Naguib pulling out of North Korea? Orascom Telecom Media and Technology Holding (OTMT) reportedly stopped its service in North Korea early last month and is preparing for a full withdrawal from the country, the Korea Times reports, citing sources. Japanese intelligence officials and industry sources say OTMT “has decided to pull its network out of the North completely amid mounting pressure from the United States and the U.N. Security Council.” As recently as September, Chairman Naguib Sawiris was saying he has no plans to divest from North Korea, even though OTMT effectively lost control of its subsidiary there Koryolink in late 2015. Koryolink was established in 2008 as North Korea’s only 3G mobile phone network with OTMT reportedly controlling a 75% stake of the venture. “The media report noted the Egyptian company has yet to officially announce its decision to withdraw from the North, as some procedures need more time to be handled smoothly,” the story adds.
Naguib’s presence in North Korea came under the spotlight after Egypt’s ties to the DPRK were reportedly a factor in Washington’s decision earlier this year to freeze and cut aid to Egypt. Naguib said at the time that he had no plans to divest. Subsequent coverage of Egypt’s trade and arms relationships with North Korea saw Cairo quietly signal that it was backing away from its decades-long relationship with Pyonyang.
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China lands port projects worth c. USD 1.4 bn: The Transport Ministry signed yesterday MoUs with the China Road and Bridge Corporation (CRBC) for three port projects at a combined cost of USD 1.35 bn, Minister Hisham Arafat said, Al Borsa reports. The agreement will see CRBC conduct studies and designs to develop the Safaga, Nuweiba, and Sharm El Sheikh ports, in addition to constructing and operating new multipurpose terminals at the ports. CRBC will also be responsible for supplying the equipment for the projects, which will be carried out under a build-operate-transfer framework. The Safaga Port project will cost USD 400 mn, while the developments at the Nuweiba and Sharm El Sheikh ports are expected to cost USD 350 mn and USD 600 mn, respectively.
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Chinese tourism to Egypt doubles this year: Some 300k Chinese holidaymakers visited Egypt this year, double the 150k who arrived in 2016, trade and economic attache with the Chinese Embassy Han Bing said according to Al Mal. His statements came at an annual conference that reviews economic cooperation between Egypt and China.
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The USD 3-4 bn USD-denominated eurobond issuance will take place towards the end of January, said Finance Minister Amr El Garhy, Al Borsa reports. A roadshow for the issuance will take place in mid-January, with the Finance Ministry focusing on Europe and the US. Extending the roadshow to Asia is under consideration and will depend on the recommendation of investment banks selected to be joint lead managers of the eurobond issuance program. The Finance Ministry will select winning investment banks in a few weeks’ time, El Garhy added. BNP Paribas, Citi, JP Morgan, and NATIXIS were joint bookrunners during the last eurobond issuance.
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Another step closer towards privatizing the gas sector: The market will start operating under the executive regulations for the new Natural Gas Act from February onwards, Karem Mahmoud, the head of the natural gas market regulator says, according to Al Masry Al Youm. Oil Minister Tarek El Molla had said the regulations would be ready within the coming weeks. Mahmoud says he expects the new regulations to incentivize production of natural gas locally and attract investment in petrochemicals and fertilizers.
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IPO WATCH- Eagle Capital could list shares of Egyptian MediaGroup (EMG) on the EGX, sources from EMG tell Al Borsa. Eagle Capital, led by former Investment Minister Dalia Khorshid, announced on Monday that it had acquired Ahmed Abou Hashima’s stake in EMG, the parent company of high-profile media assets including ad agency Synergy and broadcaster OnTV. Plans for a listing on the EGX have been in the books prior to the acquisition, and the new board of directors will consider the issue, the sources said.
Meanwhile, Osama El Sheikh, the noted journalist and former head of broadcaster ART, has been the new chairman of EMG, replacing Abou Hashima, EMG CEO Hussam Saleh told Al Masry Al Youm on Tuesday. The company seems set to hold a presser on Thursday.
Speaking of Abou Hashima, the man had glowing things to say about investing in Egypt’s manufacturing sector in a talk with content mill World Finance. Representative quote from the Egyptian Steel CEO: “The future is ours, and I never regretted investing during [the time of Egypt’s 2011 revolution]” (watch if you must; runtime: 04:06).
