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Business

Money for ideas

by Maya Sioufi October 2, 2012
written by Maya Sioufi

An “American Idol” for entrepreneurs; that’s how the first round of selection for Beirut-based business accelerator Seeqnce could be called. The 436 applicants — ranging from designers, developers to business people from 30 countries and places as far apart as California and Romania — had three minutes to pitch their idea to the three-person jury of Seeqnce program directors. Their dream? To become the next DropBox or AirBnb, ideas that found financing from Y Combinator, a renowned Silicon Valley-based accelerator.

All you needed was an Internet business idea, or techie aptitudes as a developer or web designer, and you could have applied to the program to be part of one of the eight startups that were recently selected. There was just one condition. You had to commit to being in Lebanon for six months, the duration of the program, which started on September 25.  The 150 candidates selected after the first screening process had to partake in “shuffles” (where participants worked in teams on assigned projects), and “mixers” (Saturday night rooftop parties to network and share ideas). The aim was for the participants to eventually form their own teams.

They then went on to partake in Seeqnce’s four-day “hackathon” workshops. Some teams fell apart and other opportunities surfaced. Rawad Hajj, cofounder of Rikbit, an online platform for group outings and one of the selected startups, started off with two Romanians who left the program because of the August kidnapping spree that struck Lebanon. He then joined another team that was working on a similar idea. Finally the teams had to participate in the “challenge”, whereby they had 48 hours to pitch their business ideas to the Seeqnce directors. Eight startups were finally selected [see box], of which seven are from Lebanon and one from Egypt.

Funding the startups

Nine investors with links to Lebanon — high net-worth individuals, angel investors and a venture capitalist whose names were not disclosed — are betting on the success of these newly formed startups, each investing $68,000 to deploy a total of $612,000, of which $306,000 will be directly injected into the startups in cash and the remainder will be given in the form of Seeqnce services. Each startup receives $38,250 in cash and an equal amount in form of usage of the Seeqnce space for six months, mentorship from the five program directors, access to the accelerator’s network, and workshops provided by “successful businesspeople and excellent designers,” according to Fadi Bizri, one of the founding members. He did not disclose the names of those providing the workshops, as the roster was not yet confirmed as Executive went to print.  In exchange for this amount, founders of the startups have to give up a hefty 30 percent stake in their newborn company to Seeqnce and the nine investors, which will each receive a three percent stake, valuing the startups at $121,000 each (by taking into account the cash component). Accelerators in the United States and in the region that offer a similar program normally take a lower stake when investing in startups, as two of the most famed US accelerators, Y Combinator and TechStars, both take an average 8 percent stake and value the startups at $300,000; Jordan-based Oasis 500 and Dubai-based SeedStartup both take a 10 percent stake and value their startups at $140,000 and $200,000, respectively.

Cedric Maalouf, founder of et3arraf.com, an online dating site for the Arab world selected by the Seeqnce program, does not believe that the 30 percent stake is too much. “I just had an idea,” he says. “I didn’t have a team or a prototype. I really had nothing.”

The real work begins

According to Michel el-Meouchi, one of the founding members of Seeqnce, “It’s a different environment. We were going for the best balance between investors and startups. It had to be attractive on both sides and had to take into account the risk of the country and the region.” Venture capitalists were not too keen to participate in the program, according to Bizri. “The general attitude was that ‘we love the Seeqnce program and would love to meet the startups when they are out,’” he says. “We told them to get them out, we need to fund the program. Some are getting to a point that they understand that the upstream is necessary, it’s essentially their downstream.”

After the six-month program, the startups are expected to have a product out with at least early users and clear monetization options. At the end of the program, they will have the opportunity to pitch their ideas to investors for a round of financing, though after giving up 30 percent, handing over more equity might seem daunting for some. “It’s a jungle out there so not all the startups might get financing,” says Bizri.

After two rounds of financing, they have the option of buying back 10 percent of their startup. “If they make it big, they can take out some ownership” adds Meouchi.  Holding their first run this year, Seeqnce aims to have it annually. “If we are still alive, we will do it again,” joked Bizri, still recovering from the rooftop party they threw in Hamra to announce the eight startups. Now selected, however, the party is over and the real work begins for these startup founders.

If these startups succeed, the market will likely open to other business accelerators, meaning a more competitive environment; one where the terms are less demanding on the entrepreneurs yet still attractive for investors.

Where Seeqnce invested

elManshar

Similar to Chicago-based Threadless, elManshar is an online community for Arab designers to upload and sell their work. Starting off with T-shirt designs, elManshar will allow its viewers to ‘like’ designs and popular ones will go into production.

Bayt Baytak

An online real estate website for the Middle East, Bayt Baytak will start by listing residential real estate for sale and for rent in Lebanon, with an aim to expand and cover the region. It will be map-based, whereby real estate owners and agents can locate their properties on the site.  

Kactus

To-do lists for “how to certify your baccalaureate diploma” or “how to handle government bureaucracy” are what Kactus aims to provide. It will be an online community-generated collection of to-do lists, or Kacts, that would be easy to manage and to share.

et3arraf

et3arraf is an online dating website for the Arab world in Arabic. It will introduce affinity matchmaking, whereby subscribers need to complete an in-depth questionnaire and matches with blurred pictures will be proposed initially. Following interaction between the matches, a progressive sharing occurs whereby the relationship can be taken to the next level.  

Presella

Presella is a web platform that guarantees a specific number of attendees for an event before it is paid for. Once the desired number of tickets is pre-sold, the event is officially confirmed.

eTobb

eTobb is an e-health platform in Arabic and English.  Similar to WebMD, eTobb allows checking for symptoms online and finding information on medical conditions. It will also list doctors’ and hospitals’ information and allow for ratings and reviews like ZocDoc.

Yoofers

Yoofers is a social gifting platform. It will list a selection of products and users can request from their friends and family to contribute a small amount to a specific gift, and the person with the highest amount pledged wins the gift.

Rikbit

Rikbit is an online platform for group outings. Starting off with outdoor events and gradually branching out, Rikbit aims to allow users to create group events or browse for events that their friends or other Rikbit users can take part in.
 

October 2, 2012 0 comments
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Society

Starved for business

by Nabila Rahhal October 2, 2012
written by Nabila Rahhal

With so many foreigners and expats altering their vacation plans to avoid Lebanon this summer, it is no wonder the hospitality sector, which relies heavily on tourism, is struggling.  

According to statistics by the Ministry of Tourism, the number of tourists entering the country this year, until July, had decreased 12 percent in comparison to the same period last year, which was already weak tourism-wise. Hotels, which usually rely on the summer to make their profits, suffered the most this year and median room occupancy was around 45 percent — even with deals on lower room rates — when usually it is between 55 to 60 percent, according to Pierre Achkar, head of the Lebanese Hotel Owners’ Association.

