Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

As global finances wobble, Kazakh stocks drop hard

AUG. 10 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Attention may have focused on Western Europe and the US but Central Asia’s biggest financial centre, Kazakhstan, did not escape the turmoil that has gripped world financial markets over the last week.

A ratings downgrade for the United States and worries about eurozone debt have spooked investors. There has been a flight to safety — gold and the Swiss Franc have boomed — as investors have become more wary of risk. Not good news for emerging markets, then.

Tellingly, Kazakhstan has been one of the worst hit stock markets in the world. Between Aug. 1 – 9 Bloomberg data showed the Kazakhstan Stock Exchange (KASE) lost about 22% of its value.

To throw in a few numbers, KASE — which includes the state oil and gas company Kazmunaigas, miner ENRC, copper producer Kazakhmys and the country’s biggest banks — is now valued at around 63% of its mid-February value. Many of the companies listed on KASE have their main listing on the London Stock Exchange where the drop was far less dramatic.

KASE recovered 7% of its value on Aug. 10 but it hasn’t been this low since the start of March 2009 when the world was tentatively starting to emerge from the global financial slowdown.

Of course volatile oil prices play their part in pushing KASE up and down but so does general investor sentiment and they worry about emerging market risk.

KASE may be a relatively minor stock market but it is still a decent weather mast. That said, emerging markets with their potential for high growth rates will always attract investors.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 52, published on Aug. 10 2011)

Kazakhstan’s KMG EP lowers 2011 production target

JULY 27 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A strike at an oil field in western Kazakhstan forced KMG EP, the London- listed arm of the Kazakh state energy company, to lower its initial 2011 production target by 6%. This is a further reduction from two weeks ago when KMG EP said the strike at its Ozenmunaigas oil field would lower production by 4%.

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(News report from Issue No. 50, published on July 27 2011)

Kazakh president’s aide hints at a successor

JULY 25 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakh billionaire Timur Kulibayev could take over the presidency of Kazakhstan if his father-in-law, President Nursultan Nazarbayev, was forced to step down, one of Mr Nazarbayev’s top political advisers told a newspaper. Yermukhamet Yertysbayev’s statement re-ignited debate over succession plans in Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 50, published on July 27 2011)

Succession plans dominate political gossip in Kazakhstan

JULY 27 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Kazakh constitution bans its subjects from discussing the health of Nursultan Nazarbayev, their 71-year-old leader, but a week after news leaked out that he may have visited a hospital in Germany for prostrate surgery, his succession plans have become the talk of the country.

Now Yermukhamet Yertysbayev, one of Mr Nazarbayev’s closest advisers, has suggested his son-in-law Timur Kulibayev could take over if ill health ever forced the president to step down.

“It is Kulibayev who would be able to continue the president’s strategic course, in the case of an extraordinary situation connected with the sudden departure of the head of state,” he said in an interview to the Russian newspaper Kommersant.

Hardly definitive then, but what Mr Yertsybayev says is important. The Kazakh media have dubbed him “a nightingale””for testing public opinion of potential future policies by gently floating them out through statements.

It is also perhaps the first time that Mr Kulibayev, 44, has been so publicly linked to the presidency, although he was quick to deny any interest. This year Mr Kulibayev has assumed more power. He was made head of Kazakhstan’s $80b sovereign wealth fund and also a board director at Gazprom, the Russian energy monopoly.

Earlier this year Mr Nazarbayev won an election that will keep him in power for another five years.

Kazakhs, though, have already begun discussing what happens beyond 2016.

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(News report from Issue No. 50, published on July 27 2011)

Kazakh President Nazarbayev flies to a hospital in Germany

JULY 20 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – A secret trip by Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev to a hospital in Germany, reportedly for prostrate surgery, has unnerved investors.

Immediately after German tabloid newspaper Bild reported the news on July 18, the interest earned on holding Kazakh sovereign debt increased. This effectively meant investors believed that with Mr Nazarbayev in hospital taking on Kazakh debt meant taking on more risk.

