Purported amendments to the banking and central banking acts have leaked: Al Mal has published its take on what it says are leaks of the most important planks of the Central Bank of Egypt’s proposed amendments to the banking and central banking acts. It says there are five major surprises in the proposed amendments:
- Imposing term limits for bank executives and giving the CBE new powers to appoint representatives to bank boards of directors, while also setting new criteria for the selection of senior central bank staff to make the institution “apolitical”;
- Requiring banks to pass on 5% of their net income to a sector development fund, alongside other fees payable to the central bank, some of which are rising tenfold;
- Expanding its sway over non-bank financial services by saying it has “opened licensing and registration to new institutions” such as providers of e-payment services;
- Increasing the minimum capital requirements for CBE-compliant financial institutions, setting a minimum capital of EGP 1.5 bn for banks;
- Accepting that we are no longer in the 1980s by recognizing electronic documents and no longer requiring banks to preserve documents on paper through antiquated means like microfilm.
Banking industry rejects what it sees as the more ‘controversial’ clauses of CBE Act: The Federation of Egyptian Banks (FEB) wants to scrap the proposed term limits outlined in article 109, which they claim would see a number of current CEOs and managing directors removed. That’s the key takeaway from a rundown on the FEB’s views on the law published in Al Mal. Term limits, they argue, would infringe on the rights of bank boards of directors and general assemblies. Other banking sources telling Al Shorouk that the article simply adds another layer of review to the appointment of bank bosses, but would not impose term limits. There is no official copy of the amendments for us to verify whether the article would restore term limits for banking sector heads as was reported last week.
Bankers are also concerned that the proposed amendments would no longer require the House of Representatives to sign off the appointment of a CBE governor. Others have also objected to clauses that place the CBE under the jurisdictions of the presidency, saying that the move would make the CBE no longer an independent authority as it currently is.
Amendments to the Banking Act would make establishing an FX bureau harder, raising the minimum capital requirements for starting an FX bureau to EGP 20 mn, up from a current EGP 5 mn, according to Al Mal.
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IFC pledges USD 660 mn to major solar power project in Egypt: The International Finance Corporation’s executive board signed off last Thursday on a USD 660 mn funding agreement to help finance the USD 730 mn solar power complex in Benban, Aswan, an Investment and International Cooperation Ministry statement said on Thursday (pdf). The funding will go to six consortiums made up of local and international firms developing 11 solar array fields producing a total 500 MW of power. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and other international organizations had pledged close to USD 2 bn in financing for Benban’s solar projects.
On a related note, Egypt netted USD 7.8 bn in foreign direct investment in the first seven months of 2017, Investment Minister Sahar Nasr said on Thursday, according to AMAY.
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M&A WATCH- Al Ahly for Development and Investment (ADI) inked an MoU with Sigma Capital on Thursday to kickstart due diligence and the preparation of a fair value report ahead of a planned merger, according to a bourse filing (pdf). Last month, ADI’s board approved merger talks with Sigma Capital and set a deadline for 30 September to complete talks on the proposed transaction.
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In other news from the finance industry, EFG Hermes has moved into Kenya. Subsidiary EFG Hermes Kenya announced it obtained a license to provide brokerage services on the Kenyan exchange, according to a bourse statement. The investment bank says the move comes as part of its expansion in frontier markets.
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IPO WATCH- Rooya Real Estate Investment Company is actively looking for an investment bank to lead its upcoming initial public offering, CEO Hisham Shoukry said on Sunday, according to Al Shorouk. Pioneers Holding, which currently owns 60% of Rooya, is looking to list half of its shares in the company on the EGX by October. Rooya expects to file the necessary paperwork for its IPO within days, according to Shoukry.
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MOVES- The government confirmed the appointment of Mohsen Adel as deputy chairman of the Egyptian Exchange. News of the appointment was leaked on Wednesday.
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MOVES- The Ministry of Electricity appointed Dr. Mohamed El Khayat as new executive chairman of the New and Renewable Energy Authority,according to Al Borsa. The confirmation of his appointment should take place within the next few days.
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A number of manufacturers have signaled that they are pressing ahead with expansion plans despite high costs of capital after successive interest rate hikes. Packaging manufacturer HiPack, for example, plans to invest EGP 3.5 bn in new production lines over an unspecified period, HiPack’s export director Ihab El Shoury tells Al Shorouk. The company is looking to double exports, which El Shoury says is worth the capex outlay despite high current costs of capital after successive interest rate hikes.
Cheesemaker Obour Land will be pressing ahead with its new juice and dairy factories, CEO Ayman Hamed also tells the newspaper. Hamed dismissed news of delays as “rumors,” saying the company plans to bring the two new plants online soon and will launch five new production lines in 2017. The company is confident on the growth outlook for its market, he said.
Not everyone is investing in Egypt, though: Dairy producer Domty is waiting on feasibility studies for a manufacturing facility it’s considering establishing in Ethiopia, according to Vice Chairman Mohamed El Damaty. Domty was one of several companies to delay planned investments due to the slump in market conditions and rising costs, particularly after the government’s latest decision to hike fuel prices. Misr Hotels Company and Arafa Holdings had also announced they would be postponing plans.