He says the first half of 2012 saw hotel occupancy percentages rise as compared to the same period in 2011. Last year started terribly, says Achkar — noting the collapse of the Lebanese government in early 2011 and the beginning of the Syrian uprising — but the situation improved with the formation of the government in June, and this spilled over to create a comparably good first half of 2012. “The numbers deteriorated by summer 2012, with the spread of Syria’s troubles to Aleppo and Damascus and the associated difficulties in reaching Lebanon by land,” says Achkar, adding that hotels have experienced an almost empty summer.

In line with Achkar’s assessment, though declining to provide numbers, major hotels in Beirut have admitted to an unusually quiet summer, especially during the Eid period after Ramadan,  which is usually abuzz with tourists. According to Christophe Hazebrouck, general manager of Le Gray Hotel, contingency plans hotels have adopted to weather the crisis include cost savings, such as sending employees on vacation, and business plans like targeting other countries and promoting attractive room packages.

The main blow for hotels this season, according to Achkar, was the travel warning on Arab tourists, as they account for 60 percent of a hotel’s business. He says he sees thoughts of replacing Gulf Arab tourists with others as irrational: “We can diversify our base, but we cannot replace them as no one will spend as much as them or even visit as much as them, especially since they are so close to us distance-wise.” says Achkar, giving the example of a Saudi tourist who prepaid for 56 weekends in Lebanon at a certain hotel beginning in the summer of 2010.

To aid them through these difficult times, the Hotel Owners’ Association is appealing to the private sector and the government: “We are approaching the central bank, Al Kafaat Foundation, the association of banks and the prime minister and asking for the following: financial support for fuel, a one-year grace period for our loans which we usually pay at the end of the summer and a subsidization for the National Social Security Fund and taxes.”

As an immediate solution to the tourism crisis, the association suggests working on monetary incentives to attract the Egyptian, Iraqi, Jordanian and Syrian tourists, who are still coming to Lebanon despite everything. “Instead of wasting the ministry’s budget of $3 million to $5 million a year promoting Lebanon to European cities which usually don’t visit the country, it would be better to use this money to target the Levant tourists and provide them with charter planes or discounted plane tickets,” says Achkar.

Empty seats at the table  

Restaurants, cafés and bars in Lebanon are also feeling the effects of the unstable regional and internal situation. The Syndicate of Owners of Restaurants, Cafés, Night Clubs and Pastries in Lebanon pegs the number for such venues in operation at 6,000, accounting for 9 percent of the total employment in Lebanon. A decline in this industry would therefore have a noticeable impact on the country’s economy. 

In line with Achkar, Ziad Kamel, treasurer of the Syndicate, sees 2012 as the worst year for the hospitality sector since 2006 (when the July war with Israel occurred). “The year 2007 showed some growth, which continued steadily until 2011 when the situation stagnated and then plummeted to the 40 percent decrease in turnover we are experiencing now,” explains Kamel. 

Offering explanations for this decrease, Kamel says: “All types of establishments in our business are affected due to the travel bans on the Arab tourists, the expats not returning as much this summer and the war next door which is spilling over to Lebanon. With all that is going on, who would choose to come to Lebanon for a vacation?”

Speaking about his own restaurants and those of his colleagues, Kamel sees that people are not going out as much and consumer confidence is low. “In such uncertain times, it seems local residents are in crisis mode and tend to save their money in case they need it for something more important than going out,” he says.

Kamel says the industry has seen closures as a result, especially in areas like Aley and Bhamdoun, as well as restaurants in downtown that mainly depend on Arab tourists.

“The people with investments in the country cannot hold on for much longer,” he says. “We, the restaurant owners, already have a lot to deal with from outdated laws and license procedures to competition without the added concern of the security situation. Investor confidence is down and national expansions are being put on hold.”

Using himself as an example, Kamel’s own expansion plan for Couqley, a restaurant he founded in Gemmayze, has been delayed. 

Looking ahead

Achkar believes Lebanon has seen worse, and believes Lebanese expats will return, in small numbers, for the Adha holidays, should the situation remain relatively stable. On the issue of tourism, however, Achkar believes it is too far in the year to see any real change in numbers. 

“Only regional security and internal stability will get the tourist back. Once we have those, they will come to Lebanon without us having to do any promotions,” says Achkar. Until then, the hospitality industry has no choice but to hang on and try to be creative.

October 2, 2012 0 comments
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Business

Where Europe and the Middle East meet

by Maya Sioufi October 2, 2012
written by Maya Sioufi

Ongoing political instability in the Arab world’s most populated country has not scared off at least one private equity (PE) fund from making major investments. Beirut-based Euromena recently deployed $20 million in an Egyptian oil and gas company, Sakson Petroleum Services, after having invested $13.5 million in an optometry hospital, Al Oyoun Al Dawli, earlier this year.

“It’s a country that had already a lot of potential and revolution gives it more potential,” says Romen Mathieu, managing director of the Euromena funds. “There are 80 million people looking to live, get medication, wear clothes and if you select well, you can make a lot of money.”

Since the launch of Euromena’s first fund in 2006, a total of approximately $100 million has been invested by the two Euromena funds in 14 companies in four countries in the region [see chart]. With an average ticket size of $8 million per company, these funds also offer co-investment opportunities in specific names, bringing the total amount invested to $175 million.

Seeds of the idea

Armed with PE experience from investment bank Lazard and accounting firms Arthur Anderson and Ernst & Young, Mathieu saw an opportunity in 2004 to invest in medium-sized companies in the Middle East. While certainly aware of the lack of transparency, stability and infrastructure in the region, Mathieu saw this as outweighed by the opportunity and decided to launch a PE fund dedicated to the Middle East. His strategy was to start off by attracting European public institutions to provide credibility to the fund and eventually attract private Gulf investors reassured that it would abide by the book. His goal was to create a Euro-Arab partnership. As he needed a platform and a solid partner to launch his fund, he went to United Kingdom-based private equity firm Capital Trust, which had previously tried but failed to venture into this region and was keen to give it another go. With Capital Trust on board, the European Investment Bank (EIB), the first European institution to deploy capital into Mathieu’s venture, soon followed.

“By creating opportunities for work, Arabs can educate their children and instead of holding the Bible and the Koran and running with it, they can think of a better life,” says Mathieu. “If the Gulf and Europe understand this, they will face the enemy of fundamentalism and illiteracy.” That’s how he says he succeeded in gathering interest from three European public institutions — the EIB, Proparco, a Paris-based development institution  and Averroes Finance, a fund of funds — accounting for 30 percent of the committed capital. Equipped with European public money, he raised the remaining capital from 45 private investors in the Middle East.

