EXCLUSIVE - Hassan Allam Holding taps advisors for potential IPO: Leading construction company Hassan Allam Holding has mandated three investment banks to run a potential IPO, including EFG Hermes and Renaissance Capital as joint global coordinators and Arqaam Capital as bookrunner, sources with knowledge of the transaction tell us. EFG Hermes and Rencap would also serve as bookrunners if an IPO goes forward. Cairo-based law firm Matouk Bassiouny is said have been appointed local counsel to the issuer, the same sources tell us. The domicile and size of the offering have yet to be determined and international counsel has yet to be appointed. Our friends at Hassan Allam Holding have in the past mentioned an intention to take the group public, but yesterday declined to comment, saying they would only have something to say once their shareholders have made a decision that could be disclosed in accordance with applicable laws and regulations. The group has recently grown to include a new utilities platform alongside its engineering & construction and building materials units.
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IPO WATCH- Carbon Holdings eyes dual listing by end of 1H2019: Carbon Holdings is looking to raise as much as USD 250 mn from a dual listing on the EGX and London Stock Exchange by the end of 1H2019, our friend Managing Director of Corporate Finance and Investor Relations Karim Helal tells Al Masry Al Youm. Carbon had previously announced its intention to IPO in Egypt by December. While the ultimate size of the listing has yet to be determined, the Basil El Baz-led company will offer no less than 20% of its shares, according to Helal. Sources previously told us that the stake sale could be the largest in Egypt since 2011 and could value the company north of USD 1 bn.
Advisors: EFG Hermes is acting as advisor and global coordinator for the IPO, Baker & McKenzie is local legal counsel, and White & Case is international counsel.
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IPO WATCH- Rooya Holding Investments is working on completing the regulatory requirements to move ahead with its planned IPO on the EGX, parent company Pioneers Holding said in a statement to the EGX yesterday (pdf). Reports had emerged last July that Rooya had filed to list 30% of its shares on the bourse. Pioneers CEO Walid Zaki then announced in December that Pioneers plans to list 40% of its subsidiary in 1H2018. Rooya had reportedly tapped Baker & McKenzie’s Cairo partner, Helmy, Hamza & Partners, as legal advisor for the potential transaction.
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EXCLUSIVE- FRA looking to marginally lower regulatory fees on stock market trades as stamp tax increases next fiscal year: A Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) committee has approved in principle lowering fees on stock market transactions, sources from the committee told Enterprise. The FRA’s consultative committee, which helps set policy for FRA, wants to lower fees to 0.04% from a present 0.05%. We’re told the change, if implemented, would aim to curb some of the burden imposed by annual rises in the stamp tax on EGX trades,which is set to rise to 0.15% on 1 July 2018 from 0.125% today. Proceeds from the regulatory fee are typically used to fund the operations of the FRA, the EGX and Misr Central Clearing, Depository and Registry (MCDR) as well as the investor bailout fund. A portion of the fee will no longer follow into the bailout fund, which we’re told has grown to EGP 2.5 bn.
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EXCLUSIVE- Has the Finance Ministry further simplified its plan to bring SMEs into the ranks of taxpayers? Speaking of inclusion, the Finance Ministry may be modifying previously outlined plans to offer SMEs of a certain size full or partial tax exemptions to enter the formal economy as part of the SME Act. Instead, the ministry is looking at requiring SMEs of a certain size a flat tax based on the size of their top line, Tax Authority sources tell Enterprise. The move makes a lot of sense.
Grow the tax base by making it easy to go legit: Businesses with an annual revenue of up to EGP 250k or less would face a fixed tax bill of EGP 2,000 per year under the proposal. Those making between EGP 251-500k will pay EGP 5,000 a year, while enterprises making EGP 501k-1 mn will be taxed EGP 10,000. Further incentives will be granted if these business register with the Tax Authority, the source said, stopping short of getting into specifics.
