Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

EBRD loans gold project in Kazakhstan

JUNE 22 2017 (The Bulletin) — The EBRD agreed a loan of $140m for Bakyrchik Mining Venture, a subsidiary of London-listed Polymetal International, to develop the Kyzyl gold deposit in Kazakhstan. The EBRD said that the loan would create 400 jobs and ensure good governance over the project. Previous mining projects in Kazakhstan have been plagued by governance issues.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan deny peacekeeping press reports

JUNE 23 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakh and Kyrgyz officials denied earlier press reports which said that they had been asked to provide peacekeeper soldiers for a force in Syria. Earlier reports had quoted Turkish and Russian sources as saying that both Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan had been asked to provide military support to a peacekeeping force in Syria. The Kazakh and Kyrgyz militaries have limited, if any, experience of peacekeeping operations.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Kazakhstan strips IS fighters of citizenship

JUNE 22 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s upper house of parliament approved a bill that will strip people accused of fighting for the extremist IS group in Syria and Iraq of their citizenship. The Kazakh authorities are increasingly worried about returnees from Syria and Iraq spreading radical ideology and fighting techniques if, and when, they move back to Kazakhstan.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Thin-skinned Kazakh officials dislike EXPO criticism

JUNE 20 2017 (The Bulletin) — Often accused of being thin-skinned, Kazakhstan reacted with fury at an article published by the Washington-based Foreign Policy magazine which said the EXPO
2017 site was boring and had no visitors. Kazakh officials claimed that Foreign Policy journalist James Palmer had never even visited the site before he wrote the story. They then also blocked the Foreign Policy website.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

ATR sets up logistics base in Kazakhstan

JUNE 21 2017 (The Bulletin) — ATR, a British oil field services company, said it had set up a new base new near Aktau after winning a series of projects. ATR, which merged with Centurion Group last year, said that the base would initially employ 12 people, although it aimed to double the size of it within 12 months. ATR rents out oil field services equipment. The Kazakh oil and gas sector is beginning to show signs of a recovery after a downturn since 2014 linked to a collapse in energy prices.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

Grain harvest to drop in Kazakhstan

JUNE 20 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan expects its grain harvest to drop to between 17m tonnes and 18m tonnes this year compared to 20.6m tonnes last year, media reported quoting agriculture minister Askar Myrzakhmetov. Grain has become an increasingly important commodity for Kazakhstan over the past decade. A crop of around 18m tonnes is roughly the mean amount that Kazakhstan expects to harvest. In 2009, it har- vested nearly 23m tonnes of grain.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Kazakh airport to be named after Nazarbaev

JUNE 21 2017 (The Bulletin) — Coinciding with the opening of a new international terminal with a capacity to process around 8.5m travellers a year, Astana airport was renamed after President Nursultan Nazarbayev. State-owned media announced the name change. Mr Nazarbayev has been accused of building a personality cult. A statue of Mr Nazarbayev sitting on a throne-like chair dominates a park in Almaty, the second city, and law- makers have also considered renaming Astana after him.

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(News report from Issue No. 334, published on June 26 2017)

 

Currencies: Kazakhstan’s tenge, Uzbekistan’s soum

JUNE 19 2017 (The Bulletin) — Falling oil prices have dented the Kazakh tenge, pushing it down to 320/$1, its lowest level since mid- February. This is a fall of 1.5% for the week, matching the fall of Brent oil. Brent oil was down at $47.37/barrel, down 1.6% for the week.

Overall, though, the Kazakh tenge is still trading up around 4% from where it started the year, although it has fallen back from highs hit in May. In May, the tenge traded at 310.6/$1 and had looked at one point as if it was going to push through the barrier.

There was little other currency moves this week, with the Azerbaijani manat staying unaffected by the fall in oil prices, and the Uzbek soum continuing its steady weekly 0.7% tick down.

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(News report from Issue No. 333, published on June 19 2017)

Kazakh capital aims to lure investors with tax breaks and stability

ASTANA, JUNE 16 2017 (The Bulletin) — Through the Astana International Financial Centre (AIFC), Kazakhstan wants to create a regional centre of excellence that will lure companies to its windswept capital with a combination of tax breaks and guarantees on stability and the rule of law.

In an interview with The Bulletin, Baurzhan Bektemirov, managing director of the AIFC, said that setting up a legal system with English common law at its heart was key to one of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s pet projects.

“We have our own regulatory framework and authority. They are completely new. We are writing new bylaws and there will be more flexibility,” he said.

The plans are ambitious. AIFC and Nazarbayev University will take over the giant site currently being used by EXPO-2017 until mid-September. AIFC will have its own courts, legal and tax systems, all of which needed tweaks to the constitution to impose.

Part of the challenge of creating a financial centre in Kazakhstan, commentators have said, is persuading companies that it is now a reliable place to invest, that their rights will be protected and that corruption, an ailment that Kazakh companies and officials have found hard to shake off, is not going to derail their plans.

Under the plans, financial companies that move to the AIFC will be given tax breaks and should benefit from a stable, investor friendly, regime at the heart of Central Asia that can be used as a launchpad into Russia and East Asia.

“There will be no income tax for 50 years but this is not the main issue, it’s more about stability and how to do business,” Mr Bektemirov said.

At the centre of the AIFC are plans for a stock exchange and the development of a liquid capital market. It will be given a boost by the IPOs next year of state-owned Air Astana, Kazmunaigas and Kazatomprom which are committed to having their primary listings in Astana, although they are free to open a secondary listing on an international market.

“The idea is to conduct IPOs in Astana. This serves two things. It is cheaper and gives local investors better access. It’s weird that local investors have to go to London and pay all these fees to invest locally. Secondly it is about creating a local capital market,” Mr Bektemirov said.

Of course, Kazakhstan already has a stock exchange in Almaty – Kase. It was set up in the early 2000s but the market and investors weren’t ready.

Mr Bektemirov shrugged when asked about it. There are lesson to be learnt but this time it will be different.

“It wasn’t successful because of institutional problems. If you want to build new business, new companies, you need to build new institutions. You can’t rely on old institutions which have their owns problems, are rigid and are used to doing business in a certain way,” he said.

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Copyright ©Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 333, published on June 19 2017)

 

Stock market: Georgia Healthcare, KAZ minerals

JUNE 19 2017 (The Bulletin) — It was a poor week for stocks in companies linked to Central Asia and the South Caucasus. All stocks were either stagnant or fell, with the notably exception of Georgia Healthcare, which is perhaps the standout performer of the year.

By the end of the week, Georgia Healthcare stock had risen by 12% to 394.5p, smashing past its previous all-time high of 373p hit in February.

As for the fallers, the heaviest tumbles were taken by KAZ Minerals and Centerra Gold. KAZ Minerals, the Kazakhstan focused copper producer, fell 11.4% to 471.5p. This, although it looks bad, was merely a correction to return to trading at a level it has been anchored around for the past month.

Centerra Gold’s shares are volatile. The Canada-based miner whose main asset is the Kumtor gold mine in eastern Kyrgyzstan is locked in a near permanent dogfight with the Kyrgyz government for control of its asset. This week, though, traders said that short-selling had knocked the value of its shares. It finished the week at C$6.72, a fall of over 8%, and its lowest level since the start of March.

Other notably fallers include Nostrum Oil & Gas, which lost around 4.7% of its stock price, more than the fall in oil, and TBC Bank, a Georgian bank, which also shed around 5% of its value, possibly because inflation data remained stubbornly high.

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Copyright ©Central Asia & South Caucasus Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 333, published on June 19 2017)