Proposed amendments to the CBE and banking acts could reinstate term limits for bank MDs: Amendments to the CBE Act and the Banking Law will enshrine into law the CBE’s decree limiting the terms of banking sector managing directors to nine years which was issued in March of last year, according to statements attributed to an official reportedly involved in drafting the bill by Al Borsa. The source said that the term limits decree had been scrapped by court order as it had no legal basis with which to stand, something the new draft bill will seek to rectify. The Administrative Court ruled back in June of last year that the CBE Governor’s decision to limit terms violates the rights of bank executives to employment and also refused the retroactive application of the decision. The ruling followed a lawsuit filed by banking executives to scrap the highly unpopular decree, which was met by an uproar from the sector when it was first issued.
Leaked content from the proposed amendments are not final, a source told Al Masry Al Youm. The source said the proposed amendments have been passed to the Federation of Egyptian Banks and to legal experts to get their opinions.
The source also denied claims by Hona Al Asema host Lamees El Hadidi on Tuesday that the CBE governor is looking to expand his position’s authority and overreach into the jurisdictions of the president, prime minister, or bank shareholders. Amending the banking laws aims to accommodate developments in banking and finance and ensure adequate corporate governance measures are in place, the source explained.
“Don’t judge the law by its first draft,” Prime Minister Sherif Ismail urged during a Wednesday press conference, where he advised calm, especially since the cabinet has yet to receive the legislation for review, Al Shorouk says.
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Misr Hotels Company is freezing expansion plans until the CBE decreases interest rates and inflation cools, according to chairman Amr Attia, Al Borsa reports. “As long as interest rates are at their current levels, we will not enter new investments,” Attia says. The company allocated EGP 183 mn in investments this fiscal year, including EGP 113 mn in debt services, for developments at Dahab Resort and Nile Ritz-Carlton. Construction work is set to start at Dahab resort’s extension before year-end, according to Attia. On tourism, he says occupancy rates at the Nile Ritz-Carlton increased to 75% last year, with Gulf nationals comprising 55% of hotel residents. Separately, Attia said the company is not intending on increasing prices.
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IPO WATCH- The Egyptian Financial Supervisory Authority (EFSA) signed off yesterday on DBK Pharma’s fair value assessment of EGP 3.1 per share ahead of the company's planned initial public offering of 35% of its shares, sources close to the matter tell Al Borsa. The report was prepared by financial consultancy firm FinCorp. We had last noted in May that DBK Pharma’s second attempt to list on the EGX had been running into roadblocks. DBK’s first attempt to IPO in 2015 had also failed when the company was unable to raise enough to cover its offering.
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EARNINGS WATCH- CIB delivered another record top- and bottom-line performance during the first half of the year as it released its earnings late last night. The lender delivered 29% revenue growth to EGP 6.88 bn, while its bottom line grew 29% over the same period last year to EGP 3.56 bn. The bank’s management team noted in a statement that despite the ambiguity with regards to the CBE corridor rate movement decisions, the bank grew its loan portfolio, despite the backdrop of a shortage in local currency liquidity and subdued growth in lending. “ Bank’s balance sheet has become more lenient to accommodate any up- or down-moves in both interest rates and currency exchange rates,” CIB said. Download CIB’s full earnings release here (pdf).
In other CIB news, the bank’s shareholders approved increases to its issued and paid-up capital to EGP 14.52 bn from EGP 11.62 bn through bonus shares issuance, according to a bourse disclosure. Shareholders will be issued an extra share for every four shares they hold. The capital increase will be financed from CIB’s general reserves.
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MOVES- Mohsen Adel was reportedly appointed vice chairman of the EGX, sources tell Reuters in reports that were also picked up by CNBC Arabia. If confirmed, Adel would assume the role for four years, after having served as EGX board member.
… Yet to be filled is the top job. The cabinet has not yet picked an EGX head and current Chairman Mohamed Omran’s term, along with Egyptian Financial Supervisory Authority (EFSA) boss Sherif Samy’s, expires on 6 August.
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A USD 10.5 bn petrochemicals complex is being planned in Suez, writes Al Masry Al Youm. The governor of Suez met Wednesday with a delegation from an unnamed petrochemical company to discuss plans for establishing the complex. The plan aims to make Suez a petrochemical production hub in the region meeting domestic demand and exporting to foreign markets. Work on the complex is expected to start in 2018. Officials from the World Bank and the European Development Bank also attended the meeting.
The government had announced plans earlier this week to establish a USD 4 bn petrochemicals plant, according to Oil Minister Tarek El Molla. He had met with Toyota, which will be conducting feasibility studies over the next 28 weeks, AMAY reported.
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The Investment and International Cooperation Ministry launched an online platform for investors to set up and register their companies through the General Authority for Investment (GAI)’s website, Minister Sahar Nasr announced. The ministry also launched a hotline (16035) to answer investors’ questions regarding the new process. Company establishment and registration procedures can then be completed at the investors services center, through accredited offices by the center, or through the standard procedures at the ministry, Nasr added.
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The law allowing for the repossession of illegally occupied land seized by the government will come into effect next week, Prime Minister Sherif Ismail announced during a press conference yesterday. The legislation will set the legal terms and measures for the owners to buy back land seized under the state’s campaign. Violating the new law — which was already approved by the House of Representatives — could result in permanent land seizure, the Prime Minister warned, adding that the state will continue to clear unlicensed developments, as it has been doing for the last several months under President Abdel Fattah El Sisi’s orders.
