Tag Archives: business

Another construction workers dies in Tbilisi

TBILISI/July 16 (The Bulletin) — Another worker in Tbilisi died on a construction site, at least the 13th construction worker to die in Georgia this year.

Reports said that 16-year-old George Beshkenadze fell down the liftshaft of a 14-storey construction building that he had been working on in central Tbilisi.

Campaigners have said that safety measures on Georgian construction sites are notoriously slack. At least six construction workers in Tbilisi have already died this year on sites and in January, seven men were killed in their sleep at the apartment they shared in central Tbilisi by a carbon monoxide leak.

The authorities have said that they will also investigate how the company managing the site where Beshkenadze died was able to hire a teenager.
The law doesn’t ban companies from hiring 16-year-olds, but they are not allowed to do hard manual job
until they are 18.
ENDS

— This story was first published in issue 417 of the weekly Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

Kazakhstan’s banking system is still vulnerable, says IMF

ALMATY/July 17 (The Bulletin) — In its annual assessment of Kazakhstan’s economy and business, the IMF said that the Kazakh banking sector is still vulnerable.

The fragility of Kazakhstan’s financial sector has undermined economic growth over the past decade, despite intervention by regulators, who have tried to legislate against bad debt, government bailouts and forced mergers.

“Despite state support, the banking sector remains weak, with high levels of bad loans,” the IMF said in a statement.

Bad loans grew rapidly after the 2015 devaluation of the tenge. It halved in value, because of a recession in Russia and a collapse in oil prices, which made dollar-denominated loans expensive to pay off.

The Kazakh Central Bank has bailed out larger banks, and overseen the merger of the country’s two biggest banks, Halyk Bank and Kazkommertsbank, but also allowed smaller banks to go bankrupt.

Kazakhstan plans to conduct what the IMF called an “asset quality review (AQR)” of large and medium banks but the IMF said that the Kazakh Central Bank needed to be careful how it reacted to the results of the review.

“The AQR may reveal the need for additional capital; any public support should be provided only to systemically-important and viable banks, subject to contributions from existing shareholders, and in the view of the IMF staff, from the budget and not the National Bank of Kazakhstan,” the IMF said.

Construction worker dies in Tbilisi Campaigners have said that safety measures on Georgian construction sites are notoriously slack. At least six construction workers in Tbilisi have already died this year on sites and in January, seven men were killed in their sleep at the apartment they shared in central Tbilisi by a carbon monoxide leak.

The authorities have said that they will also investigate how the company managing the site where Beshkenadze died was able to hire a teenager.

The law doesn’t ban companies from hiring 16-year-olds, but they are not allowed to do hard manual job until they are 18.

It said also that there was a risk that Kazakh policymakers were trying to do too much too quickly. They want to move the Central Bank from Almaty to Nur-Sultan, a plan delayed by the 2014-17 economic downturn, and set up a new financial regulator.

“(This) carries risks that should be carefully managed, including possible gaps during the transition and insufficient bank oversight and coordination with the National Bank of Kazakhstan and government,” the IMF said.
ENDS

— This story was first published in issue 417 of the weekly Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

Nestle sells Uzbek water bottling company

TASHKENT/July 18 (The Bulletin) — Swiss food and drinks producer Nestle sold its dairy and bottled-water business in Namangan, east Uzbekistan to France’s Lactlis for an undisclosed amount.

The deal finalises Nestle’s exit from Uzbekistan, in 2017 it sold its drinking water production site in Tashkent, although Lactlis will continue to use Nestle’s Nesquick, Nido and Nestle Pure Life brands in Uzbekistan under a licensing agreement.

Martial Rolland, the market head for Nestle’s businesses in Russia and Eurasia, said: “We continue to be committed to supply consumers with high-quality products and further grow our brands in Uzbekistan. Lactalis is one of the worldwide leaders in dairy and we are pleased to have found a strong partner for our dairy and water brands in Uzbekistan.”

In its press release, Nestle said that it would continue to sell its various other products directly in Uzbekistan.
ENDS

— This story was first published in issue 417 of the weekly Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

Trump ditches plan to tax uranium imports

ALMATY/July 12 (The Bulletin) — US President Donald Trump backed away from imposing uranium tariffs on imports, giving Kazatomprom, the world’s biggest uranium producer, a major boost.

Analysts said that they expected the uranium market to pick up after Mr Trump said that he disagreed with a US Commerce Department Investigation which had said uranium imports were a threat to US national security.

Kazatomprom and other producers said that talk of uranium imports as a threat to US national security was a smokescreen for protectionism. US uranium producers have been struggling to compete over the past few years.

Kazatomprom CEO Galymzhan Pirmatov said that a free market that isn’t tampered with is important for the global uranium market.

