Tag Archives: business

Sweden drops Telia bribery case in Azerbaijan

MAY 3 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Prosecutors in Sweden dropped an investigation into alleged bribe paying by TeliaSonera, now called Telia Company, in Azerbaijan, relieving the pressure on the Nordic region’s biggest telecoms company but disappointing corporate governance campaigners.

Scrapping the investigation also ditches a potentially embarrassing public hearing for Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his family into their personal affairs. TeliaSonera was alleged to have paid millions of dollars indirectly to Mr Aliyev and his family for access to Azerbaijan in 2008.

Prosecutors said they could neither prove the bribery allegations nor Telia’s intent.

Allegations of the payment emerged in mid-2014, nearly two years after TeliaSonera was accused of paying a $375 million bribe to Gulnara Karimova, the eldest daughter of Uzbek President Islam Karimov, for access to Uzbekistan.

“With the tools we have at our disposal, we can’t prove bribery,” Gunnar Stetler, Sweden’s prosecutor, told Reuters in an interview.

Telia said the ruling marked another departure from the company’s more murky past.

“After today’s decision, there are no ongoing Swedish investigations that relate to Telia Company, except for the investigation regarding Uzbekistan,” Telia said in a statement.

Telia is linked to investigations in Sweden, the Netherlands, the US, Switzerland and Norway into alleged corruption linked to Ucell, its subsidiary in Uzbekistan.

Last September, Telia said it wanted to sell off its assets in the South Caucasus and Central Asia. Turkish telecoms company Turkcell, in which Telia owns a stake, said it was interested in buying some of these companies.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan secures $1.7b loan to push CASA-1000 forward

MAY 5 2016, BISHKEK (The Conway Bulletin)  — Despite securing a $1.7b finance deal to boost its power generating sector, Kyrgyzstan still has its work cut out to ensure that it can hit targets laid out in the ambitious CASA-1000 project which aims to send Tajik and Kyrgyz electricity to Pakistan and India, analysts said.

Next week heads of state from Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan are due in Dushanbe to officially launch CASA-1000, heralded as a new epoch in Central Asia and South Asia trade relations.

And Kyrgyzstan’s $1.7b credit line, organised last week with the Islamic Development Bank, the International Development Association and the European Investment Bank, has come only just in time.

Kyrgyzstan needs the cash to bolster its power generating capacity which has faltered over the past six months. In December 2015, transmission line faults damaged the 1,200MW Toktogul power plant, which generates 40% of Kyrgyzstan’s electricity. The outage triggered shortages and worried senior officials in the Kyrgyz government and their international partners.

At the same time, Russia pulled out of a $2b deal to build a dam and a 2,000MW power station at Kambar-Ata, on the Naryn river in central Kyrgyzstan, because a recession had sucked dry its funds.

Marat Kazakbayev, a political analyst based in Bishkek said Kyrgyzstan can currently meet its export demands but at a heavy cost.

“Electricity exports may be carried out at the expense of domestic electricity supply for the population of Kyrgyzstan,” he said.

For Kyrgyzstan, though, CASA- 1000 is a headline project that it simply must make work. The $1.2b project, backed by the World Bank, has been touted as a regional trade deal that will create wealth in mountainous Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, which have large power generating systems through their network of hydropower dams, and light houses and office blocks in Pakistan where electricity is in short supply.

The United States also views the project as an important way to lock Afghanistan into a global trade system and for it to generate some revenue as a transit country.

Still, as Indra Overland, research professor at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, said, even with the $1.7b loan secured, there is no guarantee that Kyrgyzstan’s power sector will be running at capacity by the time CASA-1000 is supposed to start in 2018.

“Kyrgyzstan has a problem of suboptimal internal organisation, lack of good governance,” he said. “It has plenty of hydropower potential to produce enough electricity for itself and for export. It should be a surplus country, but its infrastructure is lagging behind.”

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on May 6 2016)

 

Centerra looks to diffuse row with Kyrgyzstan over Kumtor

BISHKEK, MAY 4 2016, (The Conway Bulletin) – Scott Perry, CEO of Canadian miner Centerra Gold, invited the Kyrgyz government to meet with him to discuss their differences, less than a week after police in Bishkek raided the company’s offices looking for evidence of financial crimes.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Mr Perry said the government has not responded to Centerra’s offer to hold talks.

He also reiterated the company line that Kumtor’s dividend payment to Centerra in 2013 was perfectly legal.

“The rattling of the cage is without merit,” Mr Perry said of the police raid in Bishkek.

Last week, police raided the offices of Kumtor Gold Company (KGC), wholly-owned by Centerra. They were looking for documents linked to a dividend payment of $200m that KGC paid to Centerra in December 2013.

At the end of last year, the authorities sentenced Dilger Zhaparov, former board member of Kyrgyzaltyn, a state-owned mining company which has stakes in Centerra, to three years in prison for authorising the dividend payment.

