The official currency of Croatia.
1However, they think the central bank will manage to preserve the stability of the kuna currency.
2In the past Croatia spent some 30 billion kuna to save its shipyards, some estimates say.
3The kuna often strengthens in the summer when tourists flock to resorts on the Croatian seaside.
4The kuna currency, introduced in May 1994, is kept in a tightly managed float to the euro.
5It has said it expected revenues of around 7.65 billion kuna.
6The kuna traded near 5-month highs, at 7.385 against the euro.
7They stand to lose some 400 million kuna this year due to the capped exchange rate for the loans.
8The current market rate is 7.35 kuna per one franc.
9The kuna firmed 0.1 percent versus the euro to 7.424.
10The central bank keeps the kuna in a managed float against the euro, intervening occasionally on the foreign exchange market.
11This was down from the initial price of 162.8 million kuna, the privatisation agency said.
12The trip lasts 15 minutes and costs 40 kuna.
13The finance ministry will offer a three-year bond denominated in euros and a 10-year bond denominated in the national kuna currency.
14A picture illustration of crumpled kuna, Dollar and euro banknotes, taken in Zagreb January 18, 2011.
15She said that Croatia needed to borrow some 28 billion kuna ($5.13 billion) this year.
16Earlier this year Atlantic Grupa forecast a 3.5 percent growth in 2015 sales to 5.3 billion kuna.