Separately, Egypt plans to retain the same levels of international funding in FY2017-18 as the year before, the Prime Minister added.
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Egypt’s agricultural exports increased by 12.1% year-on-year in 1H2017 to 3.5 mn tonnes, up from 3.1 mn tonnes last year, Agriculture Ministry spokesperson Hamdi Abdel Dayem said on Wednesday, according to Reuters. “Exports increased in citrus, potatoes, grapes, and strawberries, and fell only for onions,” he said, explaining that the EGP floatation last November is one of the main drivers of this growth.
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President appoints head of Council of State to the chagrin of judiciary: President Abdel Fattah El Sisi issued a decree appointing Ahmed Aboul Azm as the head of Maglis Al Dawla (Council of State), according to Ahram Gate. El Sisi is using the powers granted to him through the controversial amendments of the Judicial Authorities Act that was signed into law in April. Maglis Al Dawla had attempted in May to protest the the amendments by presenting just one nominee, Yehia El Dakroury, to become its head, instead of presenting El Sisi a list of three nominees to choose from. El Sisi went against the judges and used a right enshrined by the amendments to pick a chief judge from one of the seven longest-serving deputies to the outgoing head of Maglis Al Dawla.
El Dakroury issued a statement thanking judges for nominating him, saying the act was proof of their independence, Al Masry Al Youm reports. Earlier, judicial sources told Al Shorouk that El Dakroury and other Maglis Al Dawla judges are reportedly looking to take legal action against the decree and plan to petition the Supreme Administrative Court in a bid to repeal Aboul Azm’s appointment.
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The US State Department issued a travel warning for Americans traveling to Egypt, urging them to “consider the risks of travel … due to threats from terrorist and violent political opposition groups.” The State Department has prohibited diplomatic personnel from visiting the Western Desert and the Sinai Peninsula, with the exception of Sharm El Sheikh, as long as they travel by air. The warning also prohibits its diplomats from visiting religious sites outside greater Cairo, noting that “terrorists continue to threaten Egypt’s religious minorities and have attacked sites and people associated with the Egyptian Coptic Church.” The warning replaces a previous one from December 2016.
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Russia still considers Egypt to be “unsafe” for Russian tourists, an unnamed source told Sputnik. It appears that Russia moved from pointing to airport security as the hurdle to restore flights to Egypt and is now, instead, pointing to its dissatisfaction with Egypt's “unwillingness to duly investigate” the 2015 plane crash in Sinai. “They are determined to investigate the crash forever and punish no one. We are not satisfied with this position … The Egyptians do not want to link the investigation of the crash with the resumption of tourist flights from Russia… At present the sides do not have an understanding what happened to the plane, how the explosive device got on board, who brought it there. There are also no identified suspects and their accomplices from the airport staff,” the source explains.
… Still, cooperation with Russia in other areas continues to move ahead. The launch of Egypt’s satellite Egyptsat-A is scheduled for 2019, Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Russia’s RSC Energia corporation Alexander Derechin said, TASS reports. Egyptsat-A is designed to replace the EgyptSat-2 satellite, with which communication was lost in April 2015. TASS says Egyptsat-A “will have an improved optical-electronic system and onboard control package, a high speed onboard radio link and enhanced solar batteries.”
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Have the demands submitted to Qatar been softened to “six principles”? The countries boycotting Qatar have set a list of “six principles” Qatar must abide by,Taimur Khan writes for The National. Diplomats from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Bahrain confirmed at the United Nations in New York that the six less specific principles, which do not have a deadline, had officially replaced the original demands, according to Khan. The new principles do not require the shutting down of Al Jazeera, but are set to serve as a framework for future talks to end the crisis. This comes amid mediation efforts by Kuwait, which are supported by the United States, United Nations, and European countries.
Egypt’s Foreign Ministry, however, rejects that the “Arab Quartet” had downgraded or dropped their original list of 13 demands, which includes shuttering Al Jazeera, according to statements by Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Abu Zeid said yesterday picked up by Al Shorouk.
Meanwhile, the US and the UK have reportedly come up with a proposal to resolve the regional crisis by “laying the grounds for direct negotiations based on an accord that resolved a previous dispute between the Gulf nations, as well as counterterrorism measures,” Bloomberg reports. The roadmap is based on two agreements Qatar and the GCC countries signed in 2013 and 2014 which “included pledges ‘not to interfere in the internal affairs’ of other Gulf Cooperation Council members and not to harbor people engaged in activities damaging to those countries.”
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Egypt’s Aly El Shafei was awarded the Grand Prize of the sixth Innovation Prize for Africa, according to Ventures Africa. El Shafei walked away with USD 100k for his development of Smart Electro-Mechanical Actuator Journal Integrated Bearing (SEMAJIB). SEMAJIB a “smart bearing that significantly improves turbine performance in single line combined cycle plants as well as conventional generator technology.” The device has been patented in the US since 2010, with another patent pending, and “is designed to be used to support energy generating turbines more efficiently and cost effectively in Africa. SEMAJIB is an innovation that does not currently exist in the West, and already Siemens’ has indicated interest in the device.”
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8 civilians were killed dead and 4 wounded in Al Arish during in an attack on Wednesday, says Al Bawaba. A policeman was also killed in a separate attack where two soldiers were injured.
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