Government to meet with brokerages houses next week to hash out the stamp tax: Investment and International Cooperation Minister Sahar Nasr is planning to sit down with brokerage firms next week to address their concerns about a proposed stamp tax on stock market transactions, Al Borsa reports. Finance Minister Amr El Garhy said on Sunday that the stamp tax is coming before May, but that the rate was yet to be set. Brokers were still wary of the idea after the Tax Authority suggested a 0.175% rate on both the buy and sell side of each transaction on Sunday, saying that while it may have little-to-no effect on foreign and institutions, it could be an issue for the retail investors that account for most of the EGX’s turnover. The Egyptian Capital Markets Association, an industry lobby group, believes a tax higher than the 0.1% levy imposed in 2013 and scrapped the year after would harm the EGX.
Developers of private free zones may now take a deep breath: GAFI overlord Mohamed Khodeir reassured investors in private free zones investors that they would be allowed to extend their agreements with the state under the new Investment Act, even though the act will not allow the creation of new private FZs. Youm7 has the story.
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Subsidy system purge on hold? Supply Minister Ali El Moselhy reportedly plans to pursue structural reforms to the subsidy system before pushing on with his predecessor’s drive to purge welfare cheats from the rolls of citizens eligible for support, Al Shorouk reports, citing unnamed senior ministry officials. Former minister Mohamed Ali El Sheikh had planned to strike mns of citizens off the list of ration card holders, including the dead, individuals living abroad, people owning more than one piece of real estate, and anyone with a monthly income of more than EGP 3k (view the full list of criteria here). Some citizens had complained that their welfare access was unlawfully revoked in early February, after the government cut about 1.2 mn names (mostly the dead and duplicates) from the list. An ensuring review of the list found that 60 mn out of 70 mn registered citizens are eligible beneficiaries, the officials add. The other 10 mn citizens will reportedly be allowed to provide proof of their need for welfare by a deadline that the ministry intends to set soon, after which, after which any files with insufficient data will be permanently cleared.
Meanwhile, the Supply Ministry appears to be working with much greater enthusiasm on price controls with the Consumer Protection Authority and has apparently adopted a plan to establish a database of products and their market prices in a possible bid to get vendors to comply with them. The database will rely on input from both private and public sector companies, Supply Minister Ali El Moselhy said, Al Borsa reports. El Moselhy said that the ministry and the CPA are working together on amendments to the Consumer Protection Act that will force manufacturers to label their products with a cost breakdown of their goods to prevent traders from over-inflating their prices. The amendments, which were first floated last month, caused the expected uproar among food producers at the Federation of Egyptian Industries.
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SODIC announced record results yesterday with net profit after tax and minority interest coming in at EGP 429 mn for 2016, up 38% y-o-y. Revenues for the year also grew by 40% y-o-y to record EGP 2.07 bn. “The main contributors to revenue growth during 4Q16 and the 12 months ended December 2016 were Eastown Residences and Westown Residences. Deliveries in Eastown Residences commenced in May of 2016 while in Westown Residences 80% of projects units were delivered by the end of the same year,” the company said in a filing. SODIC says 2016 saw cancellations dip to 4%, a record low, and deliveries and collections increase by 46% and 31% y-o-y, respectively. The EGP float impacted the company’s cash balances positively, causing a revaluation of EGP 68.5 mn in 2016. For 2017, SODIC expects contracted sales to reach EGP 5.6 bn and is looking to deliver 1,150 units across its projects. The company also plans to invest EGP 3 bn during the year.
We also attended SODIC’s roundtable with Managing Director Magued Sherif yesterday. The key points from the discussion were:
- Sherif said expectations of devaluation “helped in accelerating buying decisions,” as Egyptians invest in real estate as a hedge against devaluation, which was reflected in SODIC’s earnings in 2016.
- “We will not decrease our prices,” Sherif said, explaining that he does not think prices should keep changing with exchange rate fluctuations, especially as contractors continue to jack up prices on the other end.
- The company is on the lookout for additions to its land bank, Sherif said, adding that SODIC is open to partnerships with the state and private entities. The challenge for SODIC is that no large areas of land have been tendered last year and that it only considers land plots that are dispute-free.
- Sherif also tempered expectations about SODIC participating in affordable housing projects. Low income housing will demand that the state make a conscious decision to make land available to developers at lower prices, he said.
- SODIC is looking into projects in the new administrative capital, but has not reached a decision yet on whether to invest there or not. “What is lacking is communication with the community of developers so that we have a complete picture about the city … the timeline for execution is out of step with the magnitude of the project,” Sherif said.
