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Bosnia and Herzegovina: obligations, indices, notations de crédit

Nom du pays
Bosnie Herzégovine
Dette obligataire
400 millions USD

explorer la base de données la plus complète

800 000

obligations globalement

Plus de 400

sources de prix

80 000

actions

9 000

ETF

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Dernières données pour

Statistiques Cbonds du marché obligataire

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Indices pour comparaison

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29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,122 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,324 USD Billion
29/02/2024
1,001 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,324 USD Billion
29/02/2024
1 Units
29/02/2024
0 Units
29/02/2024
0 Units
29/02/2024
0 Units
29/02/2024
0 Units
29/02/2024
0 Units
29/02/2024
42 Units
29/02/2024
0 Units
29/02/2024
23 Units
29/02/2024
1 Units
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0
29/02/2024
0
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion
29/02/2024
0,000 USD Billion

Cotations

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Profile

Bosnia has a transitional economy with limited market reforms. The economy relies heavily on the export of metals as well as on remittances and foreign aid. A highly decentralized government hampers economic policy coordination and reform, while excessive bureaucracy and a segmented market discourage foreign investment. The interethnic warfare in Bosnia and Herzegovina caused production to plummet by 80% from 1992 to 1995 and unemployment to soar. With an uneasy peace in place, output recovered in 1996-99 but slowed in 2000-02 and picked up again during 2003-08, when GDP growth exceeded 5% per year. However, the country experienced a decline in GDP of nearly 3% in 2009 reflecting local effects of the global economic crisis. GDP has stagnated since then. Foreign banks, primarily from Austria and Italy, now control most of the banking sector. The konvertibilna marka (convertible mark or BAM) - the national currency introduced in 1998 - is pegged to the euro, and confidence in the currency and the banking sector has increased. Bosnia's private sector is growing, but foreign investment has dropped off sharply since 2007.
Public debt
43.8% of GDP (2012 est.)
40.6% of GDP (2011 est.)

Récompenses

Documents

Actions

Dernières émissions

La participation aux organisations internationales

Dette obligataire par devise

Codes

  • LEI
    529900BKXPZG5Q9JGJ73
  • SIC
    9199 General government

Notations de crédit et notations d’ESG

Macroéconomie

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