Tag Archives: Kazakhstan

Biathlon team cleared of drug-taking, says Kazakh minister

FEB. 14 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s culture and sports minister, Arystanbek Mukhamediuly, said that the biathlon team had been cleared of taking any performance enhancing drugs ahead of the World Championships in Austria. Austrian police raided the team’s hotel last week on the eve of the competition after, media reported, finding an empty box with discarded medical equipment.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

Stock market: KAZ Minerals, Georgia Healthcare

FEB. 17 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Georgia Healthcare’s shares surged 8.4% to near an all-time high of 379/$1 after earnings results showed that it had tripled its pretax profit in the fourth quarter of last year thanks to organic growth and acquisitions.

It also said that by the end of 2018, it expects to have doubled its revenues compared to 2015.

Long a favourite for investors looking to invest directly into the South Caucasus, Georgia Healthcare stock gives them a slice of the growing Georgian private healthcare sector.

The only downside of the earnings results was a pretax loss for its insurance division. Still, analysts were bullish. Jefferies increased its target price on Georgia Healthcare to 435p from 420p. Numis Securities stuck with its target price of 420p.

The other big mover of the week was KAZ Minerals, the Kazakhstan-focused copper producer, which finished up 5.7% at 559p. On Tuesday its shares had peaked at 592p, its highest level for nearly four years.

Copper prices have recovered since they started to fall in mid- 2015. KAZ Minerals also announced the start-up of new production in Kazakhstan.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

Kazakhstan promises to prop up banks with $6.5b fund

ALMATY, FEB. 13 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kazakh government is preparing what would amount to a 2 trillion tenge ($6.5b) bailout of its banking sector only eight years after it was forced to buy up a handful of failing banks during the Global Financial Crisis of 2008/9.

The plan is a virtual admission that policies brought in by the Central Bank since the Global Finance Crisis have failed to prevent another banking meltdown.

The sharp economic downturn triggered by a collapse in oil price in mid-2014, has wiped out jobs, pressured inflation and knocked 50% off the value of the tenge. Despite being forced to increase their capital and pass Central Bank stress tests, the Kazakh banking sector has been hit badly and is now holding billions of dollars of bad debt.

Earlier this month, the IMF said that urgent action was needed to stave off another banking collapse. Now that warning appears to have been heeded by the Kazakh government after it announced the emergency plan.

In a statement on the finance ministry’s website, Bakhyt Sultanov, the finance minister, said that the government would pull in funds from the country’s oil wealth fund to plug the financial shortfall.

The Interfax news agency later reported by quoting the deputy governor of the Central Bank, Oleg Smolyakov, that the cash would be injected into the government’s Problem Loan Fund, through which it has been funnelling cash to banks.

The government has already doubled its loans to troubled banks to 400b tenge ($1.3b), half of which has been borrowed by Kazkommertsbank.

Kazkommertsbank bought the debt-laden BTA Bank in 2014/15 in a deal heavy with political undertones. It is now in talks with Halyk Bank, owned by President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s daughter Dinara and her husband Timur Kulibayev, to merge and create a banking giant.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

Bread prices rise in Kazakhstan

FEB. 14 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — An informal study of bread prices by the ranking.kz website showed that prices have risen by 8-9% in the past year. This is important because the survey acts as a balance on official inflation data which has said that price rises have been more gentle. Economists have been predicting a jump in prices, linked to the devaluation of the tenge.

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(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

Comment: Central Banks face mess of their own making, says Kilner

FEB. 17 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — First came the oil price collapse, then remittance flows started stagnating and (some) currencies (think of the tenge and the Azerbaijani manat) halved. Now the debt mountain, or perhaps debt tsunami is a better description, looms large, threatening to drown the countries of Central Asia and the South Caucasus.