There are also bigger plans for 2013, despite the European sovereign debt crisis and the uncertainty in several countries in the Arab world. Mathieu’s next aim is to raise a minimum of $200 million starting next year for Euromena’s third fund, and he is keen on adding companies in Libya, Iraq and Sudan to the Euromena portfolio. The final composition of the investments, however, depends on the final makeup of investors of the funds — with major targets including the International Finance Corporation, the private sector lending arm of the World Bank, and Germany’s DEG, one of Europe’s largest development finance institutions — as they may put restrictions on where their money goes.  
For this third fund, he will also be seeking to tap private European wealth from families such as the Rothschilds and institutions such as Paris-based PE Quilvest, in addition to Arab public investors such as sovereign wealth funds (SWFs). Mathieu seems more confident on attracting European private investors, given the previous funds’ track record. The first fund’s three exits generated an average return of 2.5 times the investments, and one of the exits was completed through the sale to French building materials leader Saint Gobain and another one to London-based international pharmaceutical company Hikma.

“We are getting appetite from European private investors,” adds Mathieu. As for Arab public investors, he is less confident and laments that “one can never understand why they would or would not give you a penny; it’s not a transparent process.” Despite this, he has not given up and will pitch to Arab SWFs again next year.

For now, the focus is on investing in two additional companies already on Mathieu’s radar — one in Morocco, still untapped by Euromena, and another in Egypt — which would complete the investments of the second fund, as well as exiting two additional companies by year-end, which Mathieu is confident will be completed despite the challenges in the region. He says the exits will be done through sales to professional investors and high net-worth individuals in the region, as strategic international investors are less willing to deploy money due to the given uncertainty in the region and the European economic crisis. With lack of visibility on prospects in the Arab world, Euromena exits its investments when it has the chance to make at least two times the investment.

“Especially in times like today; if I wait one more year, I might make three times [the investment] if the ‘Arab Spring’ turns into an ‘Arab Summer’ but I would definitely sell today because there is a big question mark on tomorrow” says Mathieu.

October 2, 2012 0 comments
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Real Estate

Q&A: Ziad el-Chaar

by Thomas Schellen October 2, 2012
written by Thomas Schellen

After seeing some delays in expansion beyond the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, Dubai-based luxury developer Damac Properties is moving closer to completion of regional projects. These include a residential tower in Beirut where interiors from the lobby to the last apartment will bear the identity of fashion brand, Versace Home. Executive inquired with Damac General Manager Ziad el-Chaar on the company’s strategy.   

What can you tell us about the state of the Damac Beirut project?

This project has reached an important construction milestone. We finished the last foundation [at the end of July] and reaching this in downtown Beirut took some time, because we had some challenging excavation [working] next to the tunnel connecting the InterContinental Hotel area to Ashrafieh. 

When are you planning final delivery of the project?

We are hoping to finish the entire project within 30 months from January 2013.

When the Damac Tower project was first presented in 2010, there was talk of a starting price for a unit at $700,000. How have things developed on the pricing?

The pricing has definitely progressed since we have launched and most of the units that this talk was about were units on the third, fourth and fifth floors. Those units are depleted now and we are now selling units on higher floors with superb sea views. The prices of those units differ from the prices of the units that we started with.

How much has pricing gone up?

Our prices have progressed since the launch in excess of 20 percent. A price growth of approximately 10 percent per annum is huge in the real estate market. This is not usual. It is a strong market that grows at  10 percent.

Lebanese real estate developers saw strong price increases from 2005 to 2010, but since then things have slowed for them and market indicators point to weakening of demand for large, high-end units. Was that also your experience?

When we launched this project, we came in at a totally independent section of the market because we launched with interior design by Versace Home.

So you do not see yourself competing with the other developers of high-end towers down at the sea front?

We are in a category of our own. The fashion branding that we have provided with that project has taken it to a totally different level [than other projects in central Beirut].

Does that mean you are not planning other projects in Lebanon?

We are always on the lookout for new projects but we are not planning a second project by Versace, because this project is very exclusive for a long time for the current buyers.

So whoever buys a unit in the project today knows that there will be no Versace 2, 3 or 4 towers coming up anywhere nearby in the near future?

Not in the near future at all.

But you do have a second Versace project?

In Saudi Arabia, but they are in totally different markets. One is in Solidere in Beirut and the other is on the Corniche in Jeddah. The attraction of the project in Solidere is mainly for the many Lebanese expats and many GCC buyers, but in Saudi Arabia only Saudis can buy.

Saudi buyers play a role in Lebanon. Does what you say imply that there is no overlap between your clients in Saudi Arabia and buyers of the project here?

On the contrary, we see many of our Saudi investors invest with us in Dubai, investing with us in Saudi and investing with us in Beirut. It was one of the main drivers for us to launch a project in Beirut, that many of our current investors wanted a project in Beirut.

One of the topics in high-end real estate is a developer’s branding. Is Damac as well known in the Lebanese market as you are in the United Arab Emirates and GCC?

We entered Lebanon aggressively two years ago while we have been in the GCC market for the past 10 years. This is an eight-year difference and perhaps you see us not advertising the brand so much in Lebanon because most of our buyers are living outside Lebanon. This is where we put heavy advertising for the Lebanese product, to invite investors from outside Lebanon to invest here.

In regional expansion, you were addressing Egypt and Jordan besides Lebanon. Has the unrest of the ‘Arab Spring’ and the civil war in Syria affected your strategic expansion?

We are still aggressively building our project in downtown Amman, in Abdali. We are going to start handover definitely next year of this 35-story tower, the highest residential project in Jordan. In Cairo we are aggressively finishing our Park Avenue mall in the 6th of October [City] area and handover started last March.

When will the mall be opening?

Based on the programs of the shop owners’ fit-out, we hope to be open by the end of 2013.

Is this a solitary project or do you plan more mall ventures?

The mall project was a successful venture for us. That mall is not a shoebox mall. It is a retail strip of shops where you can enjoy indoor and outdoor walkways throughout the year. We are on the lookout to replicate that elsewhere; the challenge is to find a suitable plot of land.

You were also engaged in a resort project on the Red Sea in Egypt but there were allegations of impropriety in the deal for this land, issued by the Egyptian government after the fall of the Mubarak administration. Is there still ambiguity about the resort project or has it been buried?

This is now a subject of international arbitration.

How do you see supply and demand factors in the luxury and super-luxury segments go together with the mood of the ‘Arab Spring’?

