LEGISLATION WATCH- One thing we learned from the ‘national dialogue’ on the Ride-Hailing Apps Act: Only the government is really happy with it. The Support Egypt Coalition led what it calls a national dialogue on the Ride-Hailing Apps Act on Sunday, bringing together MPs, government officials and representatives from the companies. The general consensus of the meeting appears to be that while the law is a good start, much more needs to be done. The event came as the government rushes to legalize ride-hailing apps such as Uber and Careem, whose licenses were put at risk by a ruling from the Administrative Court favoring taxi drivers.
The government line: The Ride-Hailing Apps Act is key, if only because it’s the state’s first to attempt to regulate the sharing economy, Investment Minister Sahar Nasr said, according to Al Shorouk. Passing the bill is in the public interest: It helps create jobs and complements the government’s development strategy, she added. The government is developing new cities and is keen to develop reliable public transportation systems in cooperation with the private sector, Nasr noted.
Nasr also may have thrown a dig at grandstanding MPs when she says that the law has been through a number of committees in the House and the government and their input has been taken into consideration.
The companies get their say: Careem’s public relations director, Dalia El Nasr, showed the flag for the private sector, according to the newspaper. She called for moderate pricing of licenses under the act, a justifiable complaint considering reports that permits to drive for a ride-sharing service could cost 125% more than taxi licenses do (which, frankly, is just insane). Ride-sharing apps should also be exempted from having to prove to regulators that all of their divers are insured, a requirement El Nasr says would be logistically difficult for a multinational with some 100k drivers. (On this: Give us a break. Proof of insurance should be a basic, as it is in every jurisdiction in the world that we can think of). Overall, El Nasr is pushing for a looser, more lenient regulatory framework
The House wants to appease taxis—and collect your data: MPs positively slobbered as they looked to score points with taxi drivers, criticizing a bill they themselves helped draft. “[Ride-hailing] companies have harmed regular taxi drivers who pay taxes and license fees to the state,” said House Transport Committee deputy chair Mohamed Zain, according to Al Masry Al Youm. (Find us a taxi driver who pays taxes on his earnings driving a cab and we’ll find you the sole living saint in Egypt.) Zain also pushed for the law to guarantee that companies open user data to the government and store that data in Egypt — a feature of the law first revealed by the NYT’s Declan Walsh last year. The head of the House ICT Committee, Nidal El Saeed, supported those articles, but called for them to be slightly loosened. He did, however, double down on support for taxi drivers, calling for a referendum on the law be put to them, Al Shorouk reports.
Brilliant. Let’s pass the democratic process to a group whose interests are in no way threatened by this bill. That’s the mature way to do it…
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INVESTMENT WATCH- Universal Healthcare Act drums up interest in Egypt’s healthcare industry? The issuance of the Universal Healthcare Act, which was signed into law and January and is up for implementation in July, is drumming up investor interest in Egypt’s healthcare sector and medical industry.
The Saudi German Hospitals Group is planning to inaugurate its USD 500 mn medical city in Alexandria next year, SGH Cairo CEO Mohamed Hablas tells Al Shorouk. The company is nearing the end of construction on its medical city complex in Alex West, which will house eight hospitals, a 220-clinic medical center, and an EGP 700 mn science and technology college. SGH is also planning to open two new hospitals in Egypt under its Andalusia brand at an investment cost of EGP 750 mn, one each in Six October City and New Cairo, in addition to its plans to build a hospital in Asyut and another in the new administrative capital.
Medical group Speed is also planning to invest EGP 500 mn over the next three years, Chairman Mahmoud Lasheen says. Speed intends to open a EGP 200-220 mn hospital in Obour City by the end of this year and simultaneously work on another EGP 280 mn facility in New Cairo, which it expects to inaugurate in the second half of 2019. Speed Medical Examination Services had announced earlier this month that it was planning to invest EGP 67 mn in 43 new labs between now and the end of 2Q2019, in addition to expanding its network to Libya, Morocco, Kenya, and Uganda.
Recently,Mena Health Partners’ recent announced it would be investing EGP 3 bn over the coming three years in its portfolio of four hospitals, and Saudi Arabia’s Elaj has been on an acquisition spree says its expansion plans include a EGP 500 mn oncology hospital in Cairo.
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IPO WATCH- The retail tranche of B Investment’s initial public offering was 84.4x oversubscribed when bookbuilding concluded at the close of yesterday’s session, Youm7 reports. BPE Holding for Financial Investments (better known as B Investments) is hoping to raise EGP 460 mn from the sale of 43 mn shares, good for a free float of about 27% (retail offering of 5,000,000 shares and private placement of 38,131,554 shares). The company will use the proceeds to fund investments in renewable energy and non-banking financial services. B Investments is expected to begin trading on the EGX on 29 March. Sigma Capital is the sole coordinator and bookrunner, while Zaki Hashem & Partners are acting as legal counsel to the issuer.
