Tag Archives: business

International Bank of Azerbaijan wins support for restructuring

JULY 12 2017 (The Bulletin) — International Bank of Azerbaijan (IBA) said that it had secured support for its debt restructuring plan from creditors holding 87% of the debt. It missed a loan repayment in May triggering plans to restructure $3.3b of debt, effectively wiping 20% off the value of its debt. Western investors have complained that the restructuring plan is biased against them and had vowed to block it from being put into action. IBA said it would announce the formal results of a vote on its restructuring plan on July 18.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

 

OPEC oil deal will break up in 2018, says Kazakh minister

JULY 5 2017 (The Bulletin) — JULY 9 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan effectively signalled its withdrawal from an OPEC deal to cut oil output in an attempt to drive up prices. Russia’s TASS news agency quoted energy minister Kanat Bozumbayev as saying at an energy conference in Istanbul that Kazakhstan wanted to rise output as soon as the current agreement expired in March 2018.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

 

Kazakh Halyk Bank completes KazKom takeover

ALMATY, JULY 12 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s Halyk Bank, owned by the daughter of Kazakh Pres. Nursultan Nazarbayev and her husband, completed the takeover of Kazkommertsbank, a deal officials say is vital to protect the banking sector but critics say cements the First Family’s power.

The complex deal involved the state writing off $7.5b of Kazkommertsbank and Halyk Bank bad debt. Halyk Bank officially paid only 185b tenge ($560m) for its rival. The combined market share of the merged bank will be around 37%, roughly four times its next competitor.

While opponents of Mr Nazarbayev and his son-in-law, Timur Kulibayev, have said that the long-planned deal gives the elite too much influence, its proponents have said that it is essential.

Kazakhstan’s banking sector is under increased pressure from nonperforming loans which have been mounting over the past few years, since an oil price collapse in 2014 triggered a downturn and a halving of the value of the tenge.

The Central Bank has said that it has prepared a $1.5b fund to bail out its banks. Some banks in Kazakhstan have already folded.

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

(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

 

CASA-1000 is on schedule, leaders say in Tajik capital

DUSHANBE, JULY 6 2017 (The Bulletin) — The CASA-1000 electricity generation and supply project, considered an essential Western-based link between Central Asia and South Asia, will be finished this year, as scheduled, leaders of the four nations working on its construction said at a meeting in the Tajik capital.

This is important because CASA- 1000, which will generate electricity through hydropower stations in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and distribute it to Afghanistan and Pakistan, is the main transnational Central Asia project backed by the West and its financial institutions. The US government has even described it as an important part of a new north-south Silk Road.

The West has lost influence in Central Asia over the last few years to Russia’s military expansionist strategy and China’s trade-orientated ‘Belt and Road’ policy.

Looking to allay fears that timings had slipped, Pakistan’s PM Nawaz Sharif, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Kyrgyz PM Sooronbay Jeenbekov and host Tajik President Emommali Rakhmon lined up to talk up progress.

Pakistani news agencies quoted Mr Sharif as saying: “We must make efforts to ensure that the project is completed well in time.”

There are still major security and operational concerns over CASA-1000, though, which need to be solved.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

Georgia’s BGEO to spin off non- banking investments

TBILISI, JULY 3 2017 (The Bulletin) — BGEO, the London-listed Georgian investment company that owns most of Bank of Georgia and Georgia Healthcare Group, said it will split into two companies later this year in a move that surprised analysts but sent its share price up towards an all-time high.

The de-merger will give investors more opportunity to increase their exposure to Georgia with a new company focused on retail, healthcare, drinks and utilities.

Both Bank of Georgia and Georgia Healthcare have had strong years and have become two of the Central Asia and South Caucasus region’s favourite shares.

In a statement, BGEO said it would split into two London-listed companies — Bank of Georgia and BGEO Investments. BGEO will own a 10% stake in the bank; a 57% stake in Georgian Healthcare; M2, a real estate company; Aldagi, an insurance company; GGU, a utilities company; a 72% stake in Taliani Valley, a drinks company.

“The Board of BGEO Group believes a de-merger of the businesses will deliver additional long-term value to shareholders by creating two distinct entities, each of which will have enhanced growth opportunities

in the strongly growing Georgian economy,” the BGEO statement said. The news sent BGEO’s shares up and over the next couple of days they hit a peak of 3,721p, near a high of 3,744p in March. Shares in Georgia Healthcare were steady at 370p.

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(News report from Issue No. 336, published on July 16 2017)

 

GE signs software deal with Kazakhstan’s Temir Zholy

JUNE 26 2017 (The Bulletin) — GE, the US engineering company, has signed a deal with Kazakh railway operator Temir Zholy to deploy its software to reduce fuel consumption and improve safety, media reported. It’s unclear how much the contract is worth. GE has agreed a handful of deals with the Kazakh government over the past few months.

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(News report from Issue No. 335, published on July 3 2017)

 

Booking.com responds to Azerbaijan’s complaint

JUNE 29 2017 (The Bulletin) — Booking.com, the Netherlands- based hotel booking website, has stopped making bookings for hotels in Nagorno-Karabakh, the region disputed between Azerbaijan and Armenia, after complaints from the Azerbaijani government, Baku- based media reported. It said that the Azerbaijani government had complained that Booking.com was breaking international law by making hotel bookings in the disputed region. Since a 1994 ceasefire, forces-backed by the Armenian government have controlled Nagorno-Karabakh.

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(News report from Issue No. 335, published on July 3 2017)

 

Factory to open in Uzbek city

JUNE 29 2017 (The Bulletin) — Tanotrade, a Swiss company that produces electrical parts, is set to finish constructing a new factory in Nukus, west Uzbekistan, in August, Uzbek media has reported. Reports said that Tenotrade is meeting 80% of the $8m cost of the project, with its local partner, ToshElectroApparat, putting up the rest. It is not clear exactly what products the new factory, called Nukuselektroapparat, will produce but reports said the regional Karakalpak government had offered Tanotrade a series of tax incentives.

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(News report from Issue No. 335, published on July 3 2017)

Armenia-Syria flights resume

JUNE 29 2017 (The Bulletin) — Cham Wings, a Syrian private airline, flew the first scheduled passenger flight from Damascus to Yerevan for four years. Cham Wings has said it intends to fly the route every week. There are no plans to restart the Yerevan- Aleppo route. On board the Cham Wings flight were 100 passengers, mainly Syrians of Armenian descent.

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(News report from Issue No. 335, published on July 3 2017)

 

Kyrgyzstan Air wants China investment

JUNE 28 2017 (The Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan Air has asked China’s Hainan Airlines to buy a 49% stake in the company, media reported. It had said earlier in the year that it wanted to sell off a 49% stake but didn’t say to whom. China, which has been investing heavily in Central Asia, was the obvious option. Hainan Airlines has not commented.

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

(News report from Issue No. 335, published on July 3 2017)