The Ismail cabinet raised the ceiling on the maximum value of USD bonds it can issue on international markets to USD 7 bn from USD 5 bn, according to a cabinet statement. The statement added that Finance Ministry was seeking to obtain additional financing in the face of a rise in interest rates on the domestic market and to increase FX reserves held by the CBE. “The government’s current trend is to replace domestic borrowing by external borrowing in order to reduce the cost of borrowing as local interest rates rise,” Reham El Desoki of Arqaam Capital told Reuters. The decision comes amid expectations of a bond issuance worth USD 3-4 bn at the end of this year, announced by Deputy Finance Minister Mohamed Maait last week. About USD 1 bn of that figure will be in the form of sukuks, Shariah-compliant bonds.
Cabinet also approved a framework for sukuks yesterday: A framework for the issuance of sukuks for companies and government bodies was adopted as part of amendments to the Capital Markets Act approved by the cabinet yesterday. The amendments also include enforcing stricter penalties and fines for violations of the law, giving authorities the power to reverse trades if international money laundering is suspected, and creating a registry of firms authorized to issue fair value reports. The amendments also cover trading of futures contracts and give EGX room to set lower listing fees to attract smaller issuers.
Cabinet will allow the private sector to bid for as many as 45 full-service “Takamol” hospitals to the private sector. The proposal won approval at yesterday’s cabinet meeting. The House Health Committee had rejected a similar proposal from the Health Ministry last July, which would have seen the private sector participate in the development and refurbishment of 377 hospitals providing low-income families with access to comprehensive healthcare. The government is now dressing the idea as turning public clinics into advanced healthcare centers in a bid to downplay the dreaded “privatization” word, according to ONA News Agency. Other decisions taken during yesterday’s meeting include:
- Approving the Finance Ministry acting as guarantor for the Egyptian Electricity Transmission Company’s annual payments for power plant projects;
- Approving amendments to a law governing the formation and structure of export councils which mandate that a third of their seats be filled by members of business associations;
- Signing off on a EUR 100 mn loan from the French Development Agency for the Alexandria tram project and other funding agreements with the agency for a primary healthcare support project;
- Approving a presidential decree to reorganize the General Organization for Teaching Hospitals and Institutes.
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Orascom Construction announced late yesterday the start of production at Iowa Fertilizers Co., the first world-scale greenfield nitrogen fertilizer plant to be built in the US in more than 25 years. “The plant has a nameplate capacity of 2,200 metric tons per day (mtpd) of ammonia, 2,200 mtpd of urea synthesis, 1,200 mtpd of granular urea, 4,300 mtpd of urea ammonium nitrate and 900 mtpd of diesel exhaust fluid, with a combined sellable capacity of 1.5 to 2 mn metric tons per annum of products,” the company said in a statement (pdf), noting that Iowa Governor Terry Branstad attended the inauguration of the facility, “one of the largest private sector construction projects in Iowa’s history.” OC, the Nasdaq Dubai- and EGX-quoted engineering and construction contractor, is number 34 on ENR’s 2016 Top 250 International Contractors list.
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State-owned fixed-line monopoly Telecom Egypt reached an agreement yesterday to offer 2G, 3G, and 4G mobile services on Orange Egypt’s infrastructure, TE announced in a statement. The agreement includes an MoU for TE to use Orange Egypt’s infrastructure for five years, starting from the beginning of 2018, at a cost of EGP 2.5 bn, according to the statement. Under the deal, TE will use Orange Egypt’s network for domestic roaming for three years, Al Borsa reports.
TE expects to roll out its mobile services during the summer season, company president Ahmed El Beheiry said at the signing ceremony. El Beheiry said the financial, technical, and legal details of the agreement with Orange Egypt will be hammered out within two months’ time, Al Mal reports.
The agreement does not bar TE from signing other agreements with Vodafone Egypt or Etisalat Misr, an option TE will likely pursue in the future, El Beheiry said. A CIT Ministry source told the newspaper that Orange Egypt just ironed out the technical and financial details with TE first. The source expects TE to split the coverage nationwide geographically among the three current mobile network operators.
Meanwhile, Orange Egypt CEO Jean-Marc Harion expects the company will receive its 4G license within a month and will roll out the service within three months, Al Borsa reports.
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The never-ending saga of the Investment Act continues: The old adage that a camel is a horse designed by committee comes to mind this morning as we look for clarity on what the House of Representatives is doing with the Ismail government’s draft Investment Act. Approval by the House Economics Committee appears to be dragging on thanks to debates over semantics: It now appears that the committee is debating to reduce the number of articles in the law to under 60 from 99, ostensibly to make it easier for investors. (That’s the same justification MPs had earlier used when they wanted to split the act into two separate pieces of legislation.) The proposal carries favor with the Support Egypt Coalition leader and head of the Federation of Egyptian Industries Mohamed El Sewedy, parliamentary sources tell Al Borsa. There is no clear explanation on which articles might be cut or why. The vote to approve the act, which was supposed to have taken place last month, has now once again been pushed to next week. Also still unclear this morning: Whether MPs are inclined to allow the establishment of private-sector-run free zones.
