LEGISLATION WATCH- The amended Banking Act will not set term limits for bank managing directors, CBE Governor Tarek Amer reportedly said yesterday. “We will keep an eye on things in a different way,” he told Al Shorouk, without elaborating. The pending law — the latest draft of which the central bank’s board is expected to review today, according to Amer — had stirred up controversy last year when an early draft appeared to show that the CBE would be given wider powers to set term limits and impose a 5% tithe on the profits of each bank. Everything in the law, which aims to set a better corporate governance framework for the banking system, has been kept under tight wraps apart from statements from Amer calling for an overhaul to banking sector regulations. He reportedly repeated those calls on Sunday when he spoke at the conference of the Union of Arab Banks You can see past coverage here and here and here.
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IPO WATCH- Banque du Caire will IPO on the Egyptian Exchange by the end of 2018 or early 2019, according to CBE Governor Tarek Amer. Banque du Caire was widely expected to be the first company to list under the state’s privatization program, which officials said will see shares from 4-6 companies (out of a total 23) offered on the EGX before the end of 2018. Finance Minister Amr El Garhy had previously said that the committee overseeing the program is still deciding which state-owned companies would IPO or offer additional shares on the EGX in 2018, noting that those “more ready” than others would receive priority, and that September or October should see the first transactions. Oil outfit Enppi is now expected to pilot the program. Eastern Company could also be among the first few already-listed companies to sell additional shares.
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IPO WATCH- Will CIRA relist on the EGX in 4Q2018? Cairo Investment and Real Estate Development (CIRA), has reportedly begun taking steps to relist on the EGX, with a preliminary date set for 4Q2018, sources said. The company, which holds majority stakes in 24 K-12 schools, is reportedly looking to sell up to 30% of its shares. Dubai-based private equity giant Abraaj had exited its c.30% stake in the company last week to minimize its footprint in the wake of turbulence at an unrelated healthcare fund, selling the shares back to the family of Hassan El Kalla.
Who’s advising? CIRA, which had delisted back in 2015 after selling to Abraaj, is said to be in advanced talks to sign EFG Hermes as adviser on the listing. It also appears that the company is at least considering an international offering, with reports that it hired White & Case as legal advisers on that tranche of the offering. El Tamimi & Co. Law Firm has also reportedly been tapped to act as local legal adviser, while Zulficar & Partners will allegedly act as legal counsel to the underwriter.
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Trade and Industry Ministry paves way for Automotive Directive and sets 46% domestic component requirement: Trade and Industry Minister Tarek Kabil issued a directive mandating that 46% of the components of a domestically-assembled car be sourced locally, according to a statement from the ministry on Sunday. The decision also mandates that 28% of a car has to be assembled in Egypt for it to qualify as a “built in Egypt” car. This portion will be reduced by 1% every year following implementation of the decision. Kabil said that the current 45% local content requirement is too little to drive the development of a local manufacturing industry. The decision goes into effect next year.
The move is a significant step toward the issuance of the Automotive Directive, which would offer assemblers incentives to move up the value chain into manufacturing. Kabil said the directive is being looked at by the ministry, the House of Representatives’ Industry Committee and members of the private sector. Kabil did not say when the Automotive Directive, which stalled on its first attempt in the House thanks to heavy lobbying by car importers, will be ready or issued. It has been with an unnamed German consultancy since last year.
The ministry also plans to establish a database to keep tabs on the implementation of the local content changes and measure which local assemblers abide the decisions and are thus eligible for incentives, said Kabil. The committee will also set quality control standards and ensure that these are identical to those in European brand cars. The database will be set up by a committee headed by the Assistant Trade and Industry Minister and will include the head of the Industrial Development Authority.
There are 245 days left until 1 January 2019. That’s when customs on vehicles imported from the European Union are set to fall to zero. That’s when local assemblers close their doors and put thousands of skilled workers out on the street, absent the protections and incentives in the Automotive Directive.
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Is the Electricity Ministry looking to force industry to go green with quota for renewable energy? It looks like we’re moving from generating renewable energy to mandating its consumption locally: The Electricity Ministry is reportedly looking to force factories to source a minimum percentage of their power needs from renewable energy, ministry sources tell Al Mal. The ministry is planning to implement the quota sometime in mid-2019, the sources said. Industry can apparently expect to have to source 6-8% of its energy from renewable sources under the plan.
Reaction from both industry and the renewables sector has been positive, the newspaper reports.
Ministry setting rules for how private sector sells renewable energy to consumers: This comes as the ministry looks to establish a domestic market privately generated renewable energy buy establishing guidelines on how private renewable companies distribute and charge homeowners and consumers for electricity. As we noted yesterday, the Egyptian Electricity Utility and Consumer Protection Agency (Egyptera) has reportedly been holding high-level meetings to discuss the pricing scheme for power produced and sold under an independent power producer (IPP) framework. Under the framework, private companies are allowed to directly sell power to consumers while paying the state a fee to use the national grid for transmission. Eni is reportedly one of five companies that have approached the Electricity Ministry with offers to build solar power stations under the framework.