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MOVES- Youssef Ayoub has joined Tanmiya Capital Ventures (TCV), the mid-cap private equity firm, as a managing partner. TCV’s other partners include founding partner Ahmed El Guindy (former head of investment banking at EFG Hermes), ex-Raya Holding Chief Investment Officer Karim Hassan and former EFG Hermes investment banker Omar Ekram. Ayoub was previously marketing manager at Coca-Cola, where he was marketing manager responsible for strategy and execution across Egypt. TCV tells us that Ayoub joins to "bring hands-on experience to the consumer, healthcare, export-led and other primarily defensive sectors in which we're looking to invest. Our key differentiator is the mix of financial, investment and operational experience we bring our portfolio companies to help them unlock growth." Ayoub is a turnaround and new-product-launch specialist with long experience in the FMCG sector. TCV, which invests alongside existing owner-operators, is presently raising its first fund.
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Is rapprochement with Saudi Arabia in the cards? Senior Egyptian and Saudi officials are laying the groundwork for a visit to Cairo by Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir next week. Al-Jubeir could meet with Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry and possibly President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi, an unnamed diplomatic source tells Youm7.
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Egypt can expect to receive the second USD 1.25 bn tranche of the USD 12 bn IMF extended fund facility sometime in June after a review that had been set for March was tentatively postponed to April, Egypt mission chief Chris Jarvis tells Al Shorouk. The delegation — which will assess the Ismail government’s progress on its economic reform program as a condition for disbursing the tranche — will need between 6-8 weeks to prepare and process its report after the visit. Finance Minister Amr El Garhy and Deputy Finance Minister Amr El Monayer told us on Sunday that the visit was postponed to allow the ministry time to focus on finalizing and delivering the FY2017-18 state budget to the House of Representatives by the end of March. Egypt and the IMF had never fixed a date for the disbursement of the second tranche.
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The final contracts with Russia for the Daba’a nuclear power plant won’t be signed until the second half of the year instead of the first quarter, as was previously expected, an unnamed source from the Electricity Ministry tells Al Mal. Drafting is still in progress, and in any case the government won’t sign the contracts until it wraps up public consultations.
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33% of Egyptians apparently approved of keeping Sherif Ismail on as prime minister after the latest cabinet shuffle, according to a poll by the Egyptian Center For Public Opinion Research (Baseera) conducted a little over a week after the new cabinet was sworn in. 25% of survey-takers felt that Ismail should have been replaced in the shuffle, while 41% were undecided. Baseera had conducted a survey a week prior to the cabinet shuffle in which 22% of those polled believed Ismail was doing a good job; 25% of those surveyed were less enthusiastic, but could live with him; 18% disapproved of his performance; and 35% were undecided.
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The Cairo Court of Cassation acquitted Mubarak-era Tourism Minister Zoheir Garana of charges of corruption, profiteering and squandering public money on Tuesday, Ahram Online reports. The ruling overturns a five-year prison sentence against Garana back in 2014, when a Cairo criminal court found him guilty of buying land in Ain Sokhna resort of Gamsha in violation of the Auctions Act. The Court of Cassation — the nation’s highest appeals court — acquitted two other defendants.
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** Earnings watch- Emaar Misr said its net profit for 2016 grew by 98% y-o-y to EGP 1.68 bn on revenues of EGP 4 bn (up from EGP 3.23 bn a year ago).
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Global demand for gas is expected to increase by 2% a year between 2015 and 2030, with LNG set to rise at twice that rate at 4 to 5%, according to Shell’s first-ever LNG outlook report. By 2020, the size of global LNG trade is projected to grow 50% compared to volumes in 2014. The report also noted that China and India, which are set to continue driving a rise in demand, were two of the fastest-growing buyers in 2016, increasing their imports by a combined 11.9 mn tonnes of LNG. Egypt was one of six new importing countries that have bolstered global demand for LNG since 2015. Others include Colombia, Jamaica, Jordan, Pakistan, and Poland. Egypt, Jordan, and Pakistan were among the fastest-growing LNG importers in the world in 2016. Due to local shortages in gas supplies, they imported a total of 13.9 mn tonnes of LNG. Egypt should see a significant reduction in imports and a return to exporting by 2018 after the Zohr supergiant field comes into production late this year. You can hit the landing page for the report here, catch an overview of the report (pdf), or check out slides or an infographic.
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Other international news stories of local relevance worth noting this morning:
- US President Donald Trump “toned down the dark rhetoric” in his first address to Congress. We’ll be reading takes this morning by Politico (the entire homepage at press time) and the New York Times.
- Lining up at the trough: Citigroup is said to be in “advanced discussions” for a banking license in Saudi Arabia, “returning after a more than 10-year absence from the kingdom, as the bank looks for ways to capitalize on financial reforms,” Bloomberg reports.
- “The Iranian economy has had an ‘impressive recovery’ following sanctions relief last year, though uncertainty regarding the fate of the nuclear deal and relations with the U.S. threaten to undermine it, the International Monetary Fund said.”
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