Last week Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin stated that he expects an expanded partnership between Ukraine and NATO will lead Ukraine to a membership in the Alliance following a path similar to that of Montenegro. With regard to the United States, for now President Trump’s ambiguous positioning in Russian affairs seems to have little impact on the US. Administration's Ukraine policy. The Administration is expected to continue its support for the actions of NATO, the IMF and Secretary of State Tillerson has reaffirmed in April 2017 that the U.S. will not lift sanctions against Russia as long President Putin does not hand Crimea back to Kiev. In internal politics, we would expect Mr Poroshenko, the President of Ukraine, to sign the Association Agreement, thus improving his diminishing ratings and to win the presidential elections in 2019. In my opinion, Mr Poroshenko is also delaying the elections in the conflict zone of Donbass, a major requirement featured in the Minsk Agreement, in order to avoid the negation of his good performance on the European prospect, and then, assessing the Russian conflict situation at that point in time, to progress with the Minsk Agreement and effectively resolve a major part of the conflict. I do not think that Crimea will ever find its way back to Ukraine but if all other matters are resolved, a financial settlement would be considered. Therefore the status of “frozen conflict” in the Donbass area would remain in the short to medium term but the economy of Ukraine has been operating for a number of years now without the Donbass and the annexed to Russia Crimea. All growth estimates published by various international institutes incorporate similar assumptions. Banking Sector In the past 3 years there has been a clean-up by the National bank of Ukraine (NBU) with the support of IMF mainly as well as of EBRD and IFC. The number of banks has been reduced from 192 to 92 and there are still banks that will be liquidated. The most dras