, with competent support and uninterrupted financing, the compensation program can become a powerful market driver, according to Alliance Novobud.
“Government programs such as eHouse and eRestoration can have a significant impact on the demand and purchasing power of Ukrainians. For example, under the eHouse program, some projects account for up to 40% of sales of the total volume. The new construction market has high expectations for eRestoration,” summarized Mikhaleva.
As of January 31, 462 certificates for UAH 1.1 billion have been sold under the eRestoration compensation program, and another 311 have been booked. The total number of applications for compensation is 9.3 thousand, and 2.6 thousand certificates have been issued.
As reported, on May 10, 2023, Ukraine launched the eRestoration program, under which owners of damaged housing began receiving compensation of up to UAH 200,000 for repairs.
On August 1, 2023, Diia started accepting applications for compensation for housing destroyed by the war. Compensation will be paid to individual owners of housing that was destroyed due to hostilities after February 24, 2022, is not subject to restoration and is located in the unoccupied territory and not in the area of active hostilities. On December 27, 2023, the issuance of housing certificates in Diia began.
In May 2023, the Cabinet of Ministers allocated UAH 4 billion 433 million 350.0 thousand for compensation under the eRestoration program, in November – another UAH 1.5 billion for compensation for damaged property and UAH 2.5 billion for certificates for destroyed property.
American Tesla recalls up to 2.2 million electric cars, including the Cybertruck pickup trucks released this year, due to incorrect font size of warning messages on the dashboard, according to a report on the website of the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA).
The font of the messages is too small, which can make it difficult to read critical information and thus increase the likelihood of an accident, the document said.
The recall is being conducted through a free remote software update and affects some of the 2012-2023 Model S, Model X (2016-2024), Model 3 (2017-2023), Model Y (2019-2024) and Cybertruck (2024) vehicles.
Tesla delivered 1.8 million electric vehicles worldwide in 2023.
Shares of the automaker are down 0.8% in pre-market trading on Friday.
In 2023, Ukrposhta increased the number of shipments by 40% and transported 15 million parcels with Ukrzaliznytsia, Deputy Prime Minister for Recovery and Minister of Community, Territorial and Infrastructure Development Oleksandr Kubrakov said on Facebook on Friday.
“The company is showing steady results. In 2023, Ukrposhta increased the number of shipments by 40%. It delivered 63.6 million units of humanitarian aid. In cooperation with Ukrzaliznytsia, it transported 15 million parcels,” the statement said.
According to the Vice Prime Minister, thanks to the established air service with the United States, more than 1 million Ukrainian goods shipped through Ukrposhta are successfully sold on American marketplaces.
By 2024, the company plans to automate the parcel sorting process and process 100% of shipments using robotic sorting lines, Kubrakov said.
“Ukrposhta has 27 thousand branches in Ukraine, 1.8 thousand mobile branches. The company employs 40 thousand people.
The volume of currency purchases by the Ukrainian population in January 2023 exceeded the volume of its sales by $1 billion 103.2 million compared to $1 billion 26.2 million in December and $621.8 million in November, which was a new record since October 2012, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) said.
According to its website, such a result in January was once again provided by the cash currency segment, where its net purchase increased to $885.2m from $807.5m in December and $375-380m in November-October, while the balance of purchase and sale of non-cash currency remained at the level of the previous month – $218.0m.
As reported, the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU), which has held the official hryvnia exchange rate at $36.5686 UAH/$1 since the end of July 2022, has switched to a regime of managed exchange rate flexibility since October 3. Since late November, under the pressure of increased demand in the market, an obvious trend towards weakening of the national currency has been formed. Despite the increase in the National Bank’s interventions to $3.55 billion, the dollar on the interbank in December rose in price by 4.5%, or UAH 1.65 – to UAH 38.002/$1, and on the cash market due to the jump of about UAH in the last days of the year, its growth in December amounted to 5.3%, or about UAH 2 – to about $39.40 UAH/$1.
At the same time, at the end of January, the official hryvnia exchange rate strengthened to 37.5627 UAH/$1, while in the cash market – to 38.20 UAH/$1, and the spread between them narrowed again.
According to the NBU, after the exchange rate hike in late December, the first ten days of the month net purchase of currency on the non-cash market amounted to $10-30 mln, but after the exchange rate stabilized and the spread narrowed, the volume of net purchases fell significantly.
At the same time, in the cash market net purchase volumes, which averaged $40.5 mln per day in the first ten-day period of January, decreased to $34 mln in the middle of the month, but in the last ten-day period grew to $48.4 mln.
According to some market participants, a new factor in the cash market, as it already happened at the end of last year, may be the adoption of the bill on mobilization, which provides for the arrest of accounts of those who do not appear at the TCC on summons.
According to the National Bank, in general, the volume of non-cash currency sales by households in January decreased to $276.7 million from $311.7 million in December, while the volume of purchases – to $494.7 million from $530.3 million.
In the cash market in January, purchases fell to $1 billion 890.9 million from $2 billion 65.9 million, as did sales to $1 billion 5.8 million from $1 billion 258.4 million.
As reported, in total for 2022, according to official statistics, the population bought $880.1 million more currency than sold, including net purchase of cash currency amounted to $1.01 billion. For 2023, net purchase of currency by the population reached $4 billion 792.8 million, including cash – $3 billion 632.1 million.
In the non-cash foreign exchange market, the purchase of currency by bank customers in January decreased more significantly – to $5.06 billion from $7.06 billion in December, while sales – not so significantly: to $4.17 billion from $4.91 billion.
As a result, net purchases fell to $0.88 billion in January from $2.15 billion in December, back to May-June 2023 levels.
As for the volume of transactions between banks, after December’s all-time record of $5.99bn, it fell to $4.34bn in January, still significantly higher than before the exchange rate liberalization.
On February 1, the Ministry of Finance of Ukraine announced a tender for voluntary insurance of motor vehicles (CASCO), according to the Prozorro e-procurement system.
The total expected cost is UAH 103,917 thousand.
The last day for accepting bids is February 9.
insurance of motor vehicles (CASCO), Ministry of Finance of Ukraine, Prozorro
Ukraine produced about 1.8 million tons of sugar in 2023 and early 2024, with the average wholesale price at 23-24 UAH/kg in early 2024, First Deputy Minister of Agrarian Policy and Food Taras Vysotsky said at a meeting on the development of the sugar industry.
“In general, the situation on the domestic sugar market is stable. The product is sufficient for the domestic needs of Ukrainians and to ensure the necessary export volumes,” the press service of the Ministry of Agrarian Policy and Food quoted him as saying on Facebook.
Vysotsky reminded that Ukraine needs up to 1 million tons of sugar annually for domestic needs. According to the memorandum of understanding, the maximum volume of sugar exports in the 2023/2024 marketing year should be up to 650 thousand tons.
The meeting, which was attended by representatives of the industry association and leading sugar producers, also discussed the planning of sown areas for 2024 and the expansion of the geography of sugar exports.
As reported, in November 2023, the Ministry of Agrarian Policy and the National Association of Sugar Producers of Ukraine (Ukrtsukor) signed a memorandum of understanding in which they agreed to regulate sugar exports based on the preliminary balance of supply and demand in the 2023/2024 marketing year.