Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan rises oil production

MAY 30 2017 (The Bulletin) — Analysts accused Kazakhstan of breaking a pledge made to OPEC that it would reduce its oil production in line with an agreed strategy. Data from the International Energy Agency in March showed Kazakh production rising by 40,000 barrels per day to 1.718m barrels per day, despite a pledged decrease. Analysts said that increased production at Kashagan triggered the increase.

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

(News report from Issue No. 331, published on June 5 2017)

 

Kazakhstan makes extradition deal

MAY 30 2017 (The Bulletin) — An extradition treaty between Kazakhstan and India has come into effect, Indian media reported. Kazakhstan and India signed the deal in 2015 and it was ratified by their parliaments a year later. The prisoner extradition agreement is significant because it again shows the improvement in relations between Kazakhstan and India. India has pushed to improve links with Central Asia over the past few years.

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

(News report from Issue No. 331, published on June 5 2017)

 

Stock Market: KAZ Minerals

JUNE 5 2017 (The Bulletin) — KAZ Minerals, the Kazakhstan- focused copper producer, has had a bumper year and it looks like it is going to get better. A Credit Suisse stock upgrade to ‘outperform’ from ‘neutral’, helped fuel more excitement around its share price.

The London-listed stock may have ended the week down just over 2% but analysts reckon that it will hit 630p this year. That’s an increase of more than 25% from its current share price of 495p.

Credit Suisse said in its note that over the past few years the share price has been held back on concerns over its profitability, worries that have now evaporated with the Bozshakol mine coming on-stream and the Aktogal mine increasing production at a faster rate than expected.

“The funding risk is now limited even under bearish copper price assumptions,” Credit Suisse wrote in its note. “We think this justifies KAZ moving to a more de-risked valuation and thus upgrade.”

In mid-Feb, KAZ Minerals looked to be set to breakthrough the 600p barrier, hitting 589p before falling back. That was the end of a bull run that had started in mid-2016 when its share price was around 126p, partly pushed up by an increase in copper prices.

Still, there is still some way to go before it can hit the heights to 2012 and 2013 when its shares were valued at over 800p.

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

(News report from Issue No. 331, published on June 5 2017)

 

Poor economic conditions forces Carrefour to close in Kazakhstan

ALMATY, MAY 30 2017 (The Bulletin) — French hypermarket chain Carrefour will close its only store in Kazakhstan barely 15 months after opening, because the economy simply couldn’t support it.

The decision will be a personal embarrassment to Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev who toured the hypermarket based in a shopping mall on the outskirts of Almaty when it opened in February 2016.

Seung Dae-Ryu, director of Carre- four in Kazakhstan, said the main reason for closing was the devaluation of the tenge and competition.

“The closure of the store does not mean that Majid Al Futtaim Hypermarkets Kazakhstan company is moving out of the country. The company will keep monitoring the economic situation in the republic and does not exclude the possibility of coming back into the market in future,” he was quoted by media as saying.

Carrefour is operated as a franchise in Kazakhstan by Dubai-based Majid Al Futtaim. It said in 2016 that it would open up to nine Carrefour hypermarkets in Kazakhstan.

Kazakhstan’s economy is recovering, slowly. A collapse in oil prices in 2014 and a recession in Russia stalled economic growth and halved the value of the tenge. Inflation has risen and people’s real incomes have fallen.

Over the past three years Western brands delayed plans to invest in Kazakhstan and the wider region, making the Carrefour entrance in 2016 a rarity. US coffee chain Starbucks opened its first store, as did the Swedish fashion house H+M, but there was little other cheer.

Mr Nazarbayev seized on the Carrefour opening as a PR opportunity, touring the shop, talking to staff and customers. He was upbeat.

It was a far more downbeat scene at the Grand Park Mall, when The Bulletin visited this week. Workers’ wearing the Carrefour blue uniform cut a despondent sight.

“Carrefour is closing and another supermarket is coming here. We will all be fired, I do not know if the new supermarket will give us a job,” one said, declining to be named. Unemployment is difficult to measure but it is clear that there has been a significant increase since 2014.

And customers were frustrated too. Natalya, 35, said that she regularly shopped at Carrefour as she enjoyed its wide choice of products.

“It is sad that it’s closing. It was very comfortable for me,” she said.

Turkish chain Ramstor dominates the supermarket sector in Kazakhstan. European firms have said Kazakhstan’s size and its relative isolation make operating there expensive.

For Mr Nazarbayev, the closure of the Carrefour hypermarket also makes for painful comparisons with Kazakhstan’s neighbours. Last year, Majid Al Futtaim said it would open its third Carrefour hypermarket in Georgia. It also operates one in both Armenia and Tajikistan.

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

(News report from Issue No. 331, published on June 5 2017)

 

Cerrencies: Kazakhstan’s tenge, Kyrgyzstan’s som

JUNE 5 2017 (The Bulletin) — In a week of little movement, it fell to the Kazakh tenge to, quite literally, fall – but only slightly. It fell 1.1% to trade at a shade above 314/$1, its lowest since mid-May.

