Blumberg Grain announced it is moving on to the USD 150 mn second phase of its Shouna Development Project for grain storage after closing out the first phase with final payments settled. “Phase 2 is currently comprised of 300 additional new Shouna, replacing the country’s antiquated and deteriorated storage facilities, located close to Egyptian farmers, providing accessible storage, which is critical to the farmers and to reducing post-harvest losses,” Blumberg said in a statement released overnight (pdf). Blumberg Grain will enter the project as a joint venture with the Egyptian Army, and specifically the Army Engineering Authority, with a view to “fulfilling President Sisi's vision for a state of the art food security network for Egypt's farmers.”
When both phases are complete, Blumberg says the project “will provide badly needed infrastructure to Egyptian farmers, create new jobs in Egypt, and save Egypt over USD 551 mn annually.” As the 22-month second phase begins, Blumberg will also begin developing an industrial refrigeration manufacturing plant to serve the domestic market and allow for exports.
Separately, the Military Production Ministry has signed a cooperation protocol with the Supply Ministry to provide the latter with project implementation support, Al Mal reports. The agreement includes the Military Production Ministry supplying and providing maintenance for electronic equipment, surveillance, and machinery.
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SODIC continues expansion on the North Coast: SODIC announced signing a new MoU for a 300-feddan land plot on the North Coast in partnership with the owner, according to a bourse disclosure. The parties are now conducting their due diligence. The MoU is the second to be announced by SODIC in two weeks, putting the total area of land on the North Coast the developer is finalizing agreements for to be 600 feddans, following last week’s similar announcement.
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M&A WATCH- Switzerland-based private equity outfit ResponsAbility is planning on acquiring a non-controlling stake in Fawry, sources told Al Mal. Negotiations between the two companies are in “advanced stages” and ResponsAbility’s entry is expected to come through a capital increase, but the sources did not disclose the expected size of the investment.
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M&A WATCH- The quasi-governmental Saudi Egyptian Industrial Investment Company (SEIC) is hoping to complete the acquisition of an unnamed, privately-held food manufacturer in October, SEIC Chairman Ali Al Ayed tells Al Mal. Talks are reportedly in advanced stages, and while Al Ayed did not name the target, he did state it was a mid-sized company that manufactures juice and dairy products. The company’s CEO had stated back in July that Cairo Financial Holdings had been tapped to advise on the transaction. SEIC plans to invest EGP 120 mn in total this year in the food and pharma industries. SEIC, an investment company set up by the governments of Saudi Arabia and Egypt, has invested around EGP 1 bn in Egypt. It holds stakes in medical disposables producer Farco Make and in Alexandria Carbon Black.
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INVESTMENT WATCH- Indian auto maker Mahindra & Mahindra is finalizing procedures for reentry into the Egyptian market after a three-year absence, a source told Al Mal. The company, which will target the mid-income segment, is in talks with various potential partners to begin assembling its models locally and has already set up an office in Egypt. The carmaker had previously shown interest in sectors like farming equipment.
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MOVES- Prime Minister Sherif Ismail has appointed Khaled El Nashar Deputy Chairman of the Egyptian Financial Supervisory Authority (EFSA). Investment Minister Sahar Nasr says the government finalize appointments to EFSA’s board in November. El Nashar was an assistant to the Justice Minister who was previously the deputy chairman of EFSA in 2013, according to Ahram Gate.
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EARNINGS WATCH- Qalaa Holdings reported a net loss after minority interest of EGP 2.8 bn in 2Q2017, compared to a loss of EGP 277.5 mn in 2Q2016. While net revenues grew 25% y-o-y in 2Q2017 to EGP 2.3 bn, the decision to fully impair Africa Railways’ assets in Kenya “took a heavy toll on [Qalaa Holdings’] for the quarter nearing EGP 2.7 bn,” the company said in its earnings release (pdf). Nonetheless, management says an upswing in the Egyptian economy leaves the company confident of its ability to capture “the new favorable economic framework,” said Chairman and Founder Ahmed Heikal. “With our investment portfolio increasingly optimized for today’s economic realities, and with Egyptian Refining Company now 95% complete, we are reaching a watershed moment in our transformation into a lean and profitable company that maximizes value for shareholders,” said Co-Founder and Managing Director Hisham El-Khazindar.
