JULY 22 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kazakhstan’s oil and gas sector seems to be in a muddle with the corporate battle between Kazmunaigas, owned by the country’s sovereign wealth fund Samruk-Kazyna (90%) and the Central Bank (10%), and its London-traded upstream subsidiary, KMG EP.
The power struggle between the two seems complicated, but it’s not. Kazmunaigas’ covert intention is to increase its 57% stake in KMG EP because it wants to take more control of its profitable upstream business, especially now that oil prices are low.
KMG EP’s independent directors, on the other hand, want other minority shareholders to resist Kazmunaigas’ pressure. The alternative, according to them, will be a de-listing from the London Stock Exchange, as independence would not be guaranteed.
Kazmunaigas has always said that its primary intention is not to buy out its subsidiary, but to change the terms through which the two companies interact, to smooth bureaucracy and make the businesses more agile.
But that’s not its real goal. If it was, it would have not have raised its initial offer to minority shareholders of $7.88/GDR to $9/GDR. And it would have not have made concessions on its corporate governance plans immediately after the first negative reaction from KMG EP’s independent directors.
If Kazmunaigas gets its way and buys out most of the minority shareholders, it may force independent directors to resign and the company to de-list from London’s GDR market.
For investors looking for a transparent sector to bet on, this won’t be good news.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)