Shake up at Telecom Egypt: Telecom Egypt has appointed Ahmed El Beheiry as its new CEO, the state-owned landline monopoly announced in a regulatory disclosure. El Beheiry succeeds Tamer Gadalla, who was the subject of rumors surrounding his future in the company circulating earlier this week. The board of directors also announced adding Mohamed Barakat and Amr Mansour as the government’s representatives on the board replacing Lobna Helal and Gadalla. The appointments are for the remaining duration of the current board of directors’ term.
In other Telecom Egypt news, the Administrative Court has handed down a ruling against a lawsuit calling for the reversal of TE’s 2005 initial public offering, AMAY says. TE’s shares advanced 0.52% on the news
Separately, Cairo Metro company spokesperson denied chairman Ali Fadaly has submitted his resignation, Al Mal reports.
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Government employees who don’t fall under the Civil Service Act are getting a 10% social welfare raise after the Finance Ministry signed off yesterday on the measure, which will apply retroactively from last July (the first month of the current fiscal year), Al Borsa reports. The minimum raise per employee was set at EGP 65 per month, and the maximum at EGP 120. According to Finance Minister Amr El Garhy, the measure will cost the state EGP 3.5 bn this fiscal year. El Garhy came to the agreement with the House Manpower Committee, which had been pushing to apply the raise to civil servants across the board. The committee had unilaterally approved a bill mandating the raise earlier this month, after the Ismail cabinet refused an original request to give civil servants an additional 10% social welfare bonus on top of the 7% annual bump granted under the Act. Articles 37 and 38 of the Act’s executive regulations stipulate a 7% annual raise for all civil regulations and allows an additional 5% performance-based bonus for a limited number of employees. Al Shorouk has the full text of the approved amendments.
So who’s getting a raise under the measure? State-employed physicians, teachers, public transportation workers, employees of most public-sector companies and a number of government bodies, including the central bank and the Central Auditing Organization.
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IPO Watch- The Oil Ministry has greenlit the beginning of the process to offer up to 24% of state-owned oil and gas engineering contractor Enppi on the EGX, according to Al Masry Al Youm. The next step now is for issuance manager NI Capital to arrange the company’s fair value assessment.
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The second USD 500 mn tranche of the African Development Bank’s USD 1.5 bn loan to Egypt will be disbursed within two weeks, pending final government procedures, Central Bank of Egypt Governor Tarek Amer tells Al Borsa.
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Raising the value-added (VAT) rate to 14% from 13% in FY 2017-18 should bring in an extra EGP 7-8 bn in revenues, Deputy Finance Minister Amr El Monayer told Reuters. The newswire notes that the delayed implementation of the VAT had the state targeting around EGP 20 bn in revenues from it in the current fiscal year.
Separately, the Finance Ministry has set three rates at which companies will be allowed to expense FX losses they incurred from sourcing USD from the parallel market in 2016, Al Borsa reports. Companies can write-off 15% of the variance between the official and parallel market rates for January-June of last year, 40% between July and September, and 60% in October 2016.
Sorry, counsel. You’re going to be paying VAT. The VAT will be applied to all “professional services” including accountants and lawyers but a payment system can be worked out for each profession, El Monayer also told Al Masry Al Youm. Agreements can be signed which would facilitate accounting procedures come tax season, he added. The ministry and the House Budgeting Committee agreed to hold meetings with the various syndicates to hammer out the details of the proposed procedures, according to Al Borsa. Actors’ guilds will be included in the new system, El Monayer is quoted as saying. The Lawyers Syndicate had filed a lawsuit to kill the VAT, saying it was unconstitutional to impose the tax on them.
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Schneider Electric Egypt has had no trouble repatriating its profits out of Egypt since the EGP was floated in November, regional head of North East Africa and the Levant Walid Sheta tells Reuters. The company is also not meeting any issues sourcing FX since the float to purchase equipment and production inputs, said Sheta. His statements follows those by Air France-KLM Group VP Patrick Alexandre noting improvement in Egypt’s FX availability and repatriation. Schneider is also looking for some recognition for its work on Eni’s Zohr supergiant gas field, where it has provided electrical infrastructure and controls, Al Mal says. Schneider is also going to be bidding for contracts at the Daba’a nuclear power plant, Sheta tells the newspaper.
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Unnamed company to build USD 624 mn pharma plant in Suez Canal Economic Zone: SCZone chief Ahmed Darwish said at a press conference yesterday that a USD 624 mn pharma plant will be built in the zone, a story getting considerable traction in the local press on a slow news day. The former minister provided no additional detail, but had previously said that an American company was interested in the opportunity. All factories to be established in the zone will be geared towards manufacturing, not packaging, Darwish said, adding that the SCZone’s tech cluster is also a promising home for would-be manufacturers of solar panels./
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CIB has taken home two awards from Asian Banker magazine for Achievement in Operational Risk and Liquidity Risk Management for 2016 at the Future of Finance Middle East & Africa Summit held in Dubai, according to a statement.
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Amazon announced yesterday it has reached an agreement to acquire regional e-commerce platform Souq, fending off last-minute rival bid. Subject to closing conditions, the transaction should be executed this year. Goldman Sachs advised on the transaction and although values and terms were not disclosed, a source described it as “the biggest-ever technology M&A transaction in the Arab world.” A document noted that Amazon’s entry into "attractive Middle East countries with significant growth potential given e-commerce only represents (roughly) 2% of retail sales.”
Souq probably wasn’t a unicorn after all, late stage investors may have taken a haircut: With Amazon reportedly thwarting a last-minute bid by Mohamed Alabbar’s Emaar Malls, sources tell Reuters Amazon still paid less than Emaar’s bid, keeping Souq's valuation below the USD 1 bn mark it reportedly hit during its last equity raising last year.
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Saudi Aramco’s IPO could be as big as USD 1.5 tn after the government announced it was cutting the company's tax rate to 50%, according to analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. and Rystad Energy AS. Bernstein analysts predict that the tax cut will increase Aramco’s after-tax income by 300%, allowing for higher cash returns to shareholders, while Rystad Energy increased its valuation of Aramco by 250%, Bloomberg reports.
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On a reasonably slow news day in Egypt, there are a handful of international stories worth knowing about:
The United Kingdom served notice under Article 50 last night. Or, to be precise, UK Prime Minister Theresa May signed a letter giving official notice under the Treaty of Lisbon provision. Qatar seized the occasion to toady up and pledge to invest GBP 5 bn over the coming three to five years. “Gulf state confident in the long term on British economy,” declared the FT. Reuters has more on the “show of support for the world’s fifth-largest economy.”
Canada is still considering a ban on laptops and tabletsin the cabins of inbound flights. Canadian Transport Minister Marc Garneau said last week the federal government was evaluating intelligence provided by the US, Canada’s CBC News reports. Analysts and experts believe the hesitation suggests that there may be something that is less than compelling about what drove the US and UK to impose the ban. The head of the International Air Transport Association shares those doubts, it seems. Alexandre de Juniac called on governments to work with the transport industry to ensure passengers aren't separated from their devices. “The current measures are not an acceptable long-term solution to whatever threat they are trying to mitigate,” de Juniac said in a speech picked up by the Associated Press.
China is giving Brazil and South Africa another year to join its infrastructure bank after the two missed a deadline at the end of 2016 to finalize procedures for joining.
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