EFG Hermes’ Vortex platform sold a 45% equity stake in its UK solar operation to Malaysia’s second-largest pension fund, Kumpulan Wang Persaraan (KWAP), in a GBP 67.5 mn transaction. Vortex will continue to maintain a 5% long-term shareholding in Vortex Solar Investments, having acquired 365 MW of solar PV producing assets in the United Kingdom from TerraForm Power in January 2017. Following the transaction, Vortex Solar’s shareholding structure will stand as 50% Tenaga Nasional Berhad, 45% KWAP, and 5% Vortex. “KWAP fits very well strategically as a long-term future partner to Vortex and EFG Hermes … I am very pleased to have placed a 45% stake with the right partners after a highly competitive process that saw interest from leading investors around the world,” said Karim Moussa, Head of Private Equity and Asset Management at EFG Hermes. Group CEO Karim Awad says “by completing the sale to KWAP we successfully complete the cycle of the underwriting for Vortex Solar in less than 12 months.” Read the full announcement here (pdf).
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IPO WATCH- Pioneers Holding plans to list 40% of its subsidiary Rooya Real Estate Investment Company on the EGX in 1H2018, Pioneers CEO Walid Zaki told Reuters on Sunday. Last we heard of this IPO was back in July, when reports emerged that Rooya had filed to list. It had also been reported that the firm had tapped Helmy and AAIB as advisors. Pioneers Holding had bought a 60% stake in Rooya back in 2015 for EGP 1.2 bn. The developer has a 9 mn sqm land bank, with about 6 mn of that currently under development, the newswire says.
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INVESTMENT WATCH- Logistics tech startup Bosta has secured seed investment from e-payment provider Fawry in a transaction entailing a share purchase and capital increase. Bosta said it plans to “leverage its latest investment to develop its online delivery platform, boost its user-experience and disrupt the delivery service market in Egypt while maintaining an eye for other regional opportunities.” The investment is the third that Bosta has secured in 2017. The value of the investment by Fawry was not disclosed. You can read the full announcement here (pdf).
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LEGISLATION WATCH- The House of Representatives approved yesterday 39 articles of the Universal Healthcare Act during its first plenary debate of the law, Al Shorouk reports. Articles that passed included those setting up the three regulators which will monitor implementing the new healthcare system. Debate of the law had been contentious, particularly over how to classify those exempt from paying premiums into the new healthcare system and who gets to classify them. Finance Minister Amr El Garhy, who attended the session, said that the executive regulations of the law would determine who would be exempt — effectively leaving it in the hands of the government, Al Mal reports. The plenary session, however, voted to keep amendments to the law which state that a committee made up of Finance Ministry, the Social Solidarity Ministry, and the state statistics agency CAPMAS would draw up criteria for exemption. A number of MPs, including from the Free Egyptians party, had voiced opposition to only allowing the Finance Ministry to determine the criteria, while the House Health Committee had recommended tying the exemption with the person’s social security and welfare status, the newspaper says.
The House Health Committee had proposed that an independent committee be set up to monitor implementation the act on an ongoing basis, Al Mal reports. They also called for a re-assessment of how long it will take to roll the act out. It is scheduled to be in place in all governorates by 2032.
Voting on the act is expected to resume today. In other legislative news:
- The House debate in plenary session today amendments to the Companies Act that govern the establishment of sole proprietorships, committee member Amr Sedky tells Al Borsa. The House Economics Committee had approved the amendments last week. We have yet to hear details on amendments to corporate governance regulations, particularly those on whistleblowers, reported to have been part of the amendments.
- Sedky also said that the committee had set up three sub-committees to review penalties in the Consumer Protection Act after business associations lobbied against them. They appear to be leaning towards reducing penalties to a fine instead of prison time, in accordance with the recommendations of the business community.
- The House Manpower Committee has completed its review of the Labor Act on Sunday and will be passing the bill over to a plenary session of the House.
Which brings us to our regular PARLIAMENTARY NONSENSE WATCH- House Speaker Ali Abdel Aal referred a draft (also spelled daft in this case) law to boycott American products to a joint committee including members of the standing committees on the economy, defense and national security, foreign relations, and Arab affairs for review, Ahram Gate reports. The legislation was prepared by 61 MPs in response to the Trump administration’s decision to move the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.
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The Sisi administration plans to honor all export contracts Egypt signed before the nation became a net importer of gas back in 2012, said Oil Minister Tarek El Molla, Al Shorouk reports. The statement appears to signal that the government plans to use influx of gas from Zohr, which it hopes will help Egypt become a net gas exporter in 2018, to resolve outstanding contracts which has caused legal headaches for the government. Most significant of these is a ruling by a Swiss court which fined Egypt USD 2 bn in compensation to Israel Electric Corporation (IEC) for halting gas supplies to our eastern neighbor in 2012. The case had led to the government suspending any plans to importing gas from Israel as part of a region-wide collaboration to export gas from the East Mediterranean to Europe. Egypt and Israel have reportedly been holding talks behind closed doors to revive cooperation efforts.