The move was, probably, triggered by a downward shift in Brent oil prices. The price of Brent dropped to just above $50/barrel. This is still within the generally accepted trade corridor and the impact on oil-sensitive currencies around the world was limit. The surprise was that the Azerbaijani manat, already smashed by the near- collapse of its biggest bank, didn’t shift downwards.

Elsewhere, the Uzbek soum continued its slow and controlled depreciation, down 0.6%, and the Kyrgyz som fell 1.1% to 68.1/$1 – its lowest since the end of April.

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

(News report from Issue No. 331, published on June 5 2017)

 

NASDAQ signs deal with Kazakhstan

MAY 30 2017 (The Bulletin) — NASDAQ, the US stock exchange, has signed a deal with the Astana International Finance Center to provide technology for a new stock exchange planned for later this year. Kazakhstan plans to build a new financial centre in the capital to develop its capital markets. At the centre of this financial centre will be the stock exchange.

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

(News report from Issue No. 331, published on June 5 2017)

 

Kazakhstan’s Air Astana/Kazatomprom IPOs could be delayed, says Beisengaliyev

MAY 24 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — In an interview with the FT, Berik Beisengaliyev, managing director for asset optimisation at Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund Samruk- Kazyna said that IPOs of both Air Astana and nuclear agency Kazatomprom could be shelved if market conditions were not right. Kazakhstan has been planning to list both companies in Astana and London in Q3 2018. It has been talking about listing a series of companies for several years but has consistently delayed this. The Kazakh government, through Samruk Kazyna, is 100% shareholder in Kazatomprom. It owns 51% of Air Astana, with BAE Systems owning the remaining 49%. These IPOs are an important test of Kazakhstan’s attractiveness to foreign investors.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 330, published on May 28 2017)

 

Inflation and joblessness hurt Kazakhs as economy struggles to improve

TRAIN 702TS/Kazakhstan, MAY 28 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kazakh oil executive, Serik, was clear enough. The economic problems in the system were hitting and hurting everybody and, importantly, it was much worse than the authorities were letting on.

“It took me a year to find a job. It shouldn’t take that long” he said. “I know people who are selling their property because they just can’t find work. They are selling and getting out, moving to Singapore or elsewhere.”

Through the window the Kazakh steppe rushed past. At this time of year, the clumps of long grass were only just beginning to turn an arid brown.

Serik took another sip of his beer. The bar on the train was full of men drinking beer, cheerfully, killing time before they could return to their berths and sleep. It’s a 13-hour journey from Astana to Almaty on the Spanish-built Talgo train.

Serik was heading to Almaty to meet up with old university class- mates from his time at the Kazakh State University. In an ordinary year, he said that he would fly to Almaty but this year he was looking to save money.

“The jobs have disappeared and inflation is eating people’s salaries. Not many people are happy at all,” he said. He popped another peanut into his mouth and took a long sip of his beer.

A collapse in oil prices from 2014 and a recession in Russia, Central Asia’s economic driver, forced Kazakhstan’s economy into a downward trajectory.

It is recovering now, but slowly. The tenge has halved in value, companies have laid off staff and prices are rising, faster than salaries.

Serik’s frustrations at the Kazakh economy, and his warning that things were worse than the government was prepared to let on, were repeated across Kazakhstan. In Astana, an engineer working on the government’s tech projects complained that his salary had been kept the same for years. As a subcontractor the engineer was not covered by government wage rises of around 20%, even though the cost of living had risen between 20% and 40%.

“It’s all about saving now,” he said. “As for foreign summer holidays, forget it.”

The rate of inflation given by the engineer was confirmed by several other people. It was far higher than the official inflation rate of 8%, down from 18% in the middle of 2016.

Later, in Almaty a Russian real estate dealer said that the market had pretty much flatlined. Very little was being sold or bought as prices were too unstable.

Last year, too, buyers had started to insist that he accept tenge for property deals, adding another level of instability.

“Things will get better,” he said. “But, right now, it doesn’t feel good at all.”

And there is more evidence of this on the streets of Almaty, the country’s commercial hub.

Like cavities fouling a row of perfect white teeth, empty shops displaying ‘to let’ signs scarred Almaty’s main shopping streets.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 330, published on May 28 2017)

 

Uzbekistan agrees groundbreaking transit deal

MAY 23 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — In a deal described as groundbreaking, Uzbek officials agreed to allow the country’s electricity infrastructure to be used to export power produced in Turkmenistan to Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. Analysts said that the deal, unveiled around yet another trip to Turkmenistan by Uzbek president Shavkat Mirziyoyev, showed that cooperation across the region had improved with the death last year of Uzbekistan’s Islam Karimov. Under the terms of the deal, Turkmenistan will send power to the Uzbek grid in exchange for the cancellation of its debt to Uzbekenergo.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 330, published on May 28 2017)

 

Direct flights to Saudi from Kazakhstan to start

MAY 23 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Privately owned SCAT Air has won permission from the Kazakh industry ministry to start direct flights to Saudi Arabia, media reported. There are currently no direct flights between Kazakhstan and Saudi Arabia. Kazakh officials and businessmen have said that they are keen to boost relations with Saudi Arabia and Kazakhstan. SCAT Air will also start operating flights to Yerevan from Pavlodar, Shymkent and Almaty this summer, media reported.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 330, published on May 28 2017)