INVESTMENT WATCH- Carbon Holdings signs contracts for its USD 10.9 bn petrochemicals complex: Carbon Holdings signed on Saturday contracts with the Suez Canal Authority and a host of service providers and technical partners, kicking off its USD 10.9 bn petrochemicals facility known as Tahrir Petrochemicals Corporation (TPC). The 5 mn sqm complex would be the largest in the Middle East, the Madbouly Cabinet said in a press release. “The project is funded by international institutions and represents an added value to the Egyptian industrial sector,” Oil Minister Tarek El Molla said at the signing ceremony. Carbon Holdings CEO Basil El Baz stressed that TPC, which will take about four years to build once funds are drawn down post financial close, has received substantial backing from international financial institutions. The complex will double Egyptian exports while producing raw materials that El Baz expects will serve as catalysts for the growth of industry here at home, Reuters reports.
Background: UK Minister of Investment Graham Stuart had told Enterprise in an interview back in May that the UK will be providing Tahrir Petrochemicals with “an unprecedented” USD 1.6 bn financing package through UK Export Finance. El Molla sat down with UK Export Finance CEO Louis Taylor on Saturday to discuss the project and potential funding for future projects, according to an Oil Ministry statement.
What other oil execs are saying about the project: Sourcing funding for the project is a positive step, Robin Mills, CEO of Qamar Energy in Dubai, told The National. “They’ve finally got the financing together, which will have a positive impact for investments. The project will boost Egypt’s petrochemicals exports and, when available locally, make it cheaper than when it was imported,” Mills added.
Polish companies look eager to invest in SCZone: Meanwhile, a delegation of Polish businessmen, headed by Polish Investment Minister Jerzy Kwieciński, met with Deputy head of the Suez Canal Economic Zone (SCZone) Mahfouz Taha yesterday to explore investment opportunities there, according to Youm7.
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Oil Ministry advises caution on reports of the size of the Noor field: Oil Minister Tarek El Molla pulled the brakes on reports on reserve figures on the Noor gas field off the coast of North Sinai. He tells Youm7 that the numbers being reported are not official and are not sanctioned by the Oil Ministry. The local and international press had caused a stir last week with reports that Italy’s Eni could unlock as much as 90 tcf of natural gas reserves from the Noor field, would make it about 3x the size of the supergiant Zohr gas field, if true. El Molla noted that the concession agreements for the field have yet to be ratified by the House of Representatives, so Eni would not have even started operations on the field yet.
A source in the industry tells that while the seismic studies are still in progress, drilling of the well won’t take place until later this year — and won’t reach its planned target depth before early January 2019. The source also points out that “on average, exploration wells have a success rate of around 20-25%,” calling it “absolutely extraordinary and extremely unlikely” that it would yield a mega-find on the scale suggested by the press last week.
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EXCLUSIVE- CIRA relisting to take place in October: Cairo Investment and Real Estate Development (CIRA) will relist shares on the EGX in October, sources close to the transaction told Enterprise over the long weekend. The firm is planning offer new shares equivalent to 35-40% of the company’s equity. Some 80-90% of the share sale will be put up in an institutional offering, with the remainder set aside for domestic retail investors. The company has already hit the road to test appetite for the offering in the GCC and the Europe. CIRA will reportedly use a portion of the proceeds of the transaction to pay Abraaj Group for exiting its 35% stake in the company, the sources added. A source at the embattled Dubai-based private equity firm had told us last month that it had completed the exit of CIRA, saying that “Abraaj exited with a healthy return before any potential IPO so as to avoid IPO-related lockups that would impact the investment IRR.” CIRA’s shareholders are set to meet tomorrow to sign off on the relisting.
Advisers: EFG Hermes is global coordinator and bookrunner for the transaction, we’re told. White & Case is said to have been tapped to serve as legal advisers on the international offering, while Zulficar & Partners is domestic counsel to the underwriter.
Restructuring ahead of the share sale: CIRA has also spun off its real estate investment arm ahead of the transaction, our sources say. Its education arm owns and operates 24 schools in addition to Badr University. El Tamimi & Co. acted as local legal adviser on the spin-off, which is also subject to shareholder approval at a meeting tomorrow.
