Tag Archives: economy

IMF praises Georgia

DEC. 20 (The Conway Bulletin) – The IMF handed another $41.6m loan over to Georgia, the fourth tranche of a three-year deal worth a total of $291.5m, after praising its economic performance and prudence. The IMF said that Georgia’s economic trajectory was positive although there were external risks and reserves needed to be built up. Georgia has become something of a favourite in the region for Western donors, recovering strongly from a 2014-16 economic downturn.

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>>This story was first published in issue 395 of The Conway Bulletin on Dec. 23 2018

Uzbekistan prepares ground for first credit rating

TASHKENT/DEC. 21 (The Conway Bulletin) – Uzbekistan is making final preparations to issue a $500m bond in Q1 2019, sources told Reuters the day after the Fitch ratings agency had given Uzbekistan its first credit rating.

Uzbek officials have also appointed four banks — JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank, Citi and Gazprom Bank — as its advisers for the issue which will mark a high for President Shavkat Mirziyoyev. He took over as Uzbekistan’s president in September 2016 promising to open up the country after 25 years of rule by the reclusive Islam Karimov.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, one Reuters source said: “They (Uzbek officials) met with investors in late November and the feedback was positive from most.”

The Uzbek debt issue will give international investors looking for greater returns yet another chance to invest in Central Asia. Last year, Tajikistan issued its first debt and this year, Kazakhstan also issued debt.

Fitch’s rating of BB- for Uzbekistan is the same as Turkey, above Tajikistan but below Kazakhstan. Giving out its first sovereign rating, Fitch said that Uzbekistan had “embarked on an ambitious and comprehensive reform programme” but that there were risks.

“A fast-moving, complex and broad reform agenda create some concerns regarding coordination and institutional capacity of the public administration to effectively plan and execute policy measures while minimising economic distortions,” Fitch said.

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>>This story was first published in issue 395 of The Conway Bulletin on Dec. 23 2018

Turkmenistan says to re-start gas exports to Russia

OCT. 10 (The Conway Bulletin) – Turkmenistan will resume sending gas to Russia in January, Alexei Miller, the Gazprom CEO, was quoted by official Turkmen media as saying on a trip to Ashgabat, giving Turkmenistan’s Pres. Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov a much-needed political boost (Oct. 10).

Turkmen gas exports to Russia were slashed in 2014 during a row over pricing and cut altogether in 2016 during a Russian economic downturn that was triggered by an energy price collapse.

The cut hurt Turkmenistan economically and left it overly reliant on China as its only gas supply client. Its economy has also been hard hit by the drop in energy prices. The economic news coming out of Turkmenistan has been dire, with Mr Berdymukhamedov being forced to cut Soviet-era subsidies on utilities.

Mr Miller said exact details of new gas imports needed to be worked out.

“The intergovernmental agreement between Russia and Turkmenistan on cooperation in the gas sphere is valid until the end of 2018. It was paused for commercial reasons and will be renewed by the end of 2018,” Mr Miller was quoted as saying by official Turkmen media. “In this regard, we discussed the resumption of the procurement of Turkmen gas by Gazprom, which will start in January 2019.”

Analysts speculated on the timing of Russia resuming gas exports from Turkmenistan. Some said that it was linked to Russia’s efforts to dampen the increased lure of gas sales to Europe from the region.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Kazakhstan’s on-off, on-off IPOs

>> Kazakhstan has talked up the IPOs of several large state-owned companies this year but, James Kilner asks, where are they?

Was that the sound of the starting gun or was it another decoy on Kazakhstan’s journey to selling off 25% stakes in a handful of its most senior companies?

I’m talking about, of course, news this week that Kazatomprom, Kazakhstan nuclear agency, plans to list GDRs in London.

GDRs, or to use their full title — Global Depository Receipts, are a financial instrument that allows companies to sell share certificates, issued by depositary banks, to professional and institutional investors. Issuing GDRs, rather than selling off shares, is, to some degree, a more limited version of a full IPO. Access to the stock is controlled; the market is ring-fenced.

Much of the reporting of Kazatomprom’s announcement that it intended to sell off GDRs on the London Stock Exchange was excitable, exclaiming that the ‘People’s IPO’ in Kazakhstan was finally happening. But is it? Yes, selling GDRs in London will dilute the state’s ownership of Kazatomprom but this is still a long way from an IPO on an international exchange. In January this year, Kazmunaigas, the Kazakh state energy company, said that it was buying back its GDRs in London so that it could prepare for a full listing.

