Tag Archives: business

Azerbaijan spends to prop up banking sector

MAY 25 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Azerbaijan has spent the equivalent of 18% of its GDP propping up its banking sector in 2015/16, Peter Paklin, assistant vice president at Moody’s Investors Service, told a press conference. Despite the state support, Azerbaijan’s banking sector has been faltering, with its biggest bank — the International Bank of Azerbaijan — restructuring its debt and smaller banks going bankrupt.

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

French car makers sign deal with Uzbekistan

MAY 16 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — French car producer PSA, the maker of Peugeot and Citroen cars, signed a deal with Uzbekistan’s state-owned Uzavtosanoat to set up a factory in the Free Industrial Zone of Jizzakh, media reported. The plan is to produce light commercial vehicles for the Uzbek and wider Central Asia markets. For Uzbekistan, attracting investment from PSA is a major success. It already operates a JV with the US’ GM. The car market, though, has slumped over the last few years as the economies in Central Asia and Russia, a major market, have dipped.

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(News report from Issue No. 329, published on May 20 2017)

 

Azerbaijani banking crisis drags in neighbours

 MAY 16 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Ratings agencies downgraded debt issued by the International Bank of Azerbaijan, as the country’s biggest bank appeared to teeter towards a collapse.

There were fears too that the bad debt piling up at the IBA may damage finance systems across Central Asia and South Caucasus after it emerged that Kazakhstan’s Single Pension Fund had bought $250m of IBA debt over the past few years.

Kazakh MPs accused the Pension Fund of incompetence for investing in IBA in October 2014 shortly after the price of oil started to fall. At the time analysts warned that IBA was at risk of accumulating mountains of bad debt that could sink it.

Moody’s said it had downgraded IBA’s rating to Caa3 from B1, effectively shifting IBA debt from risky to extremely risky.

“Moody’s expects the announced foreign debt restructuring plan to result in credit losses for creditors in excess of 20%,” it said. Media reported that Cargill and Citibank are two of IBA’s biggest creditors.

Last week, IBA filed for Chapter 15 protection in the United States after it failed to make a $100m debt repayment to Netherlands-based Rubrika Finance on May 10. Chapter 15 prevents creditors going after IBA while it restructures its $3.33b debt. The Azerbaijani government is the bank’s biggest shareholder, now holding an 80% stake, and its fall is a major embarrassment to it. Not only has it bought equity in the bank, it increased its stake from 55% earlier this year, but it has also spent nearly $6b buying up its toxic debt.

Media quoted IBA chairman, Khalid Ahadov, as saying that its restructuring plan will be presented in London on May 23.

“Upon completion of these measures, the Bank’s capital position will return to regulatory frameworks,” he was quoted as saying. “As a result of all those measures long-term financial sustainability of IBA will be ensured that will increase its market value on the threshold of privatisation.”

But the reputational damage inflicted by the near-collapse of IBA will undermine Azerbaijan’s status in the financial markets. Last year several smaller banks collapsed or had their license withdrawn by the Central Bank. In 2015, the Azerbaijani manat was devalued twice, halving its worth. With many mortgages and personal loans given out in US dol- lars, consumers found it near-impossible to service their debt.

Azerbaijan has been particularly hard hit by the fall in oil prices. Its economy is reliant on oil exports. Despite repeated warnings, it has failed to diversify.

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(News report from Issue No. 329, published on May 20 2017)

IDB to fund Uzbek SMEs

MAY 18 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — A unit of the Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank (IDB) signed deals to boost financing of small and medium-sized businesses in Uzbekistan with two Tashkent-based banks, Ipak Yuli and Asia Alli- ance. The deals continue the sense of openness and development that President Shavkat Mirziyoyev has ushered into Uzbekistan since taking over as president in September 2016. Earlier this year, he welcomed the head of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) back to Tashkent for the first time since 2003. This month the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights visited Uzbekistan for the first time.