Small business owners can forget about utilities if they don’t register with the tax man: The Tax Authority is looking at how to coordinate with state utility providers to monitor spending by SMEs and ensure they are registered. Sources tell us that obtaining access to water and electricity will be conditional on a business registering with the Tax Authority.
The ministry hopes to net EGP 3-4 bn from provisions of the SME Act in year one alone, our source added.
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LEGISLATION WATCH- Banking Act will expand the CBE’s oversight of bank management, boards: The Banking Act will grant the central bank greater oversight of the banking sector and boards,CBE Governor Tarek Amer announced yesterday, according to Al Mal. The law will establishes new procedures that expand the CBE’s oversight of bank management, said Amer, without offering specifics. The governor remained tight-lipped on the details of the proposed law, but had said last week that the amended legislation would not set term limits for bank managing directors — a key issue that had stirred up controversy last year when an early draft showed that the CBE would be given wider powers to set term limits. He also noted that the law seeks to strengthen governance regulations for the sector.
The new law would also strengthen governance and independent oversight of the central bank’s own board as part of efforts to ensure transparency, said Amer. He noted that the law, which was reviewed by the CBE’s board recently, has the support of international finance institutions such as the IMF and World Bank.
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LEGISLATION WATCH- Final House vote on Ride-Hailing Apps Act postponed amid backlash against data-sharing clauses: The Ride-Hailing Apps Act failed to breeze through a final vote in the House of Representatives yesterday, drawing heavy criticism for some of its most controversial clauses, which appear to not have been amended at all. Articles 9 and 10 of the legislation, which mandate that ride-hailing companies store user data on their servers abroad for a period of 180 days and make information accessible to government agencies, appear to still be in the bill, according to a leaked copy released by Al Shorouk. MPs voted to study the two articles, which raised the most stink from Uber and Careem, and postpone the vote on them. Earlier reports had indicated that a House subcommittee charged with reviewing the act had agreed to do away with these clauses, which the Egyptian Council of State (Maglis El Dawla) itself had ruled were unconstitutional.
The House also postponed a vote on Article 5 of the law, which sets a cap on licensing fees for ride-hailing companies. Transportation Minister Hisham Arafat had requested that licensing fees for companies in the law be capped at EGP 10 mn.
A law less than ideal for ride-hailing companies: Based on our reading of the law, multiple provisions that came under fire from Uber and Careem remain in place. Among the most glaring:
- Forcing ride-hailing companies to develop a system to integrate white taxis into their fleets, something which the Council of State had deemed unconstitutional.
- Special licensing fees for drivers that are likely to be more expensive than those for taxi drivers.
- Forcing drivers to have stickers marking their association with a particular company.
- Setting a fine of between EGP 200k and EGP 5 mn for violators of the act.
- Ride-hailing companies have only six months to comply with the law.
Are tuk-tuks covered by the law? House Speaker Ali Abdel Aal reportedly said that the law would not govern tuk-tuks. But the act clearly says that the law would apply to “land vehicles and mass transit.” While seemingly a simple discussion, this point could potentially impact numerous new services that do not use traditional passenger cars. Halan, a new ride-hailing app targeting motorcycle and tuktuk owners, had launched in January and has already raised more than 75% of the USD 2 mn it is looking to land for its pre-series A. Uber already runs its Uber Scooter service.
Tic toc: The Supreme Administrative Court is scheduled to hear on Saturday, 12 May an appeal by Uber and Careem of a lower court decision that ordered the two companies to suspend operations, Al Mal reports. The two companies continue to operate under a Court of Urgent Matters ruling that stayed the initial suspension.
Uber, Careem to update Google Maps’ GPS? On a related note, the House Transport and ICT committees reportedly reached an agreement with Uber and Careem that will see the two ride-hailing companies provide Google with an updated and more detailed map of the Cairo governorate once the Ride-Hailing Apps Act is signed into law, unidentified sources tell Al Mal. The two companies will connect the data with Google’s GPS service, which MPs say currently lack many streets’ names. The process should not take longer than one year, the sources say, and the details of the partnership will be announced at the end of the month. It remains unclear whether Google had any role in the “agreement” — or, indeed, is even aware of it.