“Kazatomprom reiterates its longheld belief that intervention in any form is undesirable, as it can create significant distortion in an already fragile nuclear fuel market by incentivising uneconomic production that relies on government support,” he said.

The US is the world’s biggest uranium market and Kazakhstan is its biggest producer with an estimated 40% of the market.

Mr Trump’s decision took the market by surprise and uranium prices, which have been depressed since a tsunami knocked out the Fukushima nuclear power station in Japan in 2011, are expected to rise. Before the Fukushima accident, uranium had been sold at more than $70/pound. Now it is priced at around $25/pound.
ENDS

— This story was first published in issue 417 of the weekly Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin

Kazakhstan to postpone Kazmunaigas IPO, say sources

ALMATY/Feb. 8 (The Conway Bulletin) — — Kazakhstan will postpone the IPO of state-owned oil and gas company Kazmunaigas because of poor market conditions, two sources close to the deal told Reuters.

They said that investor interest had waned for a London IPO for Kazmunaigas, as Kazakhstan had been touting last year. Kazakh officials had launched a road-show to drum up support in 2018 and had talked of selling as much as 20% of the company to raise around $6b.

The Kazmunaigas sale was supposed to have been the centrepiece of a sell off of various Kazakh state-owned assets, including nuclear agency Kazatomprom, which listed last year on the London Stock Exchange, and Air Astana, scheduled to list this year.

Reuters quoted data which said that the value of global IPOs had dropped by 83% to $2.6b in January 2019 compared to January 2018.

Kazmunaigas declined to comment.
END

>This story was first published in issue 399 of The Conway Bulletin on Feb. 8 2019
Copyright The Conway Bulletin 2019

Chinese company to build cement plant in Uzbekistan

FEB. 7 (The Conway Bulletin) — China’s Huaxin Cement said it will construct a new cement factory in Uzbekistan’s Jizzakh region. The plant will cost $150m to build and have a capacity of 1.2m tonnes per year. The new plant is expected to start operations in December. Several companies have built cement factories in Central Asia over the past few years.
END

>This story was first published in issue 399 of The Conway Bulletin on Feb. 8 2019
Copyright The Conway Bulletin 2019

Kazakhstan’s Halyk Bank to open branch in Uzbekistan

FEB. 4 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Uzbek Central Bank gave Kazakhstan’s Halyk Bank permission to open its first branch in Uzbekistan. The move is important as it signals the Uzbek authorities willingness to further open up the country since Shavkat Mirziyoyev took over as president. Halyk Bank is the biggest bank in Kazakhstan. Georgia’s TBC Bank has also said that it is interested in entering the Uzbek banking sector.
END

>This story was first published in issue 399 of The Conway Bulletin on Feb. 8 2019
Copyright The Conway Bulletin 2019

Air Astana to open direct route to New York

FEB. 4 (The Conway Bulletin) — Air Astana, which is 51% owned by the Kazakh sovereign wealth fund Samruk Kazyna and 49% owned by BAE Systems, said it will start flying direct to New York’s JFK Airport from 2020. Last year Air Astana agreed a $2.5b deal to buy three 787 Dreamliners from Boeing. The Kazakh government also plans to list Air Astana on a foreign stock exchange this year.
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>This story was first published in issue 399 of The Conway Bulletin on Feb. 8 2019
Copyright The Conway Bulletin 2019

Armenia fines subsidiary of France’s Veolia

FEB. 6 (The Conway Bulletin) — The authorities in Armenia fined Veolia Jur, a subsidiary of France’s Veolia, 10m dram ($20,700) for “ongoing breaches of water supply requirements”. According to media reports, Veolia Jur missed deadlines set in 2016 for water supplies and waste water removal. Last year, Veolia Jur was fined a similar amount for breaching anti-trust laws.
END

>This story was first published in issue 399 of The Conway Bulletin on Feb. 8 2019
Copyright The Conway Bulletin 2019

ArcelorMittal says it had “operational issues” at its Temirtau steel plant in Kazakhstan

FEB. 7 (The Conway Bulletin) — Luxembourg-registered metals producer ArcelorMittal said that output dropped in Q4 2018 compared to Q4 2017 because of “operational issues” at its Temirtau plant in central Kazakhstan. The Temirtau plant is one of the country’s largest non-oil and gas projects and is a cornerstone of the Kazakh economy. ArcelorMittal has clashed with labour unions over pay, redundancies and holidays at its plant over the past few years. It also said that a pipeline explosion had slowed production.
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>This story was first published in issue 399 of The Conway Bulletin on Feb. 8 2019
Copyright The Conway Bulletin 2019