I don’t think I can reply to that question in regard to the ‘Arab Spring’. What I can tell you is that demand for luxury real estate is still growing and in Dubai, we recently introduced a new category, which is the luxury serviced apartment. We aspire to be the number one operator of luxury serviced apartments in four years from today. Our aspiration is to manage 4,000 units.

In Dubai or anywhere?

In the areas where we are present today, which is Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Doha, Jeddah, Beirut, Amman and Cairo.

Your track record as developer began in 2002. Is it correct that you have delivered more high-end units as a luxury, private developer in the Middle East than anybody else? And how many units have you delivered to date?

We say we have delivered approximately 7,500 units in 36 buildings and currently have approximately 10,000 units under construction in 50 buildings.

What was the worst delay that you suffered in any of the projects during the UAE downturn?

We had some acceptable delays in some of the projects but these were mostly due to challenges in the new [Dubai] master plan.

How long is acceptable?

It depends, it usually is in months.

You mean in months and not in years?

Yes.

It appears that you are venturing into two new areas: the development and operation of luxury serviced apartments, and the mall business. Are you then moving toward services more than build and deliver?

We are moving more and more into the hospitality business, yes. Our new offering will include the sale of luxury serviced apartments and the operations of those units in the hospitality sector.

Does this mean you have to reinvent the company in structural terms by building new capacities and expanding human resources?

We are building a massive hospitality division in our company.

Can you tell us how much you are investing in financial terms into building these capacities?

I don’t have that number now. I will let you know once we deliver that budget.

Returning to the Damac Tower in Beirut, we would of course like to know what the tower’s top floor will see as price per square meter.

We have not reached the top floor yet. We are still selling [units] in the middle of the project and the prices are, on average, between $10,000 and $12,000 per square meter.

October 2, 2012 0 comments
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Economics & PolicyIndustry

Q&A: Neemat Frem

by Paul Cochrane October 1, 2012
written by Paul Cochrane

Neemat Frem is the president of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists, chief executive officer at INDEVCO Group and founder of technology service provider Phoenix Machinery. He recently sat down with Executive to discuss the state of the industrial sector in the face of regional turmoil, high energy costs and the economic downturn in Lebanon.

Let’s start off with some statistics. Lebanese industry had five years of strong growth, but 2011 and 2012 were slower, reflected in lower exports, a drop in machinery imports and also fewer bank loans to the sector. What do you attribute the drop to?

No doubt the first half of 2011 was tough… basically, Lebanese industry doubled in size in five years. In 2011, it was not a slow down in growth but a complete stop and it was the second half of the year that did all the damage. This year we started to regress, about 6 percent below 2011 — I am using exports as an indicator. Now, what do I attribute this fall to? What happened with the flare-up of oil prices was a major handicap to the Lebanese economy, and I can’t stress enough the fact that our economy is inversely correlated to the price of a barrel of oil, as we have no other form of energy. This is number one. The second factor is the turmoil in the Levant today. Also, a loss of confidence by the Lebanese consumer, and this has affected patterns of consumption, no doubt about it, plus the fact we missed our tourism season, which affected our local market.

Are you optimistic about the rest of the year?

I think 2012 will end as a tough year and I am personally worried, not only for the situation of industrialists but also because of the condition of public finances and the pressure it puts on the private sector. Our indicators are not good, to say the least. I know there is a major struggle within the Cabinet on the level of taxation policy and strategy, but I tell you with such public financing it is hard not to expect that the economic environment will be [negatively affected].

What is your stance on the draft law for a 50% tax cut on exports?

It would help for sure but we asked for 100 percent as that would really change things and attract foreign capital while enticing non-Lebanese industrialists to relocate here. But we ended up with 50 percent. Again, the problem is overall profitability, and it is not easy to be profitable today and to feel the effect as (the tax reduction is based on) profit tax rebates. To tell you the truth, we are not looking today at incentives from the public sector, but are worried about what kind of handicaps we will experience in the coming years due to the level of deterioration in the public sector. What sort of problems are we going to have due to this changing situation? This is my worry today.

What contingencies are in place?

The only contingency Lebanese had for a long time was to relocate, but this time I think the Lebanese are intelligent enough to do it in a flexible way, to stay in Lebanon and have new deployments in emerging countries, like in Africa. I see it more than exports in the coming era. I see Lebanese industrialists having satellite operations to protect their export markets.

One contingency that could be prepared for is if the border with Syria is completely closed.

I doubt it will be completely shut. So far it hasn’t, despite everything. If it is shut, our research shows that the two countries that are the hardest and most expensive to reach are Jordan and Iraq, as [there are] major land freight costs. The others, well, [there will be] a delay in time but costs are almost the same, to Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. Regarding Europe it will be open, and the Balkans, which we… export to by land, as we have a RORO (roll-on-roll-off) vessel to Turkey and from there continue north.

Is the RORO vessel between Mersin (in Turkey) and Tripoli running effectively?

It is already in operation, twice a week. Again, for Iraq that is a way to get there, Kurdistan especially, but it is expensive, double the price.

What prices are we talking about?

It is around $4,000 to $5,000 for a 40-foot container. The problem is the land cost, this is why Iraq and Jordan are the problem. The Jordanian market is up north, not in Aqaba, so you need to drive there.

If we look at the situation in Syria it is obviously affecting us here, and in Syria companies are lacking raw materials and workers. Could Lebanese companies step in to fill the gap?

They already are, first of all in the Lebanese market as competition from Syria is decreasing by the day.

So taking up that slack is primarily for the Lebanese market, not replacing Syrian goods say sold in the Gulf? Could you see that coming?

The Syrians were never big competitors with Lebanese products. I foresee however that once everything settles down there will be a construction boom and a big market for Lebanese cement and other products.

Yes, figures are already being thrown around of $15 billion to $20 billion needed for Syria’s reconstruction, and this could be good for Lebanese business…

No doubt about it. Since the start of the Arab Spring there have been a lot of opportunities the Lebanese could seize, but our history has shown we don’t know how to seize these opportunities. And we haven’t till today. Will we this time? Only time will tell.

Is this due to the divergence between the private and public sector, where the private sector is left to do its own thing? 

Mostly because the political situation needs to [fit] an agenda to seize opportunities for economic growth. But today, the government has other priorities and this is a problem.

…such as industrial zones talked about for years and years?

Forget about it, there is a complete paralysis on the economic zones. Today we are talking about developing private industrial parks and have suggested creating private power plants, as industrialists, and selling to the grid at the same contract and conditions as the government signed with the Turkish power ships that are coming (a three-year, $390 million contract to provide 270 megawatts); this is nothing but fair. What the government gave to a Turkish company should be starting conditions for Lebanese industrialists on the ground to sell electricity to the grid. We have given this proposal to the Industry Minister to put it on the agenda of the Cabinet, but we’ve had no answer.