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INVESTMENT WATCH- Ukraine’s Nibulon will invest USD 2 bn in upgrading Egypt’s grain storage and transport infrastructure under an agreement reached in May with Supply Ministry officials, according to a ministry statement. The investment will be split over four stages, the first of which is expected to begin during FY2018-19 and will involve building state-of-the-art silos along the banks of the Nile. The first are set to be built near the ports of Alexandria and Damietta. Nibulon execs are expected to visit Egypt this month to start setting up a local branch for the company and hiring a team to oversee the first phase of the project, which also involves the manufacturing of 20 barges, each with a capacity of 20,000 tonnes. The Ukrainian grains and oilseeds producer had signed an MoU with UN FAO in Cairo last year “to increase the efficiency of Egyptian companies, engaged in production of cereals, their storage and transportation.”
This came as an unnamed Ukrainian company reportedly made an offer to develop a USD 200 mn river port in Upper Egypt, a transport ministry official told Al Shorouk. The ministry intends to issue tenders to the private sector for the development and management of three ports in Assiut, Sohag, and Qena, under a 25-year usufruct contract, the official added, saying river transport will be a big theme for the ministry this year.
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INVESTMENT WATCH- Evergrow scaling back investment in fertilizer plant? It appears that fertilizer maker Evergrow has reduced projected spending on its calcium diphosphate plant, with Evergrow chairman Mohamed El Kheshen stating that the Sadat City plant will cost EGP 2 bn, down sharply from an initial estimate of EGP 9.5 bn, Al Mal reports. The plant will aim to export 75% of its production, El Kheshen said.
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El Sisi urges patience as economic reforms begin to show results: President Abdel Fattah El Sisi made his administration’s economic reform program the highlight of his televised speech on Saturday, which marked the fifth anniversary of the 30 June protests that ousted his Ikhwan-backed predecessor. He noted that while the reforms are tough, they are working: He cited GDP growth rising to over the 5% mark from around 2% before 2013, adding that Egypt is on track to achieve growth levels of 7% in the next few years. He also noted that FX reserves jumped to USD 44 bn from USD 15 bn in 2013. El Sisi stressed that the uprising five years ago sought to solve three major issues facing Egypt and the region in the wake of the Arab Spring: A security vacuum, the proliferation of terror groups, and a collapsed economy. The nation is on the right track on all three fronts, he said.
Coverage of El Sisi’s speech topped headlines on Egypt in the foreign press. Reuters is taking note of an online campaign calling for El Sisi to resign. The Associated Press’ coverage, which was widely picked up, emphasized the impact of the subsidies cuts and other reform measures on the average Egyptian. The newswire also noted that an Egyptian court on Saturday postponed the verdicts for hundreds of defendants detained for their involvement in a 2013 Rabaa sit-ins. Meanwhile, the GCC press is celebrating the anniversary: Gulf News is noting that five years since the events of June 2013, Egypt has re-emerged from the shadow of he Ikhwan.
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The central bank’s Monetary Policy Committee left key interest rates unchanged at its Thursday meeting. The move was widely expected. The overnight deposit and lending rates remained unchanged at 16.75% and 17.75%, respectively, with the main operation rate also stable at 17.25%. The decision was “consistent with the targeted disinflation path,” the CBE said in a statement, which explains that it means to counter a temporary rise in inflation levels that is expected to follow the most recent hike in energy prices.
The central bank sees inflation falling into the single-digits “after the temporary effect of supply shocks dissipates.” Inflation levels in May rose at their slowest pace in two years, with annual headline inflation coming in at 11.4%, down from 13.1%, while monthly headline inflation dropped to 0.2% from 1.5% a month before. “[The CBE] want to assess the inflationary impact of the recent increase in fuel and electricity prices before easing policy further,” said Bloomberg Economics’ Ziad Daoud tells Bloomberg.
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Egypt’s current account deficit fell 57.5% y-o-y to USD 5.3 bn in 9M2017-18, down from USD 12.5 bn in the same period last year. “This improvement was an outcome of the increase in both services balances surplus by 138.2% and net current transfers by 23.2%, [as well as a] retreat in trade deficit by 1.3%,” the CBE said in a statement (pdf), which adds that the BoP recorded a surplus of USD 11.0 bn during the nine-month period.
Remittances grew 23.1% y-o-y to USD 19.5 bn for 9M2017-18, up from 15.9 bn a year before. Travel receipts recorded a surplus of USD 5.5 bn, up from USD 651.0 mn in 9M2016-17, while revenues from the Suez Canal grew by 11.9% y-o-y to USD 4.2 bn.
