Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

Stock market: Tethys, Nostrum, KAZ Minerals, TBC Bank

SEPT. 3 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Shares in Toronto- and London listed Tethys Petroleum, whose focus is on oil and gas production and exploration in Central Asia, fell significantly after rival Nostrum on Aug. 28 cut a third off the value of an earlier buyout offer.

Tethys shares in Toronto fell by 20% and in London by 29.3%. Tethys responded by saying that it would honour the exclusivity agreement with Nostrum and then look to other companies for potential buyers.

Nostrum said that it had cut its offer after a new due diligence project showed that the original offer had overvalued the company.

In mining, shares in London-listed KAZ Minerals lost 14.2% of their value between Aug. 28 and Sept. 4, wiping gains from August’s devaluation.

KAZ Minerals used to be called Kazakhmys and is focused on copper production.

The Global Depositary Receipts (GDRs) of TBC Bank, which are traded in London, fell by around 8% over the week to $9.12, the lowest price to date for the bank.

TBC, which is the largest retail bank in Georgia and counts PM Irakli Garibashvili as a director, has been trading its GDRs in London since 2014.

The Georgian economy, like the rest of the region, has been dealing with the fallout from the slowdown in Russia’s economy. Georgia is also vulnerable to Greece, its second largest source of remittances. There was no particular news from TBC that would have pressures its GDRs.

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(News report from Issue No. 280, published on  May 13 2016)

 

Kazakhstan pressures free media

SEPT. 1 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The New York-based Human Rights Watch criticised Kazakhstan’s commitment to free speech after it ordered the independent-minded ADAM magazine to be suspended for three months for failing to publish copies in both Russian and Kazakh. The authorities closed down its predecessor ADAM Bol in 2014.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on Sept. 4 2015)

AvtoVAZ to increase prices in Kazakhstan

SEPT. 1 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian car manufacturer AvtoVAZ said it would increase prices in the Kazakh market by 3%. “The new pricing policy is due to changing macroeconomic factors and increased competition,” a company official told kapital.kz. Kazakhstan has devalued its currency and inflation is rising. This is the fourth price rise in 2015.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on  Sept. 4 2015)

 

Kazakh prosecutor bans websites

AUG. 28 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Increasingly concerned about radicalising influences, Kazakhstan’s prosecutor-general said it was banning 700 websites and 21 religious organisation. Kazakhstan and other Central Asian states are worried about extremists linked to the IS group recruiting disenfranchised young men to their causes. Free speech activists have accused the government of using these concerns as a pretext for clamping down on media.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on Sept. 4 2015)

Devaluation worries in Kazakh economy

SEPT. 3 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Umut Shayakhmetova, chairman of Halyk Bank, said the devaluation of the tenge last month would hit businesses hard and that the impact would be heavier than a devaluation in 2014. “It will affect the economy. Our clients will experience a drop in sales,” media quoted her as saying at a press conference.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on Sept. 4 2015)

Currencies: Kyrgyz som falls to lowest level in a decade

SEPT. 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Kyrgyz som lost 5.4% of its value on Sept. 1 falling to 66 som to $1, the biggest fall by any currency in Central Asia and the South Caucasus over the past week and the lowest value for the som against the US dollar for at least a decade.

This was also the som’s biggest one-day loss since March 2014. The Kyrgyz government, like the rest of Central Asia, has been battling to defend its currency against a sharp fall in the value of the Russian rouble, still the main driver of regional economic growth.

It’s unclear what pressured the Kyrgyz som to fall so severely but a few days earlier the head of the Central Bank Tolkunbek Abdygulov had said that the currency had dropped by 10.3% in 2015 despite the the government spending nearly $180m to protect its value.

“The National Bank will have enough reserves to avoid sharp fluctuations in the exchange rate of the som. Now the situation on the market is stable. There are no reasons for anxiety and panic,” media quoted Mr Abdygulov as saying on Aug. 25.

His statement and the subsequent fall in the value of the som suggest that the Kyrgyz Central Bank may be struggling to maintain its value.

Across the border in Kazakhstan, the Kazakh tenge has been stable at a level of 242/$1 during the past week, down from the a high of 252/$1 in August. The Kazakh Central Bank’s decision to adopt a new benchmark interest rate policy on Sept. 2, did not appear to have a significant impact on the exchange rate.

Elsewhere in Central Asia, the Tajik somoni and the Uzbek sum remained substantially unchanged. Currencies in the South Caucasus kept their against the US dollar throughout the week, fluctuating by just 1%.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on  Sept. 4 2015)

 

Comment: Kazakhs steady themselves for the impact of Devaluation 2

SEPT. 4 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Timing is everything and fortune favoured me last month.

By chance, I flew into Almaty 24 hours after Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev and Central Bank chief Kairat Kelimbetov had released the tenge from its US dollar peg.

This effectively triggered a 23% devaluation of the currency. I would be able to experience Ground Zero in the latest Emerging Markets currency crisis. If you’re a journalist, this is a good thing.

But if my timing had been fortunate, Mr Nazarbayev and Mr Kelimbetov hadn’t been so lucky. They had overseen an earlier devaluation of the tenge, let’s call this Devaluation 1, which hadn’t worked out. The current currency crisis, Devaluation 2, is a direct result of this mismanagement.