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(News report from Issue No. 329, published on May 20 2017)

 

Kazakhstan to open uranium bank

MAY 15 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan will open its much-vaunted uranium bank on Aug. 17, media reported quoting MP Kanat Bozumbaev. The uranium bank has been authorized by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and is designed to act as a resource for countries that want to develop nuclear energy. Kazakhstan is the world’s largest uranium producer.

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(News report from Issue No. 329, published on May 20 2017)

 

Logistics market grow in Azerbaijan

MAY 17 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Pony Express, a Russian logistics company, said that it had opened up an office in Azerbaijan to take advantage of the opportunities that it expects major transport routes to generate. Media quoted regional development director Sergey Sergushev as saying that the development of a North-South transport corridor linking India, Iran, Azerbaijan and Russia, as well as the already established trans-Cas- pian Sea route, would boost demand for logistic services in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan has been trying to position itself as a major link between Europe and Asia and companies such as Pony Express moving in will be a boost to its aspirations.

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(News report from Issue No. 329, published on May 20 2017)

 

Kazakh port up for sale

MAY 1 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Aktau port, the busiest Kazakh Caspian Sea port, will be privatised by the end of the year, Temir Zholy, the state railway company which currently owns it, said in a note. Kazakhstan is pushing ahead with a number of high profile privatisation projects. Aktau port will be viewed as a valuable asset as it is the main gateway for goods being sent between Asia and Europe.

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(News report from Issue No. 327, published on May 5 2017)

Blue Water Shipping announces new Kazakh deal

MAY 11 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — A consortium lead by Denmark- based Blue Water Shipping has won a cargo contract to transport equipment to the Tengizchevroil project in Kazakhstan through a network of rivers and canals in Russia, the company said. Tengizchevroil is the consortium running the Tengiz oil project. It has committed to an $36.8b expansion plan. This is generating business for a number of companies in Kazakhstan. Included in the Blue Water Shipping consortium is Dubai-based Manchester Shipping.

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(News report from Issue No. 328, published on May 12 2017)

 

Azerbaijani oil field bloc output falls again

MAY 10 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — BP’s Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli oil field bloc in the Azerbaijani sector of the Caspian Sea produced 581,000 barrels of oil per day in the first three months of the year, it said in a statement. This is a significant drop compared to the year before when output was recorded at 651,000 barrels per day. BP has been under pressure from the Azerbaijani authorities to boost production at SCG, the country’s main oil producers and the latest figures will likely irritate Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

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(News report from Issue No. 328, published on May 12 2017)

 

Turkmenistan touts new gas field discovery

MAY 6 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — In a boost for its ambitions to become the region’s top gas exporter, Turkmenistan said that it had discovered a potentially large gas field near the Caspian Sea.

New gas field finds, especially of the size touted by Turkmenistan, are rare and the announcement created excitement in the oil and gas sector.

“According to the preliminary estimates, the well’s productivity is 500,000 cubic meters of natural gas and 150 tonnes of gas condensate per day, which confirms the huge hydrocarbon potential of the coastal zone and the shallow waters of the Caspian Sea,” the state-owned news agency Turkmenistan Today said of the discovery at the Uzunada area.

“Increasing hydrocarbon production is one of the priorities of the domestic fuel and energy complex.”

Turkmenistan’s economy is heavily skewed towards gas exports, mainly from the Galkynysh field, the second largest in the world, in the east of the country. A pipeline from the field feeds gas directly to China and a new pipeline is being built that will pump gas to Pakistan and India.

Turkmen President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov has talked of diversifying the Turkmen economy towards fertilizer and electricity production, but gas still dominates. The fall in gas prices has hit it hard and even forced a rare admission of economic weakness, with a cut to the manat currency in 2015.

If the new field was commercially exploited and did manage to produce at the rate of 500,000 cubic metres of gas per day claimed by Turkmenistan, it would add significant capacity to the country’s overall production. The Galkynysh field produces gas at around 1.7m – 2m cubic metres per day.

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(News report from Issue No. 328, published on May 12 2017)