APRIL 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Dividends make investors happy, when they are issued, that is.
Kazakhstan’s largest publicly-traded companies have embarked on different dividend policies to weather an economic downturn that has, frankly, clobbered markets.
This week, mobile operator Kcell, which is part-owned by Sweden’s TeliaSonera and whose GDRs are listed in London, decided to give out 50% of its profits as dividend to its shareholders.
And, sticking to a long-held company policy, London-listed Central Asia Metals said it would pay out a total dividend of 12.5p.
At the opposite end of the dividend strategy spectrum, KMG EP and Halyk Bank, whose GDRs are also listed in London, ditched their annual payout to shareholders.
Both companies had traditionally given a piece of their profits to shareholders in the past.
KMG EP, a subsidiary of state-owned Kazmunaigas, said a collapse in oil prices over the past couple of years meant it couldn’t afford to pay out dividends and in a terse statement, Halyk Bank, owned by Timur Kulibayev and his wife Dinara Kulibayeva, daughter of President Nursultan Nazarbayev, said it too wouldn’t give shareholders a handout this year.
Halyk Bank didn’t explain its decision but Kazakhstan’s banking sector is bracing itself for an increase in non-performing loans linked to a 50% fall in the value of the tenge last year Broadly, these two different strategies provide an insight into Kazakh corporate mindset. Those companies with a stronger link to the Kazakh government and the political elite simply don’t need to pay dividends to keep their key investors happy.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 276, published on April 15 2016)