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Does the UN have proof Egypt was buying arms from Pyongyang? A UN investigation into a shipment of North Korean weapons seized while trying to sail through Egyptian waters in August revealed that Egypt was the illegal shipment’s final destination. The investigation “uncovered a complex arrangement in which Egyptian business executives ordered mns of USD-worth of North Korean rockets for the country’s military while also taking pains to keep the transaction hidden,” Joby Warrick writes for the Washington Post, citing unnamed US officials. The shipment was allegedly the largest and most recent of several “clandestine” transactions that prompted the USD to withhold nearly USD 300 mn in aid to Egypt, in a bid to apply more pressure on Pyongyang by forcing the Middle Eastern country to cut ties and stop supporting Kim Jong Un’s “booming illicit arms trade.”
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Terrorist group Hasm claimed responsibility for a small explosion at Myanmar's embassy in Cairo “saying it was in retaliation for that country's military crackdown on Rohingya Muslims,” Reuters reports. The “interior ministry has not commented on Saturday's blast, which local residents and media initially reported as probably the result of a faulty gas pipeline, but two security sources told Reuters that traces of explosives had been found at the scene.” Reuters notes that, if true, this would be the first time Hasm has claimed an attack on a civilian target.
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Terror attacks in France, Canada: A French soldier shot dead a man who had stabbed and killed two women at Marseille’s main railway station yesterday “in what officials described as a ‘likely terrorist act,’” Reuters reports. Daesh claimed responsibility in a statement. Meanwhile, a suspected Islamist terrorist in Edmonton, Canada, stabbed a police officer and drove a van into a crowd of pedestrians. Five people were injured, the Toronto Star reports.
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US regulators unshackle AIG from “too big to fail” classification: In one of the bluntest-yet signs that financial crisis-era reforms are being unwound, the Financial Stability Oversight Council has removed AIG’s classification as “too big to fail.” The move would free the insurance provider from proposed capital surcharges and other federal restrictions on its business, the Financial Times reports. FSOC is the body that decides which non-bank financial companies are “systemically important.” Fed boss Janet Yellen voted in favor of the move.
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Regional malaise? Saudi Arabia’s non-oil economy is sputtering, with the latest data showing that “businesses and Saudi consumers were still struggling to cope with government policies. Private sector activity grew at an annual rate of 0.4 percent, compared with 0.9 percent in the previous quarter,” Bloomberg reports. Lest the Statelet of Qatar start feeling its oats on that front, “Qatar’s economic growth was slowing even before a Saudi Arabia-led bloc severed diplomatic and transport links in early June,” the business information service notes. Qatar is expected to grow this year at 2.5%, or about the slowest pace since 1995.
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Political leaders in Catalonia are claiming the right to statehood after “a contentious referendum that was marred by violence,” BBC reports. Some 800 people were injured in clashes with police yesterday as they attempted to block the ballot for Catalonia’s independence, which the Spanish constitutional court had declared illegal. Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont reached out to EU officials through the media, saying they “could no longer continue ‘to look the other way.’”
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CLARIFICATION- In our coverage of the CAPMAS national census we had stated that the number of married women aged 12 made up 18% of married women in Egypt, based on media reports including remarks on Saturday night by Planning Minister Hala El Said to CBC talk show host Lamees El Hadidy. A presentation of the statistics to President Abdel Fattah El Sisi suggests that in fact 40% of married women are under the age of 18. It does not break out those aged 12 — that figure remains in the CAPMAS report that has yet to be publically released. H/t Sherif A.
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