Tag Archives: banking

EBRD gives loan to Armenian bank

DEC. 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The EBRD sent a $10m loan to Ameriabank, Armenia’s largest bank by assets, to promote credit to women-led small and medium enterprises. The EBRD also sent a $3b loan to ACBA-Credit Agricole Bank, one of the largest lenders to Armenia’s agriculture sector. The loan is part of the EBRD’s Women in Business programme, which includes Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine.

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(News report from Issue No. 309, published on Dec. 16 2016)f

Tajik Banks

DEC. 16 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — News that Tojiksodirotbank had resumed banking activities might have been a relief for its many customers, but it’s still keeping the Central Bank’s officials on the edge of their seats.

Injecting around $500m, as it did to save Tojiksodirotbank from going bankrupt, into the banking system was not a joke for the Tajik government. It is struggling to keep its somoni currency afloat against a strengthening US dollar and has faced a severe downturn in remittances from migrant workers, an important part of Tajikistan’s economy.

Tajikistan is one of the world’s most remittance-dependent countries. Transfers from workers abroad accounted for around half of the country’s GDP a few years ago.

Now, the picture might be different. The Central Bank has blamed the liquidity crisis in the banking sector on the shrinking remittances, projected to decrease again this year. In two years, between 2014-2015, remittances had fallen by 47% from $3.9b.

The combination of these events put increasingly pressure on the banking sector, which risked default earlier this year. The government intervention seems to have plugged the main hole, but the crisis is far from over.

With the bailout, the government inherited the banks’ shaky credit portfolio. For regular people, the pressure on the economy has made it increasingly difficult to pay back their debt. In addition, several state-owned companies that had borrowed heavily in previous years have started to show signs of insolvency.

The government knows well enough that it is simply not in a position to bail out its entire economy.

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(News report from Issue No. 309, published on Dec. 16 2016)f

 

Kazakhstan’s Samruk-Kazyna fails to obtain a review

NOV. 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund Samruk-Kazyna failed to obtain a review of a US court case that deemed the fund liable for the misrepresentation of BTA Bank bonds sold abroad in 2010-2012. The US court said in February that the Kazakh fund had concealed information regarding dealings with BTA that led to the bank’s default in 2012. The decision was significant because it marked an exception to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act which protects activities by sovereign wealth funds.

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(News report from Issue No. 307, published on Dec. 2 2016)

BGEO results on Georgia increase

NOV. 21 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — London-listed investment holding BGEO posted a 24% growth in revenues in Q3, compared to the same period last year. BGEO’s main assets are Bank of Georgia and Georgia Healthcare Group (GHG). GHG accounted for the group’s largest growth rate. In the first nine months of the year, GHG posted revenues for 290.4m lari ($116.6), up 64.8% from 2015.

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(News report from Issue No. 306, published on Nov. 25 2016)

Azerbaijan to privatise IBA

NOV. 24 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan will privatise the International Bank of Azerbaijan, the country’s largest lender, in the first half of 2017, Rufat Aslanli, chairman of Azerbaijan’s financial supervisory agency, said. Azerbaijan’s ministry of finance owns 54.9% and the government- owned credit company Aqrar Kredit owns 27% in IBA. IBA accounts for around 60% of all lending in Azerbaijan.

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(News report from Issue No. 306, published on Nov. 25 2016)

Kazakhstan-based financial institutions sign agreement

NOV. 21 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan-based financial institution Almex Holding and Dutch company Staay Food Group signed an agreement to create a joint venture to develop agribusiness in Kazakhstan. They want to create a distribution network with local farmers. At a later stage, Staay Food said it plans to build greenhouses to boost exports of fresh fruits and vegetables. Almex group controls Halyk Bank, Kazakhstan’s second- largest bank, and is owned by President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s daughter Dinara and her husband, Timur Kulibayev.

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(News report from Issue No. 306, published on Nov. 25 2016)

 

International Bank of Azerbaijan loans clear up

NOV. 14 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In a half-year report, the International Bank of Azerbaijan (IBA), the country’s largest lender, said it completed the first stage of a cleanup of its toxic assets. In the first half of 2016, IBA transferred 9.9b manat (around $6b) to the government-owned credit company Aqrar Kredit. Azerbaijan’s ministry of finance owns 54.9% and Aqrar Kredit owns 27% in IBA.

