Tag Archives: business

Oilmen strike in western Kazakhstan

JULY 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Around 700 oil workers staged a two-hour strike, protesting against alleged pay cuts and job losses at the Burgylau oil service company in Zhanaozen, western Kazakhstan, the US-funded RFE/RL reported. Burgylau is linked to businessman Yakov Tskhai, who owns a majority stake in its parent company KazPet- roDrilling. In 2011, around 15 people died in Zhanaozen during clashes between striking oilmen and police.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

MTS wants to sell Uzbek stakes

JUNE 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian telecoms operator MTS wants to sell its Uzbek assets, two anonymous sources from the company and the ministry of information told Interfax. The move follows other competitors, like Telia Company and VimpelCom, who are looking to divest from the country, after a corruption scandal hit the telecoms sector. MTS owns 50.01% of UMS, the Uzbek government owns the rest.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan focused Manas moves into Africa

JUNE 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan-focused miner Manas Resources said it bought a gold project in Tanzania, in an effort to diversify its operational portfolio. Thedeal, struck with an Italian private group, will cost Manas $2m cash and $2m in shares. Last week, Manas halted trading at the Australian Stock Exchange, ahead of its announcement of the deal. After the deal was announced, Manas’ share price doubled to 0.4 Australian cents.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

Kyrgyz Parliament approves BTA stake sale

JUNE 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Kyrgyz Parliament approved the sale of a 15.4% stake in BTA Bank Kyrgyzstan to Kazakh investors. The stake previously belonged to Daniyar Usenov, former Kyrgyz PM, who fled the country after a revolution in 2010 toppled President Kurmanbek Bakiyev. The new Kyrgyz government took possession of his stake in BTA and sentenced him to 15 years in prison for abuse of power in 2013.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

inApril makes deal with Kazakhstan-based Geo Energy

JUNE 30 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – inApril, a Norwegian oil and gas service company, said it had reached a deal with Kazakhstan-based Geo Energy Group to supply it with a seismic acquisition system. The deal, worth up to $30m, according to inApril, will improve the technological footprint of Geo Energy Group, which provides seismic assessments of oil and gas basins in offshore sections of the Caspian Sea.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

Kazakhstan and Iran to build refinery

JUNE 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan and Iran will build a new refinery in the Iranian Caspian Sea port of Amirabad, Golestan,specifically to process Kazakh oil for export. It is unclear how much the refinery is going to cost to build and when it will be operational but it is probably the biggest single joint venture between the two countries since many Western sanctions on Iran were lifted in January.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

Georgia is the best route, says Iran

JUNE 28 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Iran’s oil refining and distribution company said that it views Georgia as the best route to send its various petroleum products to Europe. Iran and Georgia have developed increasingly close economic and business relations over the past few years and there is now relatively high number of Iranian businesses and nationals living in Tbilisi. They had viewed Georgia as a potential route around sanctions.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

Kazakh Air Astana starts flights to Iran

JUNE 30 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakhstan’s flagship carrier Air Astana said it started direct flights to Iran, after it had delayed starting the route in May. From June 30, Air Astana will fly three times a week between Almaty and Tehran. Kazakhstan and Iran have tried to boost business ties since western countries lifted sanctions on Iran in January.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

Business comment: Big Projects

JUNE 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan may resume its dream of building a mega petrochemical processing complex in an effort to revive its oil and gas sector. This alone is good news for the economy of Azerbaijan, which is poised to see its GDP shrink this year for the first time in two decades.

The intent of SOCAR, the state-owned energy company, is to salvage the project, which it had effectively abandoned in February, after its initial investors had either pulled out or stalled financing.

This is the effect of sustained low oil prices. Besides shying away from upstream exploration and production for costly fields, oil and gas companies have also been forced to rethink their plans for downstream processing facilities.

The project initially included an oil refinery, for a total cost of $16.5b. After scrapping parts of the complex, including the refinery, and downsizing the gas processing facility, the project’s price tag fell to around $4b, a cost that Chinese and Russo- Italian ventures, the new potential investors, now deem feasible.

This is a common problem. Big projects have had to face both the doubts of investors in a low oil price era and the protests of locals, who would rather see resources allocated to combating the enduring crisis.

In January, South Korea’s LG pulled out of a project to build a $4.2b petrochemical plant in Kazakhstan, Russia fled an investment to build a $2b hydropower project in Kyrgyzstan, and Azerbaijan seemed to have abandoned hopes for its project.

As oil prices timidly pick up again, Azerbaijan’s announcement that the project might still see the light could potentially lure investors, who had kept themselves at arm’s length from the rather toxic market it had become in the past two years.

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(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)

 

Azerbaijan focused Anglo Asian aims to cash in on gold price rise

JUNE 29 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Looking to cash in on a spike in gold prices triggered by Brexit, Azerbaijan- focused miner Anglo Asian said it would sell the remainder of its 2016 production as futures.

Gold prices have risen 5% in the past week because of thinning confidence linked to Britain’s referendum last week which voted unexpectedly to leave the European Union, in a so-called Brexit, triggering a wave of uncertainty across the world.

The Anglo Asian deal fixed a price corridor of $1,200-$1,426/ounce for their future gold production for the next six months.

Reza Vaziri, Anglo Asian’s CEO, said that the deal, which could secure between $21.6m and $25.7m, will be beneficial for the company, which has had to cope with low gold prices over the past few months. It accumulated debt over the past few months which it now has to pay off.

“This is a win-win transaction for us,” Mr Vaziri said.

“Whilst protecting the downside in the current volatile gold market over the coming six months given Anglo Asian’s debt service payments, we also enjoy considerable exposure to any further increase in the price of gold during this period.”

Spot gold prices closed at $1,321.9/ounce on June 30 compared to $1,257.6/ounce on June 23.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 287, published on July 1 2016)