After the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan became increasingly closed and instability stalked Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan but Mr Nazarbayev is credited with keeping Kazakhstan stable and opening it up to Western businesses.

His status was underlined last year when the Kazakh Parliament bestowed upon him the title of “Father of the Nation”. This year Mr Nazarbayev has won an election with 95% of the vote and said that he wants to rule until 2020.

For investors looking for stability, Mr Nazarbayev is generally good news. The problem is — what happens after the 71-year-old Nazarbayev leaves office? He doesn’t appear to have a firm succession plan.

The powers of his son-in-law Timur Kulibayev have grown this year but his ascendency to the top job is by no means guaranteed. Kazakhstan’s politics are a patchwork of competing clans and groups and other powerful figures such as PM Karim Massimov, Economy Minister Kairat Kelimbetov and Imangali Tasmagambetov, the mayor of Astana, have been touted as potential successors.

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(News report from Issue No. 49, published on July 20 2011)

Kazakh president reportedly has prostate surgery

JULY 19 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, 71, has had secret prostate surgery in a hospital in Hamburg, German tabloid Bild reported. Nazarbayev is considered key to stability in Kazakhstan and the news spooked investors. Bild said Nazarbayev went into hospital on July 14 and left two days later. The President’s office just said he was on holiday.

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(News report from Issue No. 49, published on July 20 2011)

Sixteen die in prison breakout attempt in Kazakhstan

JULY 12 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Kazakh authorities said a group of 16 prisoners died in an explosion as they tried to break out of a jail on July 10 in the town of Balkhash in central Kazakhstan, media reported. In June 2010, 21 prisoners escaped from a maximum security prison in western Kazakhstan. Most were recaptured.

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(News report from Issue No. 48, published on July 12 2011)

Nine Kazakh gunmen killed in Aktobe shootout

JULY 11 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Police in west Kazakhstan killed nine gunmen alleged to have shot dead two policemen on June 30, local media said. Four police also died in the operation. The authorities denied media reports the gunmen were linked to militant Islam. In May, a suicide bomber with links to radical Islam attacked security forces in the nearby city of Aktobe.

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(News report from Issue No. 48, published on July 12 2011)

Pop star Sting sides with striking Kazakh oil workers

JULY 5 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Workers’ rights, the energy business and rock music are mixing into a potent concoction in Kazakhstan.

British pop star Sting stepped into the row between striking oil workers and Kazakhstan’s business elite when he cancelled a concert in support of a six-week long strike. Sting’s concert had been planned for Astana on July 4 as part of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s birthday celebrations.

Cancelling it handed the oil workers a massive publicity coup and Nazarbayev a very public snub.

On his website Sting, former frontman of the 1970s/1980s rock band The Police, said: “Hunger strikes, imprisoned workers and tens of thousands on strike represents a virtual picket line which I have no intention of crossing.”

Perhaps Sting also had in mind the criticism he took last year after playing for the daughter of Uzbek President Islam Karimov, a man western human rights groups accuse of abuses.

The Kazakh strikers are mainly from Ozenmunaigas, a subsidiary of the state energy company Kazmunaigas in Kazakhstan’s energy producing western hinterland. They say they are not being paid enough. The authorities and Kazmunaigas have declared the strike illegal and arrested some of the workers’ leaders but they have failed to pressure them back to work.

Strikes in Kazakhstan are rare. This one though has already forced KMG EP, the London-listed arm of Kazmunaigas, to reduce its 2011 production forecast by 4% and looks set to rumble on.

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(News report from Issue No. 47, published on July 6 2011)

Kazakh entrepreneur Kulibayev named Gazprom director

JUNE 30 2011 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian gas monopoly Gazprom appointed Timur Kulibayev, the favoured son-in-law of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, as one of its directors. Mr Kulibayev was appointed head of Kazakhstan’s $80b sovereign wealth fund earlier this year.

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(News report from Issue No. 47, published on July 6 2011)