Kazakhstan is the latest to propose a major bailout of its banking sector. Finance minister Bakhyt Sultanov said on Feb. 13 that the government would potentially use $6.3b to prop up banks listing under the weight of bad loans. The Tajik government is in talks with the IMF to borrow cash to help prop up its banking sector and in Azerbaijan the government has been, as quietly as possible, buying up chunks of the biggest bank. It now owns more than 76% of the International Bank of Azerbaijan, allowing it to smooth out its debt crisis without attracting too much attention.

Ratings agencies and analysts have been warning of this denouement.

As long ago as December 2015, Standard & Poorsratings agency said: “Medium-term prospects for Kazakhstan’s banking system have deteriorated in 2015 due to lower oil prices, the economic slowdown (especially in non-extractive sectors) and the weaker tenge.”

And that prediction has been borne out.

The frustration is that we have been here before. In the Global Financial Crisis of 2008/9 bad debt built up in banks in Kazakhstan forcing the government to step in. It bought out BTA Bank, at the time one of the country’s biggest lenders, and a handful of smaller banks. It was expensive but staved off disaster and the Kazakh government pledged not to find itself in a similar position again.

The government finally offloaded BTA bank to pro-government businessmen in 2014/15 and proposed to impose rules and regulations that would require its banks to bulk up their capital and refrain from handing out loans, mainly mortgages, to people unworthy of them.

Clearly, the Kazakh Central Bank and other regulators across the region, have failed. Certainly they have not been helped by the sharp currency devaluation that made US dollar-denominated mortgages unserviceable.

Better macro-economic policies, tighter rules on lending and a more clear-headed approach to dealing with problems would surely have put the Central Banks in better positions than they now find themselves. Governments in the region are once again having to buy themselves out of trouble.

By James Kilner, Editor, The Conway Bulletin.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

Oil output in Kazakhstan beats forecast

FEB. 13 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kanat Bozumbayev, the Kazakh energy minister, told media that in 2016 Kazakhstan produced 78m tonnes of oil, beating an initial forecast of 75.5m tonnes. This is important because the government had been forecasting a drop in production because companies were throttling back output under the pressure of poor prices.

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(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

 

Kazakh oil project to double oil output

FEB. 13 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — The Kashagan oil project in the Kazakh sector of the Caspian Sea will double oil production to 370,000 barrels of oil per day by the end of 2017, the North Caspian Operating Company consortium developing the project said in a statement. Kashagan is the Great White Hope of Kazakhstan’s oil industry. It started commercial production at the end of last year, three years behind schedule because pipes running from the mainland to the field were found to be leaky and needed to be repaired.

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(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)f

 

Kazakh special forces kill Islamists

FEB. 11 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakh special forces killed six alleged Islamic extremists and arrested 15 more in raids in January in Almaty, media reported quoting the interior ministry. The ministry said they also found arms caches, including grenades. Central Asian countries have been on alert to counter a perceived growth in recruitment by Islamic extremists.

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(News report from Issue No. 317, published on Feb.17 2017)

Oil price drop hits Kazakh export value hard

FEB. 7 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — The value of Kazakhstan’s exports fell by 20% in 2016, the Central Bank said, reflecting just how heavily the drop in oil prices has hit the country. It said that exports dropped to $37.2b. In 2016, the average price of a barrel of Brent oil was $42.80. In 2015 it had been $50.80. This year, oil prices have hovered around $55/barrel.

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(News report from Issue No. 316, published on Feb. 10 2017)

WorldRemit extends to Armenia and Kazakhstan

FEB. 7 2017 (The Conway Bulletin) — WorldRemit, a money wire service, said that it had extended its services to Armenia and Kazakhstan as well as Ukraine and Belarus, through a partnership with the Russian payment system Contact. Previously, London-based WorldRemit has concentrated its services in southeast Asia and Africa. It said that WorldRemit will operate 330 service points in Kazakhstan and 65 in Armenia. Remittances are a vital plank of the economies of Central Asia and the South Caucasus.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 316, published on Feb. 10 2017)