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The Finance Ministry is working on a medium-term plan to trim Egypt’s public debt to 80% of GDP by 2020, down from 107-108% during FY2016-17, Finance Minister Amr El Garhy said yesterday, according to a ministry statement. Speaking during the second day of the IMF and Central Bank of Egypt’s “Inclusive Growth and Job Creation” conference, El Garhy said that the state would be able to achieve this target by reducing the budget deficit, achieving a 2% primary surplus, and raising per capita income. The IMF said in January that it expects public debt to reach 87% of GDP in FY2018-19, while next year’s state budget expects it to stand at 91-92% of GDP.
El Garhy also predicted that next year will bring significant improvements to citizens’ living standards and stressed that the state is working on further reducing unemployment figures by achieving annual growth levels of 5-6%. Boosting exports is also at the top of the government’s priorities, El Garhy also said. Next year’s budget estimates that unemployment will fall to below 11%.
CBE lays out its inclusive growth plan: CBE Governor Tarek Amer surmised the CBE’s two-fold inclusive growth strategy at the conference. First, the CBE has removed FX restrictions, and opened the FX market, which in turn has drawn in foreign investment and contributed to a drop in unemployment, he said according to Al Shorouk. Meanwhile, the CBE has a strategy to increase the funding available for SMEs as part of the government’s overall financial inclusion drive, CBE Governor Tarek Amer said, according to Al Masry Al Youm.
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LEGISLATION WATCH- Is the House looking to bring about a two-party system? It indeed was a busy day at the House of Representatives, which also looked at amendments the House of Representatives Act, which govern election guidelines and coalition and party formations. Very little in the way of detail is out on the amendments themselves, but Support Egypt Coalition’s Hisham Emara tells Al Mal that the amendments aim, in principle, to turn the House into a two-party majority system. The new law would set 75% of parliamentary seats to party-affiliated MPs, with only 25% seats being allocated for independent MPs, he added. The newspaper notes that the next parliamentary elections are due to take place in 2021.
Meanwhile, the House Culture and Media Committee is expecting to complete its review of the second part of the Press and Media Act by week’s end, committee head MP Osama Heikal said, Ahram Gate reports. The legislation was split into two sections, the first of which was passed in 2016. The second part will establish the regulations and guidelines for those working in the media.
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LEGISLATION WATCH- Amendments to State Lawsuits Authority Act could impact int’l arbitration cases: The Justice Ministry is currently drafting amendments to the State Lawsuits Authority Act, which would help “improve procedures to reach quick resolutions on Egypt’s international and domestic cases,” sources said. They did not provide details on the legislation save that these would presumably include international arbitration cases. The government hopes to get the law approved by parliament in the current legislative cycle.
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BUDGET WATCH- House Budget Committee wants more spending on health and education in the budget: The House of Representatives’ Budget Committee plans to make an official request to the government to raise its allocation for health and education in the FY2018-19 budget, the committee’s deputy chair Yasser Omar said. The government has yet to inform the committee whether the increases in health and education spending meet the constitutionally mandated 10% of GDP spending requirement, he added. The budget for healthcare will grow 12.5% y-o-y to EGP 61.81 bn, while spending on education will grow 8% to EGP 115.66 bn in FY2018-19, according to leaked documents. The committee will wait until hearings with the education and higher education ministers have concluded before making the request, he added.
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MOVES- Kuwait-based KAMCO Investment Company has appointed Sherif Abdel Aal (LinkedIn) as managing director and head of mergers and acquisitions. Abdel Aal was most recently managing director and head of investment banking at Pharos. Noha Ghazaly was announced yesterday as Abdel Aal’s successor at Pharos.
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Saudi King Salman has issued a decree protecting employees who report financial and administrative corruption, Reuters reports, citing Al Arabiya TV. The decree to shield whistleblowers comes as part of a massive anti-graft campaign that included the detention of dozens of royals and top businessmen last year, including Prince Alwaleed bin Talal.
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