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Naguib Sawiris, Yassin Mansour offer to buy Qatari Diar out of Egypt? Businessmen Naguib Sawiris and Yassin Mansour are reportedly looking to buy real estate developer Qatari Diar’s Egyptian investments, sources claimed to Al Shorouk. Naguib was said to have made Diar a EGP 35 bn offer to acquire all of its local assets, while Palm Hills Development Chairman Mansour made an offer for the company’s New Cairo City Gate development, which has been the subject of an ongoing legal dispute with the New and Urban Communities Authority, which had set an estimate of EGP 13 bn for Diar’s total fines. Diar has completed only one of several projects it had planned for Egypt, for which it had acquired land in Sharm El Sheikh, Hurghada, and other spots along the Red Sea Coast. A state-owned company is also interested in Diar’s assets, the sources added without elaborating.
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INVESTMENT WATCH- EK Holding could invest as much as EGP 250-300 mn in subsidiary Kahraba to increase its generation capacity to 100 MW from a current 70 MW, our friend Haitham Abdel Moneim, IR Director at EKH, tells Al Mal. The planned increase would take place over 18 months, he adds. EKH had increased Kahraba’s production capacity to 70 MW from 40 MW in 2017 at a total investment cost of EGP 450 mn.
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Naeem Holdings shares begin trading on DFM: Naeem Holdings’ shares officially began trading on the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) yesterday under the ticker NAHO, making it the first Egyptian company to be dually listed on the EGX and DFM, according to a DFM statement (pdf). “There are many leading companies listed on the DFM or the Egyptian Exchange that actively operate in both countries and represent potential candidates for dual listing,” DFM Chairman Essa Kazim said.
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The rally in Abou Kir Fertilizers and Chemical Industries’ shares may soon come to an end, Tamim Elyan and Filipe Pacheco write for Bloomberg. Data compiled by Bloomberg showed that the company’s shares “traded at an estimated price-to-earnings ratio of about 17, versus about 12 for Egypt’s main index as well as for chemical companies in emerging markets,” thanks largely to its overseas expansion. This year, however, “easing urea prices abroad and a factory shutdown for maintenance may dent sales,” leading analysts to believe the stock may be overvalued. Plans to float more of Abou Kir’s shares on the EGX are also expected to further pressure the stock, analysts say.
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LEGISLATION WATCH- House aims to pass Local Administration Act, Press and Media Act part 2 this legislative session: The House of Representatives is aiming to pass the second part of the Press and Media Act during the current legislative session, Parliamentary Speaker Ali Abdel Aal tells state-owned Al Ahram. The Press and Media Act, now before the House Culture Committee, may be pushed to the beginning of the next legislative session if need be. The legislation was split into two sections, the first of which was passed in 2016. The second part will establish the regulations and guidelines for those working in the media. The Local Administration Act, which aims to decentralize local councils and organize district elections, has faced delays at nearly every step of the way. House majority leader Mohamed Elsewedy had previously said the act would take 3-5 years to implement once passed.
The FY2018-19 state budget will be parliament’s top priority when it returns from recess after the presidential election, Abdel Aal said. The Ismail Cabinet is expected to present the draft budget to President Abdel Fattah El Sisi this week for approval before shipping it to the House at the end of the month. The budget includes a GDP growth target of 5.8%, aims to reduce the budget deficit to 8.4% of GDP, and will increase spending on social welfare, wages, and commodity subsidies.
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The Agriculture Ministry is expected to launch a new smart card system for farmers in a bid to tighten controls over exported produce, Deputy Minister Safwat Al Haddad tells Al Borsa. The new system will aim to keep better track of shipments earmarked for exports. Exporting farmers will be required to register for a number that will serve as an identifier for their products. The move is the latest in a series of regulations the Agriculture Ministry has issued in its efforts to enforce stricter quality control measures on exports, after a number of Arab countries, including KSA, Kuwait, and the UAE to impose temporary blanket bans on imports of Egyptian agricultural products on grounds of them containing high levels of residual pesticides. Most recently, Russian authorities flagged two Egyptian potato shipments alleging they were contaminated.
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CBE ends EGP 10 bn medium-sized business initiative: The central bank has instructed banks to stop giving out new short-term loans to medium-sized enterprises under a EGP 10 bn finance initiative launched in March 2017. The initiative has fulfilled its objectives and the loans allocated have been fully utilized, the CBE said in a statement on Sunday (pdf).
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The Financial Regulatory Authority’s new board has been ratified, according to Youm7. The seven-member board got sign off from Prime Minister Sherif Ismail yesterday. Members include Vice Minister of Finance Mohamed Mait and a deputy central bank governor that CBE chief Tarek Amer will select. The board is expected to get to work on executive regulations for the Capital Markets Act, completing the Insurance Act, and drafting legislation that would grant FRA new autonomy.
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EARNINGS WATCH- Cheese maker Domty recorded a 140% y-o-y increase in consolidated net profit after tax to EGP 61.52 mn in FY2017, up from EGP 25.5 mn the previous year, according to an EGX disclosure (pdf). The company’s sales for the year came in at EGP 2.25 bn, up from EGP 1.7 bn in 2016.
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Are the big investment banks going to adopt a platform which could kill their sales teams? JPMorgan, Bank of America and Citi are developing a new platform to overhaul the disjointed bond issuance process, the Financial Times reports. The three, who made nearly USD 5 bn from arranging bond sales for clients in 2017, are considering an online-based application that can be installed on investors’ computers or one that is integrated through an application into existing asset manager order management systems. As we noted back in January, the move, which is meant to solidify their hold on bond issuances and cut costs, could spell the end of sales teams in corporate bond issuances.
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