Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan wants high-speed train to Beijing

OCT. 12 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan is keen to build a high-speed train link between Beijing and Astana which will also connect China to Moscow and Berlin. Kazakh PM Bakytzhan Sagintayev suggested the infrastructure project at a meeting of heads of governments of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) member states in Dushanbe. He said that a high-speed train link was an obvious extension for China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

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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

Kazakhstan denies asylum to whistle-blower of Chinese camps

OCT. 5 (The Conway Bulletin) – Human rights activists accused Kazakhstan of caving into Chinese pressure after it refused to grant asylum to an ethnic Kazakh who had fled across the border earlier this year from China where she said that she had been forced to work at an internment camp set up to ‘re-educate’ Uighurs. In August a court had agreed not to send Sayragul Sauytbay back to China for illegally crossing into the country earlier in the year. Instead it gave her a suspended prison sentence and set her free. During her earlier trial, Ms Sauytbay had testified that China had set up a series of camps to ‘re-educate’ the Xinjiang region’s Muslim communities, mainly Uighurs but also ethnic Kazakhs, Kyrgyz and Hui.

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

Kazakhstan’s Tsesnabank not imposing restrictions

SEPT. 26 (The Conway Bulletin) – Crisis-hit Tsesnabank, Kazakhstan’s second largest bank, said that although it had experienced “an unexpected and sharp increase of fund withdrawal requests” it had not set withdrawal restrictions despite some Kazakh media reporting that limits had been imposed. The Central Bank is effectively bailing out Tsesnabank by buying up its $1.2b agriculture loan portfolio.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

KAZ Minerals backs Bozymchak mine

SEPT. 29 (The Conway Bulletin) – In an apparent PR attempt to remind the Kyrgyz government of its commitment to the Bozymchak gold mine in south Kyrgyzstan, which was raided by financial police in June, London-listed KAZ Minerals said that it had invested $350m into the site over the past 10 years, created jobs for 1,200 people and paid taxes of $41.2m. KAZ Minerals is worried that the Kyrgyz government is pressuring the mine for money or increased ownership.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

Russia’s Transmashholding buys Kazakh rail carriage maker

SEPT. 27 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russia’s Transmasholding has signed a deal to buy 99% of the railway carriage maker Tuplar-Talgo from Kazakhstan’s Temirzholy state railway company, media reported. Media reported that the deal was signed on Sept. 20. The Tulpar-Talgo plant was opened in Astana on 2011 to produce railway stock for companies in Central Asia.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 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

Kazakhstan gives regional governments a development boost

SEPT. 25 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan will spend 194.3b tenge ($547m) on developing its regions this year, economy minister Timur Suleimenov said at a government meeting. Kazakhstan has been developing a policy of boosting four key hubs — Almaty, Aktau, Shymkent and Astana — as regional growth centres.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018

Karachaganak partners agree to pay Kazakhstan $1.1b

ALMATY/OCT. 1 (The Conway Bulletin) — The partners developing the Karachagank oil and gas site, a cornerstone of Kazakhstan’s energy production, agreed to pay the Kazakh government $1.1b, settling a long-running dispute over profit sharing.

Kazakhstan will also receive an estimated $415m in extra revenue by 2037, based on the price of oil at $80/barrel, in the new profit sharing deal.

For the Karachaganak partners — Shell, ENI, Lukoil, Chevron and Kazmunaigas — and their shareholders, the deal marks the end of a dispute that could have severely undermined the project from 2015 when Kazakh officials first accused the consortium of an unfair profit sharing deal. None of the partners have yet commented on the deal.

The final $1.1b agreed fee is less than the initial $1.6b that Kazakhstan had pushed, although the additional earnings will probably take it close to that amount.

There is also a $1b long-term loan that the consortium has agreed to give to Kazakhstan to develop its regions.

The partners have also committed to spending $5b on upgrading the site to ensure that production continues.

Karachaganak is one of the most important oil and gas projects in Kazakhstan producing nearly 50% of its gas and 18% of its oil production.
This year, Kazakhstan has increased oil production by 5.3% to 60m tonnes by the end of August, the Kazakh energy ministry said earlier this month.

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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

ALMATY/SEPT. 27 (The Conway Bulletin) — — The Moscow Stock Exchange (MOEX) said it will buy a 20% stake in the Almaty-based Kazakhstan Stock Exchange (KASE) for 338m roubles ($5.2m).

The deal raises questions about the Astana Stock Exchange that opened this year and has been feted by Kazakh officials as the financial market that will attract serious global capital to Kazakhstan.

Neither MOEX nor KASE, which was set-up in 1993 and has been derided as an illiquid relic, have commented on the deal but in April Alexander Afanasiev, CEO of the Moscow Stock Exchange, had said, when a memorandum of understanding was signed, that a tie-up would improve the liquidity of both markets.

“This partnership is an important step towards integration of the markets of the Eurasian Economic Union,” he said. “Investors in both countries will receive access to new instruments, while issuers will enjoy new sources of capital.”

To the north, the Astana Stock Exchange, sited within the government-backed Astana International Finance Center, was launched to much fanfare this year. Since then, though, there has been little news. It has been promised the domestic IPOs of some of Kazakhstan’s largest companies, including Air Astana, Kazatomprom and Kazmunaigas, when they launch international IPOs this year or in 2019.
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>>This story was published in issue 387 of The Conway Bulletin on Oct. 1 2018