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(News report from Issue No. 305, published on Nov. 18 2016)

 

Qazkom and Halyk Bank eye merger to create Kazakh bank giant

ALMATY, NOV. 15 2016, (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s largest lenders, Halyk Bank and Qazkom, are in talks to merge and create a super- sized bank with strong links to the Kazakh elite that would dwarf its rivals, according to sources quoted by Reuters.

Reuters quoted two anonymous sources, who both confirmed that talks were under way and that the merger could be agreed after Halyk redeems a $638m Eurobond in May 2017.

Importantly, one of the sources said that the idea behind the merger traces all the way up to the presidential family.

President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s daughter Dinara and her husband Timur Kulibayev coown Halyk Bank. Kenes Rakishev, son-in-law of Mr Nazarbayev’s close ally Imangali Tasmagambetov, owns Qazkom. Mr Tasmagambetov is minister of defence.

Qazkom which rebranded last month from Kazkommertsbank, gave a guarded denial that a merger was about to happen. Halyk Bank did not comment.

“Responding to recent rumours, I can say that Qazkom has neither made nor received offers regarding a merger with Halyk Bank,” Qazkom’s press officer, Sergei Chikin, told media

A merger would form a banking superpower in Kazakhstan, four times larger than its biggest competitor, Tsesnabank, owned by Adilbek Dzhaksybekov, head of the Presidential Administration. Analysts, though, are skeptical at the prospects of a merger, which would create a bank with a 40% of the loans market.

“Even if the talks are proved true, the Central Bank is unlikely to allow a merger that would monopolise the market,” Rasul Rysmambetov, director of the Public Fund Financial Freedom, told the Inform-Kazakhstan news agency.

In the past two years, both Qazkom and Halyk have cleaned up their toxic assets, which built up during the Global Financial Crisis of 2008/9. Qazkom had also bought Kazakhstan’s once-largest lender BTA Bank, now riddled with non- performing loans. It also changed ownership, with Mr Rakishev sidelining founder Nurzhan Subkhanberdin.

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(News report from Issue No. 305, published on Nov. 18 2016)

 

China’s CITIC Bank buys 60% stake in Kazakhstan’s Altyn Bank

ALMATY, NOV. 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Halyk Bank, one of Kazakhstan’s biggest lenders, said it will sell a 60% stake in its subsidiary, Altyn Bank, to China’s CITIC Bank at the start of next year, China’s most significant investment in the Kazakh banking sector.

The parties did not disclose the cost of the transaction, but experts believe it could be around $300m.

“The valuation of Altyn’s current assets as of September 30 is 316b tenge ($929m) and we can expect an increase in the bank’s activity in Q4. After premiums and non-performing loans discounts, the final figure could be around $300m,” Rasul Rysmambetov, director of the Public Fund Financial Freedom, told the Kursiv newspaper.

Altyn Bank is the successor of HSBC Kazakhstan that Halyk Bank bought in March 2014 for $176m.

China already owns Bank of China in Kazakhstan and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China in Almaty, two small-sized lenders founded in 1993. Owning Altyn Bank will boost its presence and could help the bank grow trade with China.

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(News report from Issue No. 304, published on Nov. 11 2016)

Kazakhstan to subsidise mortgages

ALMATY, NOV. 8 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kazakh government will gives subsidies of 15m tenge ($43,455) to mortgages for new homes, Marat Idryshev, head of the Association of Kazakh Constructors said, part of President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s plan to breathe life into Kazakhstan’s flatlining economy.

Mr Nazarbayev announced the Nurly Zher programme in September, the name means Bright Land in Kazakh, a few months after a series of unprecedented anti- government protests focused on mortgages and land ownership showed just how frustrated ordinary Kazakhs were with the state of the economy.

Precise details of the $1.3b plan to re-energise Kazakhstan’s construction sector have been thin, so Mr Idryshev’s comments are important. He said that the mortgage market was severely undernourished in Kazakhstan.

“Today the proportion of mortgages given by commercial banks in Kazakhstan is no higher than 5%,” he told media. “In Russia it is 50-70%, a world standard. We will act in accordance with the experience of our neighbours. The government will subsidise mortgages.”

The subsidy should, Mr Idtzhev said, bring interest on mortgages down to around 10% from 17%.

The collapse of the tenge last year made it difficult for mortgage holders to pay back their loans. Almaty-based economist Zharas Akhmetov said the plan should dampen growing tension.

“This, firstly, will support the housing market. Secondly, this will remove tension in society,” he told the Bulletin. “One of the drivers of economic growth is construction, and not only construction of houses but also roads and industrial objects.”

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(News report from Issue No. 304, published on Nov. 11 2016)