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Tax Authority signs off on new income tax breaks: Tax Authority boss Emad Samy signed off on income tax breaks on Thursday, Al Mal reports. The House of Representatives had approved income tax cuts last month ranging from 5-80% for those earning under EGP 200k a year and exempting those earning anything below minimum wage. The breaks came as part of the government’s efforts to widen the social safety net and soften the impact of economic and fiscal reform measures.
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Remember last year’s exposé of corruption in the wheat subsidy smart card system by Reuters’ Eric Knecht? On Thursday, the Illicit Gains Authority referred “two employees from the Smart Cards Applications Company to criminal court on charges of graft allegedly worth EGP 60 mn,” Ahram Online reports. The employees allegedly work for one of three companies tasked with printing food subsidy cards and are accused of “fraudulently creating one mn cards by duplicating existing cards, activating cancelled cards, and issuing cards to those who were not eligible.” Knecht’s excellent report had mentioned industry sources saying “the smart card system could be hacked, allowing some bakers to falsify receipts and request far more subsidised flour than they officially sold… that triggered a wave of fraud higher up the supply chain.” He said employees of the company producing the cards had the ability to hack the system and “reset the card allowing more spending. So instead of spending once or twice a month you can spend 1,000 times.”
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The Ismail government approved on Thursday amendments to the law regulating the Administrative Control Authority (ACA), granting the nation’s top anti-corruption watchdog complete technical, financial, and administrative autonomy, according to a Cabinet statement. The amendments stipulate that the ACA is now affiliated with the presidency, rather than the prime minister, and the head of the ACA will be appointed by presidential decree. The amendments also widen the scope of the authority’s responsibilities pertaining to investigating incidents of illicit gains and FX-related crimes.
Other key decisions during Thursday’s cabinet meeting included:
- Allocating a portion of the Social Housing Fund’s accumulated interest to compensate contractors building affordable housing in the Red Sea governorate for losses incurred from the EGP float;
- Signed off on decisions and recommendations from Cabinet’s Investment Dispute Resolution Committee;
- Ratified a bundle of decisions from Cabinet’s engineering committee to develop social housing projects nationwide.
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Egypt’s poverty line is expected to rise to EGP 700-800 during FY2017-18, up from EGP 482 amid the impact of the government’s ongoing economic reform program, Cairo University Professor of Statistics Heba El Laithy tells Youm7. El Laithy, who helps state statistics agency CAPMAS carry out its income and expenditures survey, says the number of Egyptians living in poverty will likely rise to 35%, from 28% currently.
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Moody’s affirmed Egypt’s B3 rating with a stable outlook, saying the IMF’s review of the country’s economic reform program is credit positive in a report released on Thursday (paywall). “Reforms are showing positive results, particularly the foreign exchange rate liberalisation in November 2016, which helped reduce balance-of-payment pressures from large current-account deficits and support the sovereign’s external liquidity position,” the report reads. Moody’s says the state’s budget deficit will shrink to 3% of GDP by the end of 2020, with exports expected to rise over the coming period. The agency also expects the government’s fiscal deficit to narrow gradually to 9.5% of GDP by the end of the current fiscal year, down from 11% during the last fiscal year, and forecasts the debt to GDP ratio to reach 86.5%, down from 95%.
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Housing Ministry to issue immediate 10% downpayments on compensation to contractors: Contractors being compensated for losses incurred on government contracts after the EGP float receive 10% downpayments until the committee tasked with repricing their contracts can complete its work, Housing Minister Mostafa Madbouly decided on Thursday, according to Al Mal. President Abdel Fattah El Sisi had earlier this month signed the Contractors’ Compensation Act into law. Some 29k contractors stand to have repriced their contracts by 15 August, House of Representatives Housing Committee chair Alaa Wali tells Al Shorouk.
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EARNINGS WATCH- The National Bank of Kuwait - Egypt reported a 78.4% year-on-year jump in net profit during 1H2017, which came in at EGP 727 mn, according to a regulatory filing to the EGX.
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Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani issued a decree on Thursday amending the country’s anti-terrorism laws in a bid to “dispel charges it supports terrorism,” Reuters reports. The move earned Doha some praise from the UAE, whose minister of state for foreign affairs said it is a “positive step,” but maintained that Qatar’s policies must change before the Arab quartet can begin direct talks to end the regional rift, Bloomberg reports. The UAE also unblocked BeIN channels from being aired, according to CNN Money. The US and the UK each praised Qatar for its “commitment to combat terrorism,” and called for an end to the blockade of Qatar.
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New York food cart chain The Halal Guys has been named the number-one fastest growing restaurant concept by Restaurant Business on its 2017 Future 50 list. The Halal Guys first started in 1990 “by three like-minded men from Egypt who came to America in search of a better life. When the founders noticed many Muslim cab drivers in New York City were looking for a place to buy Halal food in Manhattan, they created their first food cart that quickly grew into a leading destination for American Halal fare. In 2013, The Halal Guys was ranked the most popular food truck reviewed on Foursquare and in 2014 was the third most reviewed restaurant on Yelp in the United States.” They now have 350 restaurants in development worldwide.
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