Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

China expresses interest in Kazakh Mangistau

FEB. 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Alik Aidarbayev, head of the Mangistau region of western Kazakhstan, said that only China has expressed serious interest in paying for the construction of a new oil refinery. The Mangistau region has been working on plans to build Kazakhstan’s fourth refinery for years. Mr Aidarbayev’s comments are important because they show both the financial power of China and the relative weakness of Russia. Kazakhstan has been looking to boost its refinery capacity for some time. It currently has three refineries.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

Kazakhstan raises interest rate

FEB. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan’s Central Bank raised interest rates by 1 percentage point to 17%, its first monetary policy move for three months. The Kazakh tenge has been sliding in value and the Central Bank has at times appeared powerless to stop this. It has slowly increased interest rates but to limited effect.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

Kazakhstan releases activist

FEB. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Serikzhan Mambetalin, a Kazakh opposition activist, was freed from prison after issuing an apology for inciting ethnic hatred. Mambetalin and his colleague, Ermek Narymbayev, were jailed at the end of January. Mambetalin’s lawyer told RFE/RL that his appeal process was still ongoing. The Kazakh authorities have clamped down on the country’s beleaguered opposition as the economy has worsened.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

Food prices inflate in Kazakhstan

FEB. 1 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Annualised food price inflation in Kazakhstan measured 11.6% for the 12-months to the end of January, the country’s statistics service said. The data highlights just how fast prices have risen in Kazakhstan. It devalued its currency last year, forcing up prices and salaries.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

 

Exxon bets on Kazakh oil field

FEB. 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — US oil company ExxonMobil said that it still thinks the giant Kashagan oil field in the Kazakh sector of the Caspian Sea will re-start production by the end of the year. ExxonMobil also said Kashagan will be one of its four key start-up projects for 2016. Other estimates forecast that repairs to essential pipeline infrastructure could drag on until 2017. ExxonMobil owns 16.81% in the international venture that operates Kashagan.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

Business comment: Central Bank intrigue in Kazakhstan

FEB. 5 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — In Kazakhstan, the Central Bank resumed its work as the country’s financial regulator after a three-month hiatus, increasing interest rates by 1 percentage point to 17%.

Daniyar Akishev, the Central Banker, is at the helm again, it seems. He even ordered a handful of interventions in the currency market in January, something he had ruled out since his appointment last November.

Now, Kazakhstan watchers expect monetary policy to become more stable and predictable in the coming months. The next policy meeting will be held in six weeks, one week before a parliamentary election on March 20.

Still, many don’t see Mr Akishev’s position as an independent one. He is a seasoned Central Bank employee, but it is clear that he is not as free as many Western Central Bankers are.

A recent symbolic move could corroborate this view. This week, Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a decree that makes the Central Banker’s signature on the back of banknotes redundant.

Only eagles, monuments and the President’s handprint will continue to feature in Kazakhstan’s colourful currency.

The Central Banker’s signature is a convention that most countries in the world adopt.

Kazakhstan will now join a handful of countries that don’t feature their Central Banker’s signature on banknotes. This group includes China, Japan and Uzbekistan.

This might be, essentially, a final step by the Kazakh government to strip the Central Bank of the independence it gained under former governor Grigory Marchenko who left in 2013.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

Kazakh government wins case v Mongolia

FEB. 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kazakh government defeated a law suit filed against it by Erdenet Mining, a Mongolian company, in a London commercial court over the bankruptcy of a mining company in the 1990s. Although Balkhashmys, the mining company, was private, the Mongolian company still said Kazakhstan had responsibility for its losses. The court in London said that it had no jurisdiction over the case and threw out the Mongolian claims.

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(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

Sumatec delays start of operations at Kazakhstan’s Buzachi field

FEB. 2 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Malaysian oil company Sumatec said that it hadn’t yet started operations at its Buzachi field in the Mangistau region, western Kazakhstan, that it bought last year for $290m from Borneo Energy. It has delayed a $105m payment to different creditors until Buzachi starts production.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

Kcell revenues fall 10% as economic downturn bites Kazakhstan

ALMATY, JAN. 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Revenues at Kazakh telecoms company Kcell fell for the first time in six years in 2015, evidence that worsening financial conditions are hitting all sectors of Kazakhstan’s economy.

Last year Kcell revenues dropped 10% to 168b tenge ($448m), the company said at its full year results. In US dollar terms, however, the comparison looks worse. In 2014, revenues stood at 187.6b tenge or $1.01b at the time. This means that revenues dropped 56% in US dollar terms. The Kazakh tenge lost half its value against the US dollar in 2015.

The management at Kcell blamed the downturn on low oil prices, the sharp depreciation of the tenge and a tough market.

“We experienced a tough operating environment in 2015, with the devaluation of the tenge, oil price weakness and a Kazakh telecoms market characterised by intensive competition,” Arti Ots, Kcell’s CEO said in a statement.

Tellingly, though, Kcell’s subscriber numbers fell by 7.5% and the average spend per consumer dropped by 8.7% in 2015 highlighting competition and creeping conservatism by consumers. Overall operating profit was down by 30%.

There is fierce competition in Kazakhstan’s saturated mobile market, an issue that Askar Akhmedov, a telecoms analyst at Halyk Finance, raised.

“The price war between Kazakhstan’s mobile operators appears to be intensifying,” he said in a note clients. Overall, he said that these results were worse than expected.

Swedish telecoms company TeliaSonera owns 61.9% in Kcell and in its sister company Activ.

Last year, TeliaSonera said it would sell stakes in companies across the South Caucasus and Central Asia after its Uzbek subsidiary became embroiled in a corruption scandal centred on payments made in 2008 to win a mobile phone licence.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)

Cliq says has sorted deal with oil field in Kazakhstan

FEB. 5 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Malaysian oil company Cliq Energy said it still hadn’t obtained permission to buy an oil field in Kazakhstan from the Malaysian authorities. The Securities Commission of Malaysia previously turned down Cliq’s request to go ahead with the deal. Last year, Cliq paid $110m for two blocks at the Karazhanbas North oil field. It needs to finalise the deal by a April 9 deadline.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 266, published on Feb. 5 2016)