Meanwhile, output from the Zohr gas field will raise Egypt’s natural gas production rate to 5.5 bcf/d from 5.1 bcf/d, Oil Minister Tarek El Molla told Reuters. Zohr will add 350 mcf/d of natural gas, with output increasing to around 1 bcf/d by mid-2018, he had said. Separately, Saudi Aramco has supplied 1 mn bbl of crude to Egyptian refineries, El Molla also said. “Egypt and Saudi Arabia will be studying the economic feasibility of continuing to refine Saudi crude in Egyptian refineries by the start of 2018 … Saudi Arabia agreed in April last year to provide Egypt with 700,000 tonnes of refined oil products a month for five years,” Reuters notes.
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The Ministerial Committee for Settlement of Investment Disputes settled a USD 937 mn dispute with Saudi Investor Hashem El Mehdar Group Industry & Tourism Development, Al Masry Al Youm reports. El Mehdar withdrew an international arbitration case he had filed against Egypt and will move ahead with planned investment in Marsa Matrouh, which were put on hold after a land dispute. Prime Minister Sherif Ismail had approved the composition of the Ministerial Committee for Settlement of Investment Disputes to be headed by the PM himself back in November, listing our friend Moustafa El Bahabety, Deputy Justice Minister for Arbitration and International Disputes, as the head of the organization’s technical committee.
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INVESTMENT WATCH- Hilton Worldwide is planning to add 1,000 hotel rooms in Egypt next year, vice president of operations for Egypt and North Africa Mohab Ghali said yesterday, Al Shorouk reports. Ghali had previously said that Hilton is planning on expanding in Egypt with seven hotels in Cairo, Hurghada, and Ain Sokhna in the next four years. The first of the seven will open by the end of 2018.
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EgyptAir Cargo apparently sent its first cargo flight to Moscow in two years on 29 November, the company said in a statement. EgyptAir Cargo plans on sending twice-weekly flights to the Russian capital until the end of February 2018, according to the statement. The company has been in talks with Russia to resume cargo flights since the 2015 Metrojet plane crash, Chairman Bassem Gohar tells Al Mal. EgyptAir Cargo’s negotiations were separate from the Civil Aviation Ministry’s efforts to bring back tourist flights. The resumption of cargo flights came two weeks before Egypt and Russia signed a civil aviation security cooperation protocol that would allow direct flights between Moscow and Cairo to resume as of February.
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Plantform Egypt’s Hussein Abou Bakr has become the latest entrepreneur to join the Endeavor network, becoming one of 35 business people from 22 companies and 13 countries to get the nod at an international selection panel in Miami. Plantform is a food processing company with three business lines (canned food, pickles and dehydrated vegetables) and supplies US restaurant chains including Olive Garden, Little Caesar’s, Papa John’s and Burger King. The company works primarily out of Upper Egypt and exports 100% of its production. TCV invested USD 2.5 mn in Plantform this summer (pdf). You can read the Endeavor press release here (pdf).
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Priority will be given to Egyptian companies in the reconstruction of Libya, said Osama Hamad, Finance Minister of Libya’s Government of National Accord. “Egyptian companies have the ability to accomplish anything, and this is what we’ve seen in our visit to the Suez Canal Economic Zone during our tour,” Hamad tells state-owned news agency MENA. The Libyan government had announced back in 2012 that Egyptian companies will take part in USD 9 bn worth of projects as part of Libya’s reconstruction, according to Daily News Egypt. Real estate development alone amounted to USD 5 bn, with Orascom and Hassan Allam Holding being the most prominent names in the list of companies participating in the reconstruction drive.
On the political front, elections in Libya appear to be high on people’s minds. Egypt, Tunisia, and Algeria called for all parties to swiftly reach a political solution to allow for safe and timely elections. The three reiterated their support for Libya’s national reconciliation through political dialogue, the three countries’ foreign ministers said in a statement yesterday following a tripartite meeting in Tunisia. The statement called on all Libyan factions to disarm in order to protect the country’s best interests, and unify their institutions, including the Libyan army.
Libyan political factions are jockeying for positions ahead of the planned elections, which are expected next year. Eastern Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar, whose forces are backed by Egypt, said on Sunday the UN-backed government was obsolete and he would listen to the will of the people, a firm hint he may run in elections expected next year, according to Reuters.
But perhaps the most surprising news appears to be Seif Al Islam Al Gaddafi planning to run for president, the family’s spokesman, Basem al-Hashimi al-Soul,confirmed to RT. The son of deposed Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said he would run on a platform of restoring security. We anticipate this will go as smoothly as Ahmed Shafik’s current presidential run.
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CORRECTION- Pharos Holding will be backing the share price of AT Lease for a period of one month after trading begins through a stabilization fund. Pharos Holding is listing 24% of the company’s shares with book-building and subscriptions to the IPO to begin on Tuesday, 19 December. We reported incorrectly that the stabilization fund will be in place for three months in yesterday’s issue. The entry has been corrected on our website.
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