Where would you set up such zones?

The Zahle area, near Saida or Batroun. You can’t go further than this.

Are there any success stories you’d like to highlight?

We are still surviving in Lebanon, which is a success story and still importing machinery. Okay, machinery imports have decreased by 12 percent this year, which is a leading indicator of growth in the sector, but for me it is quite an achievement. In other terms, in 2012 the sector will import almost $180 million to $200 million of new machines, and this goes straight to the expansion of the sector.

October 1, 2012 0 comments
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Economics & PolicyIndustry

Outside the box

by Paul Cochrane October 1, 2012
written by Paul Cochrane

To Lebanon’s older generation, Carosserie Abillama is a household name, with ‘Abillama’ stenciled on the back of nearly every truck, tipper, tanker or ambulance in the country. The company, which has been around since 1933, is still at the forefront of trailer manufacturing and other automotive add-ons, although its name does not stand out as much as it used to amid the surge in vehicles and trucks on Lebanese roads over the past few decades.

Lebanon is also no longer the company’s major sales market, selling to 27 countries and approved for its high international standards by leading European companies Scania, MAN, Renault and Volvo. Abillama has even built trailers for Formula 3 racing cars, “which is at a very high level as it’s so image orientated,” said general manager Daniel Abboud.

Last year, however, Lebanon was a significant market, at 50 percent of sales, then dropping to 15 percent in 2012. “In terms of sales, Lebanon has not dropped that much, but exports have risen,” said  Abboud. “This year our biggest market is West Africa, at 45 percent, followed by the Gulf at 25 percent and institutional buyers 15 percent.”

The surge in exports to West Africa was a deliberate strategy by Abillama to anticipate a potential drop in sales due to the crisis in Syria and its spillover to the Lebanese economy. Abboud put a dedicated sales team on the West African market, and “it worked.”

“I think we’re going to have a good year and next year even better. We have a nice order book,” he said, projecting annual revenues at $16.5 million, up from $14.5 million in 2011.

Part of the company’s success over the past 80 years has stemmed from predicting downturns and keeping sales diversified. “For a while, 90 percent of our market was Iraq before the Americans came [in 2003],” said Abboud. “We saw the dangers so stopped taking orders. It was a good approach, as if we’d  stayed we’d have been in bad shape.”

A further key to success is Abillama’s research and development, and bringing out new products to stay ahead of the competition, such as a new cement mixer developed with an American company for whom Abillama manufactures to order, primarily for the Saudi Arabian market. “There is a lot more research and development in Lebanon than elsewhere in the region. In Saudi Arabia, Syria, the Emirates, they just copy others. The ‘Abillama tipper’ has been a generic term in Saudi Arabia for the past 40 years,” said Abboud.

In terms of competition, in West Africa Abillama vies for business with European firms, while in the Middle East, Iraq in particular, the company is facing stiffer competition from Turkey. “High quality Turkish producers were focusing on the European market, but they have lost it due to the economic downturn there so are turning to other markets where quality is important,” said Abboud.

 

Universal Metal Products

While Turkey poses a competitive threat to Abillama, aluminum tube manufacturer Universal Metal Products (UMP) sees the closure of Syria as a market and transport route for Turkish products to much of the Middle East as a boon for the company. “We are picking up slack not because of Syria so much, but due to Turkish suppliers being out of the market. They are now being restricted due to logistics and political reasons, and that trade link has been broken,” said general manager Nizar Raad.

UMP has experienced a major up-tick in sales to Saudi Arabia this year for the collapsible aluminum tubes it manufactures for the cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries. The situation in Syria, however, is causing logistical problems and heightened transport costs, deriving from export for which overland transport is the most cost effective method.

“We’ve made contingency plans for sea as there is the possibility of Syria blocking the route to Jordan,” said Raad. “We got the cost by sea freight, to Jeddah, and that is okay but the problem is the delays in offloading. Then the goods have to be driven to Riyadh, the main pharmaceutical hub. These time factors and delays are a problem.”

UMP’s exports are not totally dependent on the Middle East though. “We do export indirectly to Europe and the United States, so the lower euro is helping. We also export to Pakistan for special clients,” said Raad. He expects business to be similar to last year, neither growing nor contracting.

Resource Group Holding

Resource Group Holding – soon to be called just RGH – are an investment group that manages a diversified portfolio of businesses in the Middle East, West Africa and Asia. The company expects to have similar revenues this year as 2011, at over $100 million. But this is not down to less business in the Middle East and Africa, its core markets, or any loss in trade to Syria. Indeed, RGH’s telecommunications infrastructure arm Serta was granted permission by the United States Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), which oversees sanctions, to sell equipment sourced from the US to Syria this year.

Revenues are expected to hover around the $100 million mark because the group is going through a period of consolidation as well as significant investment, with Chief Operating Officer Dany Eid expecting to see returns next year and for RGH’s revenues over the next five years to grow by more than 100 percent to exceed $200 million.

In Lebanon, RGH is expanding its 4,000 square meter Inkript facility, which handles high-security printing, from checkbooks to lottery tickets, electoral voting cards and bonds, to bank cards and electronic-passports, by a further 16,000 square meters, financed through a subsidized loan from the central bank and the Investment Development Authority of Lebanon. The expanded facility is slated to open by end 2013, and will create further employment, adding to the current 500 working at the plant in South Beirut. Elsewhere, RGH has 200 employees in lottery business Intersektion’s brand Afrijeux in Chad, and 300 other employees in Lebanon and abroad.

In further expansion, RGH bought a factory in Saudi Arabia last year to make mobile phone SIM cards and scratch cards. “We bought the facility to cater to the sizable Saudi market and have proximity to our customer base,” said Eid. “The plant is still in the restructuring phase, so we expect this investment to yield results as of next year.” The group is also involved in the smart phone gaming business through investing in a startup called Game Cooks, which co-produced the hit game Birdy Nam Nam. “With the Arab world as the primary target, games like Run for Peace and Déjà Vu have witnessed over 1 million downloads so far in less than a year,” said Eid.

Eid sees Lebanon’s strength as being able to not only manufacture goods at a high quality, but also to combine development with value-added and follow up solutions. “The future is in value-added and solutions. At a group level, our products are already highly technical, such as printing, and through products that provide solutions, like software for SIM cards. What makes our products hard to compete with is that they are relatively unique, as clients for printing, for instance, are mainly governments and banking sectors, and competition at that level is lower.”
 

