Tag Archives: banking

Stock market: Roxi Petroleum, KAZ Minerals

NOV. 5 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Stock markets saw commodities-focused companies lose terrain this week, despite a brief surge in oil prices above $50/barrel on Tuesday.

Kazakhstan-focused oil company Roxi Petroleum lost 16% in one week closing at 7.88p, perhaps driven down by technical issues slowing down its drilling operations at the BNG contract area in the western part of the country.

After peaking at 122.4p on Tuesday, mining company KAZ Minerals shares were down 8.5% to 105.7p on Friday. KAZ Minerals used to be called Kazakhmys.

In Toronto, Centerra Gold shares lost 3.5% to 7.15 Canadian dollars, continuing a 3-week slump following debates on the formation of a new government in Kyrgyzstan. The Kumtor gold mine in Kyrgyzstan is Centerra’s main asset and the company is a major taxpayer in the country. Centerra has said, though, that production at Centerra would be down this year on earlier forecasts.

A new government has now been formed in Kyrgyzstan, hopefully giving Centerra a stable partner to work with.

Shares in Bank of Georgia were down 4.5% to £19.11 on Friday.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

 

Kazakhstan’s Eurasia Bank profit drop

OCT. 30 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Net profits at Kazakhstan’s Eurasia Bank fell to 2.6b tenge ($9.1b) in the first nine months of the year, a fall of 67% from the same period in 2014. The bank, owned by businessmen Alexander Mashkevich, Alijan Ibragimov and Patokh Chodiev, declined to disclose further details of the results. In 2014, net profit fell by 13% compared to 2013.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

 

Akishev was groomed for Kazakh Central Bank top job

NOV. 2 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Daniyar Akishev’s promotion to head the Kazakh Central Bank may have taken observers by surprise but to those who know the 39-year-old, it is a job he has been groomed for.

Mr Akishev is a veteran of the Central Bank, where he worked in various positions from 1996 to 2014 before moving to the Akorda as economic adviser to President Nursultan Nazarbayev.

In 2007 Mr Akishev was rumoured to be in pole-position for taking on the role of new chief of the financial regulator.

Instead has was named deputy head of the Central Bank, a position he held for seven years, under three different bosses.

In particular, Central Bank insiders said he achieved professional maturity under Grigori Marchenko, a respected liberal economist, who often clashed with Mr Nazarbayev on economic policies.

There have been wobbles, though, in Mr Akishev’s rise to the top. In December 2008, ominously, he said the economic situation was ideal for Kazakhstan.

“The Central Bank has no problems with the exchange rate of the tenge, quite the contrary,” he told RIA Novosti in an interview.

Two months later, the Bank devalued the tenge by 19%.

Media quoted some local analysts as saying that Mr Akishev lacks independence because of his young age and his lack of political authority. But Mr Akishev is the same age as Mr Marchenko was when he was named head of the Central Bank for the first time in 1999 and is five years older than Oraz Dzhandosov was, when he became Central Bank chief in 1996.

Mr Akishev’s predecessor, Kairat Kelimbetov, who held the job for two years during which the tenge lost half its value, had a different profile and no background at the Central Bank.

Mr Akishev might have accepted possibly the toughest job in Kazakhstan, but he is also one of the few people in the country with the experience and background to take it on.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 255, published on Nov. 6 2015)

Stock market: Centerra Gold, KAZ Minerals

OCT. 30 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — The US Federal Reserve Bank’s hinted that interest rates could be increased in December, hitting stock markets worldwide. South Caucasus- and Central Asia-related shares were no exception.

Miners were hit badly. Kyrgyzstan- focused Centerra Gold saw its shares lose over 9% in Toronto this week, closing at 7.36 Canadian dollars on Friday.

KAZ Minerals shares were also down 9%, closing at 116p on Friday.

After announcing it would pay a dividend to its shareholders on Oct. 30, Central Asia Metals reversed a slow start and closed on Friday, with a marginal positive growth, at 163p/share in London.

Oil and gas producers also suffered, despite oil prices gaining 2% this week with Brent crude closing at $49.5/barrel. Kazakhstan-focused Tethys Petroleum and Nostrum Oil & Gas both lost around 10% this week.