Does this then mean that Kazatomprom has ditched the idea of a full IPO? Where does this leave other Kazakh companies contemplating IPOs, among them Air Astana which is part-owned by BAE Systems? And what of the Astana International Finance Centre (AIFC) – President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s Great White Hope on the Kazakh steppe? Since it was officially launched in July at the site of the former EXPO in Astana, the news flow has gone quiet. It was supposed to carry an equivalent 25% Kazakh listing to match any international listing.

But despite the fanfare and the general upbeat notices from Kazakh officials, the anticipated IPOs have failed to materialise this year. Kazatomprom talked up a listing on the AIFC at the same time that it lists its GDRs sell in London but the details have yet to be released.

There is still time, of course, but Kazakhstan and its companies need to shift up a gear if they are going to hit the expectations that they have drummed up. The IPO market has weakened over the year, possibly delaying Kazakhstan’s IPO plans, but Kazatomprom’s GDR listing is not enough to give ordinary investors a decent buy-in into Kazakhstan and Kazakh companies.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Capital investments in Kazakhstan rise

OCT. 14 (The Conway Bulletin) – Capital investments in Kazakhstan rose by 22% in January-September compared to the same period in 2017, the Kazakh statistic agency said. The data is important as it underlines the progress that economies in the region are making since an economic downturn in 2014-17. Most of the investment was directed into mining, construction and real estate.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Kazakhstan raises interest rates for first time since 2016

ALMATY/Oct. 16 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan’s Central Bank raised its key interest rate for the first time in 2-1/2 years because of the rising threat of inflation, highlighting growing concern in the region that price rises may wipe out tentative economic gains made since a 2014-17 downturn.

Announcing the rate rise to 9.25% from 9%, Kazakh Central Bank chief Daniyer Akishev said inflation was currently sitting at 6.1%, square in the middle of the government’s 5-7% target for the year, but that pressure was building.

“Today’s decision, in our opinion, will reduce the severity of the problem,” he said. “The new level of base rates will increase the demand for tenge assets and bring monetary and credit conditions to a level close to neutral.”

Kazakhstan is the biggest economy in Central Asia and had looked to have made a reasonable recovery from a sharp economic downturn between 2014 and 2017 that was triggered by a collapse in oil prices and a recession in Russia. Over the last few months, though, the Kazakh tenge has come under pressure, dropping to its lowest level since the start of 2016. Analysts said global insecurity and concern over Emerging Markets have hit the tenge.

The Kazakh Central Bank last increased its core interest rate in February 2016 when it raised it by 1 percentage point to 17%. From then it slashed interest rates to 9% to stimulate growth.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Azerbaijani jailed banker’s wife suspected of money laundering

OCT. 10 (The Conway Bulletin) – A woman under investigation in Britain’s first case involving an Unexplained Wealth Order (UWO) for spending $21m at the London department store Harrods, buying a nearby townhouse and also a golf course outside London was named as Azerbaijani Zamira Hajiyeva. Ms Hajiyeva is the wife of Jahangir Hajiyev, the former chairman of International Bank of Azerbaijan who was jailed in 2016 for fraud.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Regus opens third office block in Tbilisi

OCT. 15 (The Conway Bulletin) – Regus, the London-listed company that offers serviced offices, hot-desking and virtual offices around the world, said that is was going to open a third site in Tbilisi. In an interview with Georgia Today, Regus area manager for Georgia, Ruska Chakvetadze, said that the expansion reflected increased interest in Georgia from international companies.

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>>This story was first published in issue 388 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 17 2018

Kazakhs do deals worth $1.9b done on China trip

SEPT. 26 (The Conway Bulletin) – On a trip to Beijing, Kazakhstan’s first deputy PM Askar Mamin and his counterpart Chinese first vice-premier Han Zheng, oversaw the signing of $1.9b of deals. The deals underline just how important close business relations with China are to Kazakhstan. The deals covered sectors from transport to agriculture to logistics.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

Uzbekistan, India aim to triple trade

TASHKENT/OCT. 1 (The Conway Bulletin) — At a meeting in Delhi, Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev and Indian PM Narendra Modi promised to deepen bilateral relations with a specific focus on trade.

Central to their ambition is an agreement to increase bilateral trade to $1b a year by 2020, tripling the current volume. Areas of focus include agriculture, tourism, military education, justice, health and medical science and pharmaceuticals. Specific trade agreements were signed between the Uzbek region of Andijan and Gujarat and also between Samarkand and Agra.

Mr Mirziyoyev said that a strategic partnership with India was a priority.

“We have agreed to closely cooperate in the sphere of developing a new transport connectivity corridor,” he said.

India wants to boost its influence in Central Asia to counterbalance the dominance of China and also to improve its access to natural resources and electricity.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

Moscow Stock Exchange buys 20% stake in KASE