Without warning Mr Nazarbayev and Mr Kelimbetov had devalued the tenge by 20% in February 2014, hoping to make the Kazakh economy more competitive. The timing was poor, though, and within weeks Russia had become a pariah state in the eyes of the West because of its support for rebels in east Ukraine. Sanctions followed, denting Russia which is still the main economic driver in Central Asia. Within another six months oil prices collapsed and the Russian rouble went into free-fall.

The original Nazarbayev-Kelimbetov devaluation strategy, was undermined.

And this forced them into a corner. Defying economic logic and trying to rescue their own pride, they defended the new tenge-dollar peg despite neighbouring currencies sinking and oil prices flat-lining.

In the end, Mr Nazarbayev and Mr Kelimbetov bowed to the inevitable. The tenge is now around 39% cheaper than it was in January 2014.

On the streets of Almaty, ordinary Kazakhs generally greeted the devaluation with a shrug. There was also a palpable sense of relief. A second devaluation was always going to happen. The day after the devaluation, the run on the exchange kiosks was for tenge which signalled that most people thought it had bottomed out and wouldn’t devalue further.

And, crucially, it felt as if people had seen it all before.

We know what is going to happen next. The fallout from Devaluation 1 will guide us through the fallout from Devaluation 2. There will be price inflation, followed by salary rises. There will be job losses and the competitiveness generated by the devaluation will recede.

The major difference now is that the tenge currency is, theoretically at least, floating free.

By James Kilner, Editor, The Conway Bulletin

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 246, published on  Sept. 4 2015)

Kazakh president defends democratic record

AUG. 28 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a speech to mark the 20th anniversary of the Kazakh constitution, President Nursultan Nazarbayev defended his democratic record and said Kazakhstan’s particularly diverse ethnic make-up made full democracy difficult to achieve.

Mr Nazarbayev, who won a presidential election in April with 98% of the vote, said that it was unfair to accuse him of being an autocrat.

“I know that we are sometimes accused of autocracy,” media quoted him as saying.

“How can we talk about autocracy when every four to five years the people vote in free elections to choose a president and elect a parliament?”

Western vote monitors have never judged an election in Kazakhstan to be either free or fair and Mr Nazarbayev’s opponents have previously accused him of being an autocrat, an accusation that clearly irks him.

Mr Nazarbayev who is 75-years- old and has yet to name a successor, has ruled over Kazakhstan since 1991 when the Soviet Union collapsed and the Central Asian states became independent countries for the first time.

He has often defended his record and said that Western-style democracy takes time to build.

“We need to consider that we are an Asian society, we have different traditions from the West,” Mr Nazarbayev said in his speech.

“We have other religious and cultural views, therefore we need to move carefully.”

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on Sept. 4 2015)

 

Kazakh miner and Chinese bank sign $2b deal

SEPT. 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Eurasian Resources Group, owner of Kazakhstan’s miner ENRC, signed a financing agreement with the China Development Bank for $2b in Kazakhstan, the FT reported. The Kazakh government and a group of businessmen own the Eurasian Resources Group. Marred with corruption allegations, the management of ENRC de-listed from the London Stock Exchange in 2013. The company now works with China on aluminium, iron ore and power projects in Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on  Sept. 4 2015)

 

Kazakh Central Bank picks new interest rate

SEPT. 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan’s Central Bank picked the overnight repo rate as its benchmark interest rate and main tool for manipulating monetary policy, setting it at 12%.

The decision came two weeks after the Central Bank allowed the tenge to free float, abandoning the peg to the US dollar. The free-float pushed the value of the tenge down by 23%, the second devaluation in less than two years.

“This rate is aimed at directing nominal rates in the money market and will become a key instrument of the credit and monetary policy, in the new inflation-targeting regime,” the Central Bank said in a statement.

The tenge traded at around 240 to $1 immediately after the new interest rate was announced, having strengthened from 252 to $1 after the US dollar peg was ditched in August. By comparison, in February 2014, before the first devaluation, the tenge traded at 155 to $1.

Analysts welcomed the relatively high benchmark interest rate, saying that the tenge needed this level of support.

Sabit Khakimzhanov, head of research at Halyk Finance, said that the Central Bank may even need to increase this key interest rate by one percentage point to 13%.

“The interest rate in the money market is the only instrument left at the disposal of the NBK (National Bank of Kazakhstan) to manage inflation and the exchange rate,” he said.

“Only by keeping the rates credibly high, that is, at a level sufficiently high to enforce the necessary discipline and for a sufficiently long time. The interest rate corridor 12-14% meets these requirements.”

Other analysts said the high interest rate may encourage Kazakhs to keep their money in the bank.

“The high rate levels are clearly seen as securing the banking system from deposit outflows and anchoring inflation expectations,” Dmitry Polevoy, a Moscow-based economist at ING Groep NV, told Bloomberg News.

Previously the key interest rate had been the ineffective refinancing rate set at 5.5%.

Earlier this year the Kazakh government said that targeting inflation was going to be the main driver of its future economic policies.

The problem is that with the tenge devaluing and with oil prices remaining stubbornly low, the Kazakh government has already said that inflation is likely to climb above its 6-8% corridor target.

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(News report from Issue No. 246, published on  Sept. 4 2015)