After reaching an 8-month high at £21.35/share last Friday, London-listed Bank of Georgia fell by 6.5% to £20.00. Last week its shares rallied after a healthcare group it holds a large stake in announced an IPO price range that valued the company at around $500m.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 254, published on Oct. 30 2015)

 

Stock market: Nostrum, Tethys, KAZ Minerals

OCT. 23 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Oil companies suffered from a fall in oil prices this week. The Brent index closed at $48/barrel on Friday, down 5% this week.

Nostrum Oil & Gas lost around 9% this week, recovering on Friday to end at 475p per share in London. Nostrum’s summer objective Tethys Petroleum continued its slump, reaching the lowest level in 2015 on Oct. 22, trading at 0.06 Canadian dollars per share in Toronto on Thursday, rebounding slightly to 0.07 Canadian dollars on Friday. Kazakhstan-focused Roxi Petroleum gained 2%, after it issued new shares earlier in October. Roxi closed at 9.63p on Friday.

Last week, the price of copper fell by 2% before recovering to $2.40 per lb. Britain-based miner KAZ Minerals was hit by the market crunch this week and recorded a 7% loss, closing at 127p in London on Friday.

The upside was represented by Centerra Gold, whose shares gained almost 9% despite slower gold production in Kyrgyzstan. The final price in Toronto was 8.28 Canadian dollars.

In the banking sector, Bank of Georgia rose by almost 7% this week to 214p. The stability of the lari currency kept the market optimistic.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

Kazakhstan’s Eurasian Bank buys rival

OCT. 20 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Eurasian Bank, a private lender in Kazakhstan linked to members of the elite, said it had bought a 100% stake in BankPozitiv, a Kazakh subsidiary of a Turkish bank. Michael Eggleton, Eurasia Bank’s CEO said the deal will not exceed $32m. In anticipation of tighter capital requirements and in an effort to cut costs, foreign banks have been selling their assets in Kazakhstan.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

Business comment: Bailing out savers

OCT. 7 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Banks in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are bracing themselves for tough times ahead. The currency crisis that has hit the region has, it feels, still a long way to run. Central Banks in both countries have pledged to help commercial banks in the short term to prevent falls in the values of the tenge and som from spiraling into panic and a run on the banks.

This is sensible.

The Kazakh Central Bank said it would compensate savings accounts in tenge that have so far lost 46% in US dollar terms after the regulator moved to a free-float policy. Across the border, in Bishkek, the Central Bank laid out new measures to help customers pay their dollar- denominated mortgages, which have become more expensive as the som lost value.

When people lose confidence in their currency, as is happening across Central Asia and the South

Caucasus, Central Banks intervene. In both countries, new policies were adopted to limit the amount of loans in foreign currencies, to ensure stability in the market.

These short-term measures, however, may have serious repercussions down the road. Bailouts can have an adverse effect on these countries’ sovereign ratings and they could, in any case, be insufficient to reverse the economic downturn.

Let’s see how these policies fair against a falling currency market.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

Tajikistan arrests bank chief

OCT. 7 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) -Tajik authorities arrested Samikhon Kurbonov, the former chairman of Fononbonk, because of his family ties to Saidumar Khusaini, a high- ranking member of the now banned Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT). Last week, Tajikistan’s Central Bank also placed Fononbonk under receivership.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 251, published on Oct. 9 2015)

 

Kazakh bank completes buyback

SEPT. 29 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakh lender BTA Bank completed the buyout of its shares from Samruk- Kazyna by buying the final 4.26% stake that Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund owned in it. Samruk-Kazyna bought BTA to save it from collapse during the Global Financial Crisis of 2008/9. Over the past year, Kazkommertsbank, another Kazakh bank, has merged with BTA Bank.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 250, published on Oct. 2 2015)

Kyrgyzstan wants China to enter its banking sector

SEPT. 25 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Looking to court China, Kyrgyzstan’s deputy PM Valery Dil said China should buy one of the country’s commercial banks. China is a vital investor for Central Asian states.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 250, published on Oct. 2 2015)