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Egypt has been ranked the third most attractive investment destination in Africa by Africa-based investment management firm Quantum Global. Their research arm‚ Quantum Global Research Lab‚ sees Botswana as the most attractive destination, followed by Morocco in its Africa Investment Index (pdf). Egypt scored highly in the firm’s ease of doing business index, demographic factors and liquidity.
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Agreements for the Daba’a nuclear power plant are ready for signing, Rosatom State Corporation General Director Alexey Likhachev said, according to Sputnik. “I can say for sure that in this case, the date of signing contracts depends on the Egyptian side. Technologically, we are ready for signing literally today,” Likhachev said. Egypt expects to sign the four contracts in May, a source from the Nuclear Power Plants Authority tells Al Shorouk.
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Hero Foods will begin shipping Vitrac jam to a food chain in the US market, Al Borsareports. Hero is targeting USD 10 mn in export sales to the United States over the next three years, Hero Middle East & Africa Managing Director Mahmoud Bazan says. The company wants to export products worth over EGP 500 mn by year-end, with exports making up 50% of its sales.
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Automotive directive, exports could drive growth at one of Egypt’s largest glass manufacturers: Glass manufacturer Dr. Greiche wants to grow exports to beyond their 17% of sales by targeting African markets, Al Borsa reports. The company is targeting a 14.5% sales growth this year and says the automotive directive — which would give incentives to auto assemblers who go deeper into manufacturing — would help the business grow, board member Magda Greiche.
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Al Ahram chairman quits to protest interference by new regulator: Al Ahram Chairman Ahmed El Naggar has resigned to protest what he claimed is interference by the National Press Council in the management of the country’s newspapers, he tells Al Shorouk. According to El Naggar, the council requested that the newspapers’ managers not take any financial or managerial decisions without prior review by the council. The council accepted El Naggar’s resignation, Al Mal says, and has appointed board member Hisham Lotfy as the interim head of Al Ahram’s board of directors, council chief Karam Gabr said in a press conference, according to Al Shorouk.
Wasting no time at all, El Naggar could face a corruption probe after six members of Al Ahram’s board of directors announced they plan to file a complaint with the Prosecutor General on alleged corruption during El Naggar’s time as chairman, Al Mal reports.
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MOVES- Real estate developer Abraj Misr has appointed former CIT Minister Hany Mahmoud to its board of directors, Al Mal reports. Others in the new board lineup include real estate development consultant Fathallah Fawzy, Multiples Investment Group founder and chairman Omar El Shenety, and former assistant chairman of Arab Contractors Medhat Askar. Mahmoud was recently appointed non-executive chairman of Vodafone Egypt. Abraj Misr, of no relation to the emerging markets private equity giant Abraaj Group, was said last year to be contemplating an IPO on the Egyptian Exchange but has since been silent on its plans.
MOVES- Vezeeta, the MENA-focused platform for automated physician, clinic and hospital booking, announced yesterday (pdf) that appointment of Fawzy Abu Seif as its first general manager for Egypt. Abu Seif, a veteran of Vodafone Egypt, was at the time of his appointment Vezeeta’s Chief Marketing Officer. The company says it has more than 3,500 physicians online and claims to be adding at least 250 new doctors per month, with a year-end target of booking 100k appointments per month.
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Hurghada sees significant growth in travel bookings in 1Q17: Travel bookings for Hurghada have seen significant growth rates during the first three months of the year, according to a report from Traveltainment. Bookings surged 102% year-on-year in January, followed by a 52% y-o-y growth rate in February and a 72% increase in March. “These growth rates are well ahead of the double-digit declines in the first quarter of last year, and have reinforced the Red Sea destination’s position as the third-largest destination airport for German package holidaymakers,” German travel trade magazine fvw says.
This comes as Marsa Alam’s Sharm El Luli beach was ranked as the third-best beach in the Middle East in TripAdvisor’s 2017 Travelers’ Choice rankings. Shark’s Bay Beach and Ras Um Sid in Sharm El Sheikh landed in the fifth and seventh spots, respectively, while Dubai’s Jumeirah Public Beach took the number one spot on the travel site’s list.
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Egyptian-American charity worker Aya Hijazi was released from detention late on Tuesday, her lawyers told The Associated Press. A court had acquitted her two days earlier of charges of human trafficking and child abuse.
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