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M&A WATCH- Telecom Egypt is reportedly close to tapping EFG Hermes as an adviser on an acquisition of MENA Submarine Cable Systems from the Orascom Telecom Media and Technology (OTMT), sources tell Al Mal. Neither TE or OTMT have publically acknowledged a transaction is in the works. However, TE had announced late last month that it is trying to arrange financing for a potential investment opportunity in submarine cables, in part by reducing its proposed dividends to shareholders. This coincided with a statement from OTMT saying that it is still planning to sell MENA Submarine Cable Systems for USD 90 mn, even though it had denied earlier reports that it was approached by TE. Sources tell the newspaper that acquisition is to ensure that the state has full control of the cable.
Is Naguib Sawiris really bowing out of the telecoms game? That’s what the Egyptian businessmen reportedly said at a conference yesterday. Naguib said he plans to exit whatever investments he still had left in the telecoms sector to concentrate on real estate, agriculture and financial services, noting that there are “serious discussions to sell his investments in cabling projects in Egypt.”
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EXCLUSIVE- Emaar offers EGP 100 mn to settle dispute with El Nasr Housing: The Public Enterprises Ministry will study an offer from Emaar Misr to pay EGP 100 mn to settle an outstanding dispute with the state-owned El Nasr Housing and Reconstruction over Emaar’s Uptown Cairo project, sources told us this week. El Nasr, which filed for arbitration in Cairo last July, is demanding Emaar pay EGP 1 bn and return 3 mn sqm of land in Mokattam it says Emaar has failed to develop since they acquired it in a 2005 agreement. El Nasr is also looking to retrieve 215k sqm it says are technically outside Uptown Cairo’s borders. The head of the Housing Company for Construction and Development, Mahmoud Hegazy, has been tasked with negotiating settlement terms with Emaar.
Emaar not at fault? Sources tell us that Emaar is not at fault for the delay in its development timeline, as the company has yet to receive the necessary licenses for the project, a fact the Public Enterprises Ministry has acknowledged.
EARNINGS WATCH- Separately, Emaar Misr reported yesterday a consolidated net profit of EGP 503.3 mn in 1Q2018, up from EGP 437.9 mn in 1Q2017, according to a regulatory filing (pdf).
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EXCLUSIVE-Egypt Care to launch first phase of EGP 15 bn new capital medical city in 3Q2018: Egypt Care intends to launch the first phase of its medical city at the new administrative capital in 3Q2018, according to Chairman Hassan Al Qalla. Construction has already started, Al Qalla told Enterprise, adding that his company had tapped HKS Architects from the United States to design infrastructure for the EGP 15 bn Capital Med City. The project, which will be run by a JV between Egypt Care and a number of foreign investors, is being funded by a mix of bank debt and the shareholders’ own resources, Al Qalla said, and will take 5-7 years to complete over four phases of construction.
Egypt Care and its partners are planning to list their JV on the EGX within two years’ of its establishment, Al Qalla also said, explaining that an IPO would help finance development. Once fully operational, Med Capital will be home to as many as 2,000 hospital beds, a public hospital, clinics, a trauma center, 11 specialized medical centers, and a hotel.
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Kuwait has agreed “in principle” to roll over some USD 4 bn in deposits it made in 2013, state news agency MENA reports, quoting CBE Governor Tarek Amer. We understand in parallel that the state is working to extend two other deposits by GCC countries, with now being repayable in September of this year and the other delayed to April 2020.
Meanwhile, the National Bank of Egypt (NBE) is raising some USD 600 mn in a club loan from a group of lenders, banking sources told Reuters on Sunday. A three-year debt facility and will likely be provided by international banks and some UAE lenders with NBE coordinating the fundraising, the sources added. While the purpose of the loan was not stated, the newswire is assuming the loan will be used to bolster foreign currency liquidity. NBE had borrowed USD 300 mn from the African Export Import Bank last year and raised a USD 390 mn in a three-year syndicated loan arranged by HSBC, Citi, Arab Banking Corp, National Bank of Abu Dhabi, Standard Chartered and Union National Bank.
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LEGISLATION WATCH- Egypt’s sovereign wealth fund to be given financial and legal independence: Egypt’s new sovereign wealth fund and any subsidiary under it would not be subject to local business laws, according to Al Mal’s reading of a draft of the law establishing the fund. Other aspects of the law include making the fund an independent body with its own budget, presumably separate from that of a state budget.
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Nasr in talks with World Bank on USD 1 bn loan to develop Sinai: Investment and International Cooperation Minister Sahar Nasr is talks with the World Bank for a USD 1 bn loan to develop Sinai, the minister is reported to have said, according to Al Mal. She gave no further detail on the talks. Sinai development shot up to the top of the Ismail cabinet priorities, when the Prime Minister pledged earlier this month EGP 275 bn for Sinai development over four years. Nasr had signed a USD 100 mn loan from the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED) to complete the financing of five water desalination plants in South Sinai, while the Ismail Cabinet signed off on USD 258.5 mn in funding from KFAED for North Sinai.
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Egypt is gearing up to launch a round of tenders for oil and gas exploration in waters west of the Nile Delta and through to the border with Libya, Oil Minister Tarek El Molla said at an AmCham event yesterday, Ahram Gate reports. The minister did not get into specifics on the timeline or size of the tenders. El Molla, however, reiterated what he said earlier this month that the ministry would issue tenders for 10-11 oil and gas exploration blocks, as well as other drilling tenders in the Red Sea by the end of 2018.
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MOVES- Orascom Construction’s board of directors nominated Johan Beerlandt as non-executive independent Director, the company announced. Beerlandt is the Chairman of BESIX Group and former CEO from 2004 to 2017.
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