Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan says it will issue an Islamic bond next year

SEPT. 17  (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan will issue an Islamic sovereign bond, or sukuk, next year, media quoted President Nursultan Nazarbayev as saying. He said that the sukuk would be worth $300m. Kazakhstan has been talking up the prospect of issuing another sukuk for years. It issued its first one, worth $57m, in 2012.

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— This story was first published in issue 344 of The Conway Bulletin, now called the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on Sept. 24 2017.

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2017

US start investigation into Kazakh titanium sponge exports

SEPT. 15  (The Bulletin) — The US authorities have started an investigation into Kazakh titanium sponge exports, the US Commerce Department said. They suspect that titanium sponge from Kazakhstan, and Japan, is being dumped in the US. They have also said that Kazakh producers may be receiving unfair subsidies. In 2016, Kazakhstan’s titanium sponge exports to the US were valued at $375,000. Titanium sponge is part of the process used to strengthen the metal for various building uses.

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— This story was first published in issue 344 of The Conway Bulletin, now called the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin, on Sept. 24 2017.

— Copyright the Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin 2017

Kazakh MPs approve draft for new Latin alphabet

SEPT. 12 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakh MPs approved a draft Latin alphabet for Kazakh. The 25-letter alphabet, it loses the ‘x’, is just the first phase in an eight-year consultative process that will culminate in 2025 when Kazakh ditches Cyrillic.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

CORRESPONDENT’S NOTEBOOK: Language in Kazakhstan

>Opposition to a switch to the Latin alphabet from Cyrillic for Kazakh has been around for years but has melted away under a government-led campaign to promote the changes.

ALMATY/SEPT. 15 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — — Only four years ago dozens of representatives of Kazakhstan’s intellectual elite wrote to President Nursultan Nazarbayev expressing their opposition to a plan to ditch the Cyrillic in favour of the Latin alphabet for Kazakh.

They said that the switch would damage the Kazakh language, undermine literature written in Cyrillic and reduce the size of the media.

This opposition is still around but now that this switch is being heavily pushed by the Kazakh government, a government that doesn’t tolerate opposition and is often described as autocratic, this opposition has melted away.

The government, and the pliant Kazakh media, has presented plans to switch the alphabets by 2022 as the overwhelming will of the people and a necessary modernisation of the Kazakh language that had only switched from Arabic script to the Cyrillic alphabet under Soviet rule in the 1920s.

But there has been no canvassing of public opinion and no poll has been published on how ordinary Kazakhs really feel about it – possibly because the results may not be as overwhelmingly in favour of the changes as the government says.

There are hints of this frustration online. Many say that the money spent on switching alphabets would be better developing the, frankly, Third World state of rural Kazakhstan or improving the education system, which is hardly drowning in accolades. One user said he was “fed up with the caprices of the few chosen elites”.

Dariya Orazbayeva, is a well-educated PR specialist living in Almaty. She speaks English but she is still against the switch.

“The process of adaptation will be really hard, I think, especially for the older generation,” she told The Conway Bulletin’s correspondent in Kazakhstan.
There are also concerns over how a 25 letter Latin alphabet, it will lose the ‘x’, can replace a 42 letter Cyrillic alphabet, which had nine letters unique to Kazakh.

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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kazakhstan buys more fighter jets from Russia

SEPT. 12 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan signed a contract with Russia to buy 12 Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jets, giving its air force a major boost and underlining its close military cooperation with Russia. Kazakh Pres. Nursultan Nazarbayev has said that he wants to strengthen Kazakhstan’s military. A Russian official said the order would be met within three years.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

COMMENT: Kazakh government is messing with its financial system

>Kazakh Central Bank remedies are unlikely to tackle fundamental supervision problems in Kazakhstan’s banking sector. Political influence will still trump formal oversight, writes Camilla Hagelund.

SEPT. 15 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — After bailing out Kazakhstan’s biggest lender, Kazkommertsbank (KKB), the National Bank of Kazakhstan (NBK) is now attempting to “reset” the country’s financial sector through a new financial support package and by boosting its own regulatory powers.