 

Vresso

For Vresso, a manufacturer of customized stainless steel kitchens and exclusive distributor for 50 food service equipment and laundry brands, the dampened economic climate in the Middle East has slowed sales this year, most evident in Syria with hotel and tourism-related projects on hold. But with exports accounting for 60 to 65 percent of business and selling to over 30 countries, Vresso is weathering an economic downturn in one area and focusing on others. “We are optimistic about the future, especially emerging markets opening up, but I won’t say where because our competitors would be on a plane tomorrow,” said Carl Sabounjian, Sales and Marketing manager at Vresso.

Sales have been surprisingly good for the company, even for stainless steel kitchen units that have a price tag anywhere from $10,000 to more than $200,000. To bolster sales of such expensive items, Vresso has been offering more credit facilities. The tactic has worked. “Business has been very good, quite great in fact, especially for restaurants, super markets and coffee shops, as well as with private villas and wine cellars,” said Sabounjian.

Vresso has 120 employees within the group, and 40 employed in manufacturing stainless steel cabinets, tops and refrigeration units. Steel sheets are bought from local importers, then cut, bent and welded at Vresso facilities, with products manufactured from scratch to customer specifications.

“Next year a lot of new models are coming out, and a lot of foreign franchises — especially internationally renowned restaurants — are coming to Lebanon so we see a good market ahead,” said Sabounjian, forecasting that once the conflict in Syria is over there will be significant business opportunities.

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Economics & PolicyIndustry

Exports in mayhem

by Paul Cochrane October 1, 2012
written by Paul Cochrane

Syrian industry has been seriously hit by the ongoing conflict, suffering from a lack of raw materials, workers, energy and capital amid heightened risk. Multinational companies such as Proctor & Gamble that sold fast-moving consumer goods exited the Syrian market last November when European Union sanctions went into effect.

Turkey has not filled any supply gap, with exports from Turkey into Syria dropping from $2.3 billion in 2011 to just $302 million in the first five months of this year. However, exports from Lebanon to Syria have risen by 18 percent to date on 2011, to $126 million, while for the first time in years Syrian products headed the other way have fallen, by 8 percent to $142 million, according to Lebanese Customs data. Are Lebanese industries stepping up to fill an apparent supply and demand gap?

The short answer is: not really. Firstly, demand for non-essential items in Syria has plummeted as prices have risen, people’s finances have been squeezed, and stores are infrequently open, if at all. Take for example the sales of Lebanese cosmetics firm Ch. Sarraf & Co., part of the Malia Group, in Syria. When the group started a distribution company there in 2008, sales quickly reached the same volumes it had taken 10 years to achieve in Lebanon. It was a good market. But since the uprising began in March, 2011, business has dropped.

“We are facing export difficulties so a few months ago we put aside stock as a preemptive measure, but demand [for cosmetics] is about half of what it used to be as purchasing power is down,” said the company’s general manager Joanne Chehab. “People are only buying products of first necessity, although shampoo is still one.”

A second factor is that demand for more life-sustaining essentials has also not risen. According to a report in As Safir newspaper, the Lebanese Farmers Association said that exports to Syria have dropped by two-thirds on last year. Demand has equally not risen for items more suitable for life under a siege than fresh fruit and veggies — tinned and packaged foods. According to the head of a leading Lebanese agro-industry company who asked to remain anonymous, there has been no marked demand by Syrian companies or traders.

One necessary product that is facing production shortages in Syria is pharmaceuticals, yet while there may be demand, potential increased exports from Lebanese pharmaceutical companies are complicated by the borders still being under the regulation of the Syrian state.

“Until now, exports from Lebanese pharmaceutical companies to Syria are subject to regulations by the Syrian authorities; that is why it’s not as easy as one would think [to export],” said Neemat Frem, president of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists. “But in areas that are unregulated, that is completely different, and we might see more in those areas.”

 


Cash flow curbs

While generator manufacturer Saccal Industries has witnessed a 100 percent growth in demand for generator sets due to power shortages, Syria is not as lucrative a market as one would expect. “We are selling more but there is the problem of cash flow. People are afraid of spending money in the current environment,” said the company’s general manager Asaad Saccal.

The United States sanctions banning the use of Visa and MasterCard, as well as transactions in dollars, and the considerable depreciation of the Syrian pound are both major contributing factors to the squeeze. “We are selling for cash not credit as the currency is fluctuating a lot,” said Chehab. “We sell in Syrian pounds and then transfer on the spot.”

Compounding the situation is problematic  distribution, which has become more difficult. Traders are looking for higher margins to cover inflated insurance premiums and container hires.

A little silver lining

So what has caused the up-tick in exports to Syria reported this year? Data is not broken down by category, but one reason for the increase is a 25 percent spike in exports of machinery, spare parts and engines due to international sanctions, according to economist Kamal Hamdan.

Another factor is fuel. Subsidized Syrian fuel used to be smuggled into Lebanon; but as the conflict dragged on and shortages emerged in Syria, this flow has reversed, causing Lebanese imports of fuel from abroad to jump, both to make up for lost supply to the domestic market and to feed the export and smuggling markets in Syria. Lebanon’s imports of oil and mineral fuels have surged 89 percent year-on-year, to $3.2 billion. Non-hydrocarbon imports on the other hand have grown just 1.8 percent, according to Byblos Bank data.

In addition to fuel exporters and smugglers taking advantage of the conflict, some other companies are also directly and indirectly benefiting from industry shutdowns in Syria. Aluminum tube manufacturer Universal Metal Products (UMP) has noted an increase in orders from Saudi Arabia, which the company does not attribute to the closure of three Syrian manufacturers in the same field — they did not have the ISO specification required in the kingdom’s market — but rather the drop in Turkish trade with Syria.

“Due to the broken trade links with Turkey we are picking up slack from Turkish business they have lost,” said UMP’s general manager Nizar Raad. On the labor side, for manufacturers such as Carosserie Abillama, the closure of Syrian manufacturers provided the Lebanese firm with skilled workers that had been laid off.

All in all, there is little silver lining to the Syrian crisis for Lebanese industry, with the situation causing more damage to the sector than any potential sales up-ticks due to shortages over the border.

Where industry may well experience an upside in the near future is if goods that have been hoarded away start running out. Otherwise, it will not be until the conflict is over, when the rebuilding effort in Syria creates a massive demand for materials and products.

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Economics & PolicyIndustry

Round-about routes

by Paul Cochrane October 1, 2012
written by Paul Cochrane

If the Syrian crisis escalates further and the border with Syria closes, Lebanon would be cut off from the rest of the region with the only way in and out being by sea or air. So far the border has remained open, but the Syrian conflict has already caused a significant drop in cross-border trade and a rise in maritime shipping.