During the police raid last week, Centerra’s shares were briefly suspended on the Toronto stock exchange. Many analysts interpreted the raid and the Kyrgyz allegation of financial crime against Centerra as more positioning. Kyrgyzstan has been trying to increase its control over the gold mine, the country’s single biggest industrial asset, for years.

This week, Centerra also posted quarterly results which showed a fall in gold production because of a drop in quality of mined ore. Sales also lagged because of a delay in gold shipments to Kyrgyzaltyn, which trades Kumtor’s gold, in March.

Low gold prices hit revenues, which dropped by 66% to $73.2m, compared to last year.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

Georgia Healthcare Group makes healthcare deal

MAY 5 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – London-listed Georgia Healthcare Group said it completed the acquisition of GPC for $14m, one of Georgia’s largest retail and wholesale pharmacy chains. Following an agreement signed earlier in March, GHG will now own 100% of GPC. GPC controls 15% of the pharmaceutical market in Georgia.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

Kazakhstan’s KMG EP and CEFC finalise JV

APRIL 30 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – State-owned KMG EP and China’s CEFC energy company finalised their earlier agreement to form a joint venture that will take over the business of KMG International, formerly Rompetrol. In December, CEFC bought a 51% stake in KMG International for $680m, KMG EP revealed this week.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

Ex-Kazakh CBank chief buys bank stake

APRIL 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Grigory Marchenko, former chief of Kazakhstan’s Central Bank, bought an 8.3% stake in AGBank, a private bank in Azerbaijan. Chingiz Asadullayev, the bank’s chairman, increased his stake to 31.7%, up from 23.3%. The World Bank’s International Financial Corporation decreased its stake from 17.5% to 4.3%. Mr Marchenko left his post at Kazakhstan’s Central Bank in October 2013. Since leaving the role, Mr Marchenko has kept a low profile.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

Non-performing loans in Azerbaijan rise

APRIL 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – International ratings agency Moody’s said that the proportion of loans deemed non-performing in Azerbaijan had reached 20%, a sign of the country’s poor economic health.

Moody’s said that data clearly shows the growth of non-performing loans in Azerbaijan. At the end of 2014, the proportion of non-performing loans in Azerbaijan had been 4.5%. This rose to 9.1% by the end of the third quarter of 2015 and has doubled, again, in the past six months.

Non-performing loans are credits that banks have been unable to collect for over 90 days. Analysts deem this timeframe a problem because when a loan is not repaid within three months it is likely that it will not be repaid at all.

Moody’s downgraded Azerbaijan’s economy, giving it a negative outlook and predicting problems collecting outstanding loans.

“The manat devaluation triggered a flight out of local currency deposits, led to a rise in banks’ problem loans, and eroded capital buffers,” it said in a statement.

Azerbaijan’s economy is heavily dependent on oil and gas which has collapsed in value since August 2014. The Central Bank devalued the manat currency twice last year. It ended the year at half the value it had started 2015 at.

Moody’s said this has had a negative impact on both economic activity and the banking sector.

“Azerbaijan’s economic growth outlook remains weak,” Moody’s said. “Moody’s recently revised its 2016 growth forecast for Azerbaijan, expecting real GDP to shrink by 3.3%, compared to a previous forecast contraction of 0.7%, reflecting its expectation of a contraction in both the oil/gas and non-oil/gas GDP sectors.”

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on May 6 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan and Centerra row

MAY 4 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Canadian miner Centerra Gold, owner of the Kumtor gold mine in Kyrgyzstan, once again said that it had not broken any rules in 2013 when it made a dividend payment . It was responding to a raid by police on the Kumtor office in Bishkek. Police were apparently sent to the Kumtor office specifically to search for any evidence of financial crime. Kyrgyzstan wants to increase its stake in Kumtor.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on May 6 2016)

Armenia gold reserve go up

APRIL 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian gold miner Polymetal said that its Lichkvaz project in Armenia holds 18.1 tonnes of gold, up 17% from a previous assessment. Last November, Polymetal bought the 75% stake it didn’t own in Lichkvaz for $9.7m, gaining full ownership in the project. Outside Russia, Polymetal operates in Armenia and Kazakhstan.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)

 

Kazakhstan’s KEGOC not to pay dividents

MAY 3 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – KEGOC, a mainly state-owned electricity distributor in Kazakhstan, said it will not pay out dividends for 2015, due to the company’s poor financial performance last year. In 2015, KEGOC posted a loss of 7.8b tenge ($23.4m). KEGOC was one of the best performers in the Kazakh Stock Exchange last year, with its shares gaining 47%. The government sold a chunk of KEGOC at the end of 2014, as part of its so-called People’s IPO.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 279, published on  May 6 2016)