
ArmInfo. Armenia's general election result signals broad policy continuity, possibly reinforcing the country's westward geopolitical trajectory and likely supporting further progress in the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process, as stated in Fitch Ratings report. However, the report emphasizes that its high exposure to Russia and its reliance on Russian energy remains a significant economic vulnerability.
Preliminary results showed incumbent Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's Civil Contract Party winning 49.8% of the vote, more than double that of the second-placed Strong Armenia Alliance. This could give Civil Contract 64 of 105 seats in the new National Assembly although the final seat allocation will depend on confirmation of the results and whether the smallest opposition party clears the 4% threshold for representation. Civil Contract's simple, albeit smaller, majority (it held 75 seats in the previous National Assembly) should ensure policy continuity. Pashinyan said the result would see Armenia "continue the course of rapprochement with the west" while developing relations with Russia, prioritising the Azerbaijan peace process and normalizing relations with Turkiye. However, Civil Contract will fall short of the two-thirds majority required to unilaterally amend the constitution in parliament. The removal of constitutional references to Nagorno-Karabakh, a key Azerbaijani condition for finalizing a peace treaty, remains uncertain, as it will require approval in a popular referendum, which Pashinyan has previously indicated could be held in 2027.
Armenia stands to benefit from the peace process and potential normalization of relations with Turkiye, including the reopening of the land border. This process began with a framework agreement in August 2025 and continued with the TRIPP agreement signed on 4 June this year, and would help integrate Armenia's landlocked economy into a corridor connecting central Asia, the south Caucasus, Turkiye and Europe. This reorientation could unlock meaningful trade and transit revenue, and could strengthen medium-term growth prospects. Growth has moderated, partly due to the impact of the US-Iran conflict, but remained resilient at 4.0% yoy in 1Q26, following 7.2% in 2025. Inflation edged up to 5.3% in April before easing to 4.2% in May, suggesting price pressures are broadly contained. Economic risks relate to Armenia's close links with Russia, which remains its largest single trade partner, accounting for 35% of total goods exports in 2025. Russia already imposed import restrictions on selected Armenian food products in the lead-up to the elections and has officially threatened to end Armenian purchases of Russian oil, gas and rough diamonds free of export duties and on vastly preferential terms if the country continues its path towards an EU accession process.
Natural gas provides 61% of Armenia's energy needs and 85%-90% of the country's natural gas imports come from Russia under a long-term fixed-price contract. Unilateral termination of the preferential agreement could materially increase energy costs and negatively affect macroeconomic performance, as well as fiscal and external balances. In January of this year, Fitch noted lingering uncertainty around the peace process when it revised Armenia's Outlook to Positive and affirmed the 'BB-' sovereign rating in January. The Outlook revision reflected Armenia's higher international reserves and continued solid growth that will support fiscal consolidation consistent with debt stabilization over the medium term. Fitch's next scheduled sovereign rating review is due on 10 July. "It will incorporate our assessment of the balance of geopolitical risks, reflecting the prospects of successfully concluding the peace process and progress towards greater integration with the west while considering risks derived from relations with Russia." In the same statement, Fitch outlines the sensitivity criteria for Armenia's sovereign rating, which depend on such categories of factors as structural factors, public finances, external finances, and macroeconomics.
The following are considered positive triggers (for an upgrade): structural- A sustainable decline in geopolitical risk and domestic political uncertainty; for example, as a result of meaningful progress in the peace process with Azerbaijan; public finances- fiscal consolidation that supports a stabilization in general government debt/GDP, while preserving improvements in terms of currency composition; external finances; macro- Preservation of high growth rates supporting a sustained increase in GDP per capita.
Negative triggers (for a downgrade) are considered to be: structural factors— Developments that increase geopolitical risks and undermine political and economic stability; for example, derailment of the current peace process with Azerbaijan; public finances— Macroeconomic or policy developments that steepen the upward path of general government debt/GDP.and external finance— A reversal of improvements in FX reserves that increases external vulnerabilities.
Recall, Fitch Ratings revised the outlook on Armenia's sovereign credit rating from stable to positive in January 2026, while affirming its long-term issuer default rating at 'BB-'. Alongside this upgrade, the rating agency projected a robust and sustainable economic growth trajectory for the country, forecasting GDP expansion to exceed 5% annually through the 2026–2027 period.