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IPO WATCH- El Saba Automotive to IPO in the coming five years: El Saba Automotive, Nissan’s distributor in Egypt, plans to list shares on the EGX sometime in the coming five years, chairman Alaa El Saba tells Al Mal. The decision appears to have been precipitated by the CBE’s 700 bps interest rate hikes this year. El Saba tells the newspaper that in this high interest rate environment, auto companies must seek alternative avenues of financing away from the banking the sector — fair enough, but if that’s the sole impetus, the five-year horizon is a bit odd. El Saba added that being publicly traded would be an advantage in solicit business from foreign car manufacturers.
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Heliopolis Housing will get 30% of the sales revenues of residential units and 30.2% from commercial units at SODIC East, according to a bourse disclosure. The project’s first phase, bringing in EGP 1.8 bn, was sold out in seven days, SODIC CEO Magued Sherif had announced during the week. SODIC East is being co-developed with Heliopolis Housing on a 655 feddan land plot.
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Italian tire manufacturer Pirelli is reportedly considering starting a research a development center in Egypt within three years, according to Agenzia Nova. The center would be the first R&D center for that industry in Egypt.
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Good luck with that: Taxi booking application Professional Taxi aims to start service before the end of the month, CEO Mahmoud Ahmed said in statements carried by Al Borsa. The company has 1,000 white taxis on its roster, all models from 2011 and up, and will offer a discounted rate of EGP 1.75 per km from the usual EGP 2.00. The app is available on Android and will expand to other operating systems down the line. The company will initially cover the Cairo and Giza areas.
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TRANSACTION NEWS- Things lawyers would like you to know this morning:
Matouk Bassiouny acted as the legal counsel, alongside Davis Polk, to Maersk Drilling in its divestment of its 50% stake in Egyptian Drilling Company. EGPC bought the stake for cash consideration of USD 100 mn to become the company’s sole shareholder.
Shahid Law’s corporate and M&A team advised Longreen Capital Advisors in its acquisition of Egyptian International Restaurants Company, operator of El Omda chain of restaurants.
Sarie-Eldin & Partners was counsel to lenders in a transaction to provide Saudi Plastic Factory SAE with a syndicated facility of USD 13.5 mn and EGP 120 mn arranged by Alexbank and Emirates NBD. The funding will go towards financing part of the investment cost of the development, design, construction and operation of a plastic packaging products manufacturing facility owned by Saudi Plastic Factory.
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MOVES- Former Vodafone Egypt CEO Stefano Gastaut was named Vodafone’s Global Director Internet of Things. Gastaut’s appointment is effective 1 January 2018. He was CEO of Vodafone Egypt from September 2016.
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Financial Regulatory Authority (FRA) Chairman Mohamed Omran warned against calls to invest in cryptocurrencies, describing such a move as “fraud” and those who engage in it could be held liable under the law. In a statement on Tuesday meant to warn investors against rushing into Bitcoin-mania (Bitcoin prices breached USD 17,000 mark yesterday), Omran noted that mystery still surrounds these currencies, citing major warnings from numerous banking and supervisory authorities against them, including the International Organisation of Securities Commissions. Omran said that amendments to the Capital Markets Act had been made to allow for futures trading and other financial instruments. Any other instruments will require further legislative amendments, in a reminder that cryptocurrencies still remain outside the purview of the law in Egypt. Omran lends his voice to that of the central bank, which has issued repeated warnings on the legal status of cryptocurrencies (and lack thereof).
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Another ballistic missile fired by Houthi rebels in Yemen targeting the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh was shot down on Tuesday, Reuters reports. No casualties were reported from the attack, the second in as many months. US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said the “bears all the hallmarks of previous attacks using Iranian-provided weapons.” She pushed the UN Security Council to act.
In other Saudi news, Saudi Arabia’s fiscal deficit is expected to grow in 2018, as the country’s Finance Ministry announced plans to increase spending to a record SAR 978 bn riyals (USD 261 bn), up from SAR 890 bn the original 2017 budget plan and SAR 926 bn of actual spending this year.
Other international news worth noting in brief include:
- The US House of Representatives almost passed the Republican tax reform plan, but were derailed on a technicality from the US Senate, Reuters reports. Expect another vote this week.
- The White House on Tuesday blamed North Korea’s government for the massive WannaCry cyberattack in May that crippled hundreds of thousands of computers around the world, according to WSJ.
- South African Union leader Cyril Ramaphosa won the ruling ANC party’s nomination for leadership, dealing a blow to beleaguered President Jacob Zuma, the FT reports.
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