The measures introduced by the NBK are designed to improve reporting on and auditing of banks. They will also strengthen the NBK’s ability to act on its own accord. Political interference and past tendencies to bury bad news mean dramatic changes are unlikely to materialise though.

Kazakhstan’s banking troubles began with a build-up of toxic debt during the 2007-2009 crisis. These remain a burden for many Kazakh banks.

The NBK now readily admits that official statistics do not reflect the full scale of the problem. The NBK estimates that the share of non-performing loans could be as high as 25%, contrasting dramatically with the official figure of 12.8%. One of the limitations the regulator seeks to address with further regulatory powers is its current reliance on bank-reported data.

But because of the political connections of major bank shareholders, further regulatory powers are unlikely to improve the effectiveness of supervision. The biggest, KKB and Halyk Bank, are now controlled by President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s immediate family, while Tsesna Bank, the country’s third largest, is owned by the head of the Presidential Administration, Adilbek Zhaksybekov.
KKB provides an apt illustration of the restrictions on the regulator and auditors alike. According to our sources, the NBK unofficially acknowledged that KKB was bankrupt at the end of 2015 but, despite knowledge of this, the auditor approved the bank’s accounts.

Auditors likely fear that too much honesty will hurt their lucrative contracts with the government, and though the NBK may not have felt empowered to initiate a restructuring of KKB, its total lack of action indicates that political influence was exerted over the regulator.

As control over important banks remains in the hands of elite insiders, it is implausible that additional regulatory powers will overcome the ineffective oversight and moral hazards characterising the banking sector. It appears the country’s institutions unfortunately remain subject to the informal rules of the game in Kazakhstan.

Camilla Hagelund, Principal Central Asia Analyst at risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft

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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Central Asia Metals says in talks on reverse takeover

SEPT. 9 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Central Asia Metals (CAM), the Kazakhstan and Chile focused copper producer, suspended its share trading on London’s AIM after it said that it was in advanced talks over a potential “reverse takeover”. CAM didn’t specify which company it may be talking with over a deal. Its main asset is the Kounrad copper dump in Kazakhstan.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kazakhstan wants improved offer from Karachaganak partners

ALMATY/SEPT. 15 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — — Kazakh officials want an improved offer from Shell and ENI to end a long-running dispute over a $1.6b profit sharing claim at the oil and gas Karachaganak project in the north of the country.

They told the Reuters news agency that the Shell-led consortium operating the plant, Kazakhstan’s biggest gas producer, had offered to build a gas processing plant in exchange for dropping the profit sharing claim.

Kazakh Energy Minister Kanat Bozumbayev declined to confirm this but did say that the offer fell short of his expectations.

“We have calculated the value of the offer to Kazakhstan and it does not meet our demands and we have already told that to consortium members,” he said told Reuters.

“We have asked the consortium to offer something in addition.”
Kazakhstan has said that it is owed an additional $1.6b from a profit sharing scheme. The tax authorities have also investigated Karachaganak and some Western commentators have said that they are simply looking to squeeze extra cash out of their partners.

The consortium operating Karachaganak has not commented.
Shell and Italy’s Eni are the field’s operators and largest shareholders with a 29.25% stake each. Chevron (18%), Lukoil (13.5%) and state-owned Kazmunaigas (10%) own the rest.

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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kazakhs talk to OPEC about output

SEPT. 7 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakh officials are in talks with OPEC to try and arrange a separate output deal that would allow it more flexibility to ramp up output from its Kashagan field, media quoted officials as saying. OPEC has been looking to restrain global oil production to increase prices, a plan that Kazakhstan, which is not an OPEC member, has gone along with. It, though, has said that it needs to extract oil from its giant Kashagan field, which started operations last year, to repay shareholders.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017

Kazakhstan expels 61 Indian workers after fight

SEPT. 8 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan expelled 61 Indian workers after a fight at a construction site in Astana. The fight, with Kazakh security guards, highlights the often strained relations between migrant workers in Kazakhstan and locals. Kazakhstan’s economy now attracts labourers from across the region, including from China and India. The fight took place on the construction site of the 75-storey Abu Dhabi Plaza, set to become Central Asia’s tallest building.
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— This story was first published in issue 343 of The Conway Bulletin on Sept. 15 2017