Tag Archives: IFI

EBRD issues lari bond in Georgia

JUNE 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The EBRD said it issued a 107m lari ($50.2m) bond in Georgia, the second lari-denominated public bond issued by the bank. The five-year bond has an initial yield of 6.45% and will be listed on the Georgian Stock Exchange. The EBRD launched its first domestic bond in Georgia in March 2014. The value of the original two-year bond was 50m lari (around $30m at the time).

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(News report from Issue No. 286, published on June 24 2016)

 

WB approves Kazakhstan road loan

JUNE 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The World Bank approved a $978m loan to finance the construction of a road link across Kazakhstan, which will complete the transit corridor between Astana and the west of the country. The project will cost a total of $1b and will be partly funded by the government. The World Bank is also funding part of the Kazakh section of the Western Europe – Western China highway.

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(News report from Issue No. 285, published on June 17 2016)

 

Tajikistan’s TSB resumes transactions

JUNE 10 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Tojiksodirotbonk, Tajikistan’s second largest lender, said it resumed money transfer transactions, and that it continued to operate under the administration of the Central Bank. TSB, as it is commonly known, is awaiting confirmation from the EBRD for a funding lifeline of around $165m. The investment would give the EBRD a 25% stake in the bank.

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(News report from Issue No. 285, published on June 17 2016)

 

EBRD to issue bond to Azerbaijan’s economy

MAY 25 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The EBRD is ready to issue a manat- denominated bond to help de-dollarise Azerbaijan’s economy, the Bank’s President, Sir Suma Chakra- barti, said. While the amount of the issue was not disclosed, Sir Suma said the bond will be sold within Azerbaijan to boost the local currency’s credibility.

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(News report from Issue No. 282, published on May 27 2016)

Uzbekistan receives loan from World Bank

MAY 25 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The World Bank sent a $20m loan to Uzbekistan to fund the update of the cadastre system, through which the government registers properties. Outdated registers and complicated bureaucratic procedures, as well as rampant corruption and a lack of legal protection for companies, have kept Uzbekistan among the worst countries to do business in.

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(News report from Issue No. 282, published on May 27 2016)

Azerbaijan may receive funding for pipeline from EBRD

MAY 25 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — During a trip to Azerbaijan, EBRD President, Sir Suma Chakrabarti, confirmed that the Bank is considering a €1.5b ($1.7b) loan to the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), part of the Southern Gas Corridor network that will pump gas from Azerbaijan’s Caspian Sea fields to Europe (May 25). Sir Suma also said the Bank is considering co-financing the TANAP pipeline, which will run from Azerbaijan through Turkey to Greece, where it will joint TAP.

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(News report from Issue No. 282, published on May 27 2016)

Kazakhstan to receive loan from World Bank

MAY 26 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s Parliament ratified an agreement to receive a $1b loan from the World Bank’s International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, a cash injection that the government will use to pay for expenses in 2016. Kazakhstan’s finance ministry and the IBRD had agreed on the loan on May 11.

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(News report from Issue No. 282, published on May 27 2016)

Kazakhstan receives loan from EBRD

MAY 26 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The EBRD has loaned around €294m ($328m) to KazTransGas, Kazakhstan’s state-owned gas distributor, to finance the modernisation of a gas storage facility and a distribution network. This is the first time that the EBRD has invested into KazTransGas projects. Modernisation at the Bozoi gas storage facility, near the Aral Sea, will increase its capacity by 1.5 times to 4b cubic metres.

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(News report from Issue No. 282, published on May 27 2016)

World Bank mulls Tajik hydropower help

MAY 18 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The World Bank said it would consider funding the modernisation of the Nurek hydropower plant in central Tajikistan. Located 70km east of Dushanbe, the 3,000 MW plant at Nurek produces around 70% of Tajikistan’s total electricity output. Earlier in May, Tajik President Emomali Rakhmon said it needs an investment of more than 4.7bn somoni (around $600m).

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(News report from Issue No. 281, published on May 20 2016)

Tajik government steps in to save bank from going bust

DUSHANBE, MAY 18 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Tajikistan’s Central Bank placed Tojiksodirotbank (TSB) under its administration after the bank said it was on the brink of going bankrupt, the first major banking casualty of the current economic downturn.

TSB is the second-largest lender in the country and manages around a third of all loans in Tajikistan. Its collapse has shaken policymakers.

A senior official at the Central Bank, Mirzokhayota Yodgorov, replaced the bank’s chairman, Tojid- din Pirzoda. Sources in the banking sector also told local media that the EBRD could step in and inject vital cash into TSB.

“The question as to whether the EBRD will enter TSB’s capital will be resolved in June,” the source, quoted by Asia Plus, said.

According to the latest, unconfirmed, updates, the EBRD plans to buy a majority stake in the bank for $165m. The Tajik government could also step in and buy a 25% stake.

Earlier in May, TSB had said it was in talks to sell half of its shares to the EBRD.

Neither the EBRD nor the Tajik Central Bank commented but Tojiksodirotbank did release a fairly oblique statement confirming it had been placed under administration.

“The National Bank of Tajikistan Board in accordance with Articles 48, 49 and 50 of its Laws, to improve the financial situation of Tojiksodirotbank and protect the rights of its depositors and creditors on 18th May 2016 appointed a temporary administration in the bank for three months,” it said in a statement.

The banking sector in Tajikistan, hit by a deep economic downturn, has accumulated overdue loans and is faced with cash shortages. An IMF delegation earlier this year said that some of Tajikistan’s biggest banks were on the brink of default.

Tajikistan’s financial sector is under stress because the value of remittances from migrant workers has shrunk significantly over the past two years, undermining the economy and, crucially, hitting customers’ ability to pay back their loans.

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(News report from Issue No. 281, published on May 20 2016)