Merchandise exports grew 17.6% to USD 18.8 bn, thanks to a 29.2% rise in oil exports to USD 6 bn, bolstered by higher global crude prices. Non-oil exports rose 12.9% y-o-y to USD 12.8 bn, thanks largely to increased exports of electrical appliances, fertilizers, and meds. Meanwhile, imports climbed 5.5% y-o-y to USD 46.8 bn.
Net foreign direct investment reached USD 6.0 bn in 9M2017-18, driven by some USD 3.4 bn in new oil sector investments. Portfolio investment generated net inflows of USD 14.9 bn, up from USD 7.8 bn a year ago, as foreigners continued to invest heavily in Egyptian treasury bills, with net purchases of USD 11.5 bn vs. USD 4.3 bn in 9M2016-17.
The CBE repaid USD 3.3 bn in loans during the nine-month period, but received some USD 7.7 bn in disbursements.
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Egypt expects to receive the fourth tranche of a USD 12 bn extended fund facility from the IMF this week, Finance Minister Mohamed Maait told Youm7. The IMF’s board signed off on the disbursement of the USD 2.02 bn tranche on Friday; it will bring to USD 8 bn the total Egypt has so far received since signing the agreement in 2016 bn, according to an IMF press release carried by Reuters. The IMF had decided to “postpone the date for approving the next tranche of its Egypt loan to a day after the rate decision” was made, notes Bloomberg. That signals the IMF’s “continued hawkish oversight, favoring monetary austerity until inflation and money supply growth are tamed,” Naeem brokerage said in a note picked up by Bloomberg. Egypt and the IMF had reached a staff-level agreement back in May, following a positive third review of progress on economic and structural reform, which found that the country had made solid progress, with inflation levels cooling and GDP growth accelerating.
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World Bank pledges USD 530 mn to improve Egypt’s healthcare system: The World Bank’s executive board approved on Thursday a five-year, USD 530 mn program to support Egypt’s healthcare system, according to an Investment and International Cooperation Ministry statement (pdf). The project will include “expanding family planning services, scaling up [Egypt’s] groundbreaking Hepatitis C program, and supporting the new Universal Health Insurance System,” according to a World Bank release. Under the program, the Health Ministry will be responsible for improving services at primary healthcare facilities and hospitals and screen 35 mn people for Hepatitis C and another 20 mn adults for non-communicable diseases.
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EFG Hermes led the June brokerage league table for the Egyptian Exchange with a 16.5% market share, followed by CI Capital (10.9%), HC Securities (9.3%), Beltone (8.9%), and Pharos Holding (8.8%), according to figures released over the weekend by the EGX. For the first half of the year, EFG Hermes had 20.2% market share, followed by CI Capital (12.2%), Beltone (6.4%), Pharos (5.4%) and Arqaam (4.9%).
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Is the gov’t tightening the internal timeline for the state privatization program? Public Enterprises Minister Hisham Tawfik ordered state holding companies to expedite procedures to ready their companies for the state privatization program, according to a ministry statement picked up by Al Shorouk. Tawfik ordered the companies to complete their reports on their respective companies in three weeks. Finance Minister Mohamed Maait insisted in a statement last week that the program was not delayed and that the ministry was currently coordinating with its peers on the timeline of the program. Eastern Tobacco was expected to pilot the program last month with an additional 4% stake sale.
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ECA warns against price manipulation in the construction, transport industries: The Egyptian Competition Authority (ECA) is reportedly warning of predatory pricing in the construction industry, ordering its regional offices to begin an investigation into manufacturers who have been selling their goods at marked up prices. The ECA is also warning against possible price manipulation by transportation companies, according to an ECA statement, picked up by Al Shorouk.
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MOVES- Civil aviation minister appoints new heads of EgyptAir, EHCAAN, Cairo Airport Company: Civil Aviation Minister Younes El Masry tapped Ahmed Adel as acting EgyptAir Chairman. Adel, who most recently served as deputy chairman at the national carrier, replaces outgoing chairman Safwat Musallam. El Masry also appointed Tarek Fawzy as head of the Egyptian Holding Company for Airports and Air Navigation, succeeding Mohamed Salam El Moselhy. Ahmed Abdelazim has also been selected as the new chairman of the Cairo Airport Company, replacing Magdy Ishak.
MOVES- Abbas Kamel was sworn in on Thursday as head of the General Intelligence Service, according to an Ittihadiya statement. Kamel had been acting chief since replacing Khaled Fawzi in January.
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