Last year, an average of 450 trucks crossed the border daily with goods destined for Syria, Turkey, Jordan, Iraq and the Gulf countries. But with the security situation deteriorating, exporters are increasingly reluctant to transport cargo by land. Insurance is up 3.5 percent to cover the risk, and companies are being held financially responsible for hired trailers. The deposit on a 20-foot  (6.1 meter) container is $4,500 to $5,000, and $7,500 for a 40-foot (12.2 meter) container. “It is a cash deposit for the empty container to cover all issues, from accidents to kidnapping,” said Fadi Haddad, general manager of shipping and logistics firm Masafat International.

In addition, there are increasingly delays at border crossings onwards from Syria, driver shortages and visa issues for Syrian drivers to enter Saudi Arabia (see box page 56). “We are facing a lot of obstacles: risk, the shortage of drivers, visa delays, and visa costs, and all this is adding up. There are also more checks at Masnaa [the Lebanon-Syrian crossing] and at Deraa [between Syria and Jordan], which holds up convoys for three to five days,” said Nizar Raad, managing director of Universal Metal Products. “So far Deraa has remained open but sometimes we wait a week or two for a trailer to go through.”

Higher oil prices have also added to costs and the overall price of transporting a trailer to the Gulf has risen by 15 percent on last year. All of this has led to an approximately 50 percent drop in the number of trucks crossing from Lebanon into Syria, to between 200 to 250 a day, according to Gezairi Transport.

Paying for Safety

With land transport having accounted for an estimated 70 percent of cargo to Iraq and the Gulf, unsurprisingly exports to Iraq have dropped, down 39 percent in the first quarter on the same period last year, and by 15 percent overall in the first half of the year. “Before the Syrian conflict, Beirut was a good transit point for cargo for Iraq, now there are a lot of doubts,” said Haddad. “Traders are asking what will happen to their cargo if it gets stuck due to a crisis during transportation in Lebanon or elsewhere.”

The re-export trade has certainly been hit, at $193 million worth of goods moved in the first half of the year compared to $379 million for the same period in 2011. Meanwhile, exports to Turkey have dropped 40 percent, despite the launch in June of a privately operated roll-on, roll-off (ro-ro) vessel between Tripoli and Mersin to circumvent Syria. Sea transport has become an increasingly viable option for traders, especially if the cargo is expensive. “We’ve had requests from clients to study sea routes, as by land it is risky. But shipping costs are higher [so] trucks are still going,” said Haddad. 

Indeed, land transport is still the preferred option as it is more straightforward for a single trailer to go door-to-door than have to transport cargo to the Beirut port, load it into a container, unload it at the receiving port, and then re-load it into a trailer. It is also more time-consuming and costly.

While a trailer would take roughly a week — without any unusual border delays — to get to the Gulf, by ship it takes on average 20 days. “[A] one week delay at sea is very common, and you can’t claim for a delay,” said Haddad. Shipping costs to the Gulf are also around 40 percent higher than trucking.

Nevertheless, with land transportation increasingly fraught and time consuming, companies are clearly willing to pay the premium to make sure cargo arrives in one piece. According to statistics released by the Port of Beirut, export shipping operations by the top eight freight forwarders reached 26,305 TEUs (Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit) in the first half of the year, up 18 percent from 22,293 TEUs in the same period of 2011.

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Economics & PolicyIndustry

Keeping alight the spark

by Paul Cochrane October 1, 2012
written by Paul Cochrane

Lebanese industry has been dealt many a bad card in its recent history. Yet when the sector went through a five-year boom, with exports nearly doubling in value from $2.17 billion in 2006 to $4.059 billion in 2010, it seemed as if industry had finally found some playable hands. The sector could raise the stakes, throw out an ace or two, and show the banking, real estate and tourism sectors that industry was an equally important player at the country’s economic big-boys’ table.

But the winning streak was not to last. The global financial crisis — which the sector had managed to bypass for a while — political uprisings throughout the region, and sluggish domestic economic growth all started to affect business in 2011, the second half in particular. In the words of the president of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists (ALI), Neemat Frem, “It was not a slowdown in growth but a complete stop”.

Although 2011 marked a new record in industrial exports from 2010 at $4.064 billion, growth was minimal and hardly comparable to the $729 million jump in exports between 2009 and 2010.

Furthermore, despite export figures being used as a benchmark to gauge the sector’s general health, they do not give the overall picture, given that exports account for only 40 percent of sales in domestically manufactured goods with the remainder destined for the local market.

The glass half empty?

The mood of industrialists certainly reflected the downturn. In the central bank’s quarterly business survey, it showed that by the fourth quarter industrial production had retreated, with a balance of opinion (the proportion of surveyed managers who consider that there was an improvement in a particular indicator and the proportion of those who reported a decline in the same indicator) standing at -11, compared to +18 at the same time in 2010 and zero during the third quarter of 2011. The balance of opinion for overall demand for industrial goods was no brighter, at -14 in the fourth quarter of 2011 compared to +4 in the same quarter of 2010.

To the sector’s relief, 2012 did not start out too shabbily, in exports at least, with first quarter results up 9 percent on 2011 at $808.1 million, according to Ministry of Industry figures. Yet the downbeat sentiment that had prevailed at the end of last year lingered, with the same debilitating factors deteriorating moods further: higher oil prices, more frequent power shortages and the situation in Syria on a slippery downwards slope. By the end of July exports were down 9.5 percent to $1.7 billion, when compared with the first  seven months in 2011.

 

Consumer confidence was also in the gutter. A survey conducted in March and April 2012 by United States-based opinion polling think tank Pew Research Center indicated that 53 percent of Lebanese considered that the economic situation in Lebanon was very bad and 35 percent thought it was bad, compared to 12 percent who believed it was good.

“Three channels were hit the most: One: the flow of tourists was down, which lowered demand for industrial and agricultural goods; Two: exports through Syria were down, and Three: the loss of foreign investment into Lebanon, including industry, because of the security and political situation and heightened risk,” said economist Mazen Soueid.

Indeed, tourism figures were down 8 percent in the first half of the year. Exports that had gone overland via Syria were down, notably plunging by 40 percent to Turkey and by 15 percent to Iraq. Indicative of reduced investment in industry, imports of machinery were down 12 percent.

While Lebanese industry has long struggled to be price-competitive within the region and other emerging economies, from wages to operational overheads, the sector had another cost to factor in this year when the government raised the minimum wage.

“The increase in salaries has affected us. Our products are customized and cannot be mechanized so we rely on labor. Our prices are up 6 percent, so it’s significant,” said Daniel Abboud, general manager of Carosserie Abillama, which has a staff of 300 to manufacture trailers and other automotive add-ons that are exported to some 27 countries.

“The wage increase from $333 (500,000 LL) to $450 (675,000 LL) is a big jump if you have 150 women working for you. That is the basic minimum,” said Nizar Raad, managing director of Universal Metal Products (UMP), a leading manufacturer of collapsible aluminum tubes for pharmaceutical and cosmetic companies. “It is a big increase in costs for us and we can’t pass that on to customers easily as competition is worldwide, from Pakistan to India and China. And they don’t have the fuel costs we have. We are paying $0.15 a kilowatt while others are paying just $0.04.”

The country’s chronic power shortages, with Électricité du Liban (EDL) producing only 1,500 megawatts (MW) of electricity and peak demand at more than 2,500 MW, has long been an existential problem for industry. This year the power outages were even more frequent than in the past and were further compounded by oil prices averaging more than $100 a barrel, which has bitten into industry’s margins as well as lowered consumer purchasing power.

 

Some industrialists want to solve the crisis by developing their own power plants, with excess sold to the grid. They have submitted a proposal to the government but it has been stymied by EDL holding the monopoly on energy sales.

Logistics costs have also risen, partly due to oil prices but primarily because of the conflict in Syria affecting overland trade, with the number of trailers crossing the border down by around half, from 450 a day last year to 200 to 250 a day, according to Gezairi Transport. Trucking costs are up by around 15 percent to the Gulf due to oil prices and insurance premiums have increased to cover the risk of transporting through Syria. Such factors have prompted a rise in sea freight, but add further costs to companies, with sea cargo to the Gulf around 40 percent more expensive than by land, as well as taking an average of two weeks longer to get to the end destination.

Regional issues are also playing their part, with Saudi Arabia no longer allowing Syrian drivers multiple entry visas — Syrians account for around 80 percent of the truckers of Lebanese products — presumably for political reasons, which adds on more time for visa applications, while the kingdom is also squeezing the Lebanese electricity generator sector.

All in all, industry is facing many obstacles. “I think Lebanese industry is going through its worst period since the end of the Civil War,” said Soueid. “We have never had this agglomeration of domestic, regional and global factors affecting supply and demand. If this continues, and unfortunately the indicators point in that direction, we will see closures of industries in Lebanon.”

The glass half full?

While the economic situation is certainly not rosy, with overall growth forecast at 1.2 percent this year by the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, it is not all doom and gloom. Taking the ‘glass is half full’ approach, ALI’s Frem is confident that the sector will prevail, stating that while industrial machinery imports have dropped, they could have dropped more — especially after significant investment in recent years — and this year he forecasts that up to $200 million of newly purchased machinery will go “straight to the expansion of the sector”. Since being interviewed in early September, Frem’s outlook has been somewhat confirmed, with statistics released by the Ministry of Industry showing that industrial imports at the end of July were up 22 percent, to $172.2 million, on the same period in 2011.

Industries not overly reliant on the local market are stoic about the situation. “We have to live up to the challenge, otherwise we shouldn’t be here,” said Raad of UMC, which exports 85 percent of its products. “We will maintain the same figures as last year; not more or less growth.”

 

“Business is good, despite the situation,” said Asaad Saccal, general manager of generator manufacturer Saccal Industries. “The reason is 85 percent of our turnover is export. Lebanon is good business of course, but small in terms of quantities; we need bigger markets to sell to.”

To Abillama’s Abboud, companies should have anticipated the regional and domestic situation and adapted their business model accordingly rather than whining about the obstacles in place. “This is a problem I see many people complaining about, but they don’t look ahead, taking the punches while sitting down — move!” said Abboud. “The key is not to be static and wait, but to be proactive. As soon as things started to happen in Syria and we saw that the economy might slow down here, that the road to the Gulf might be difficult and we would have to focus on sea export, we put all [our] sales people on West Africa to be dynamic, and it worked,” he added, with Abillama having a “nice order book” for the year ahead.

Indeed, as the saying goes, one man’s loss is another man’s gain. Some exporters have benefited from the current regional crisis by picking up orders that Syrian and Turkish manufacturers cannot fill.

The economic sanctions imposed on Syria by the United States and the European Union (EU) have also been a boost for certain Lebanese companies, with imports from Syria down 8 percent in the first half of the year, and exports to Syria up 18 percent, according to global information company IHS. It would appear, though, that the negative impact on some Lebanese companies in losing the Syrian market and that export route outweigh the opportunities for their industries to fill the gap left by the collapse of Syrian industry.

Government support?

The government is not helping the sector through these trying times, with the Minister of Industry, Vrej Sbounjian — a Utopian at heart — stating there is no cause for concern.

“We don’t have any complaints concerning the economy or industry… We need to be more realistic and enjoy life a little bit. We don’t have to make money every year,” he told Executive.

The ministry itself could certainly do with more money, with a budget of just $5 million, just more than half that of the Ministry of Youth and Sports, at $9.7 million, and a third of the tourism ministry’s $14.6 million.

“The ministry’s share in the budget seems way too low to me,” said Abillama’s Abboud. “There should be more than just enough to pay salaries.”

“The ministry should be able to afford promotion programs and to fund delegations from the ministry to visit seminars and industrial meetings with specialized bodies in the Arab League, the EU  or others,” he added.

There have also been no steps made to set up dedicated industrial zones despite government pledges over the years to do so. As Frem observed, “Forget about it, there is a complete paralysis on the economic zones.” Industry, as in the past, is being left to its own devices to stay alive, not even getting governmental contracts to bolster domestic sales.

However, the Ministry of Industry has put its, albeit limited, weight behind a joint scheme launched in September with the ALI to promote Lebanese products under the slogan “Your industry your identity: Buy Lebanese.”

While a promotional campaign may help, industry needs more than just marketing, it needs solid support from the government and for the ministry to tout the sector at international exhibitions, just as other countries do. A bigger industrial sector would, after all, help to lower unemployment and boost the overall economy.

“It is not that Lebanon cannot be industrial, but that it should be seen as a sustainable sector,” said Abboud. “It is great to have an ad agency here, but they could leave tomorrow; industries can’t get up and leave like that. Industry should be a priority and not be seen by the government as a cash cow. Industry is a social contributor as well as a fiscal one. In the past, industry was looked at as a polluting sector or as exploiting the masses — this is not the case anymore.”

To economist Soueid, the government needs to implement any of the economic plans drawn up over the years, whether by external actors such as the World Bank, or by ministries and economists. “Industries in Lebanon don’t need a ministry, they need an economic policy that supports industry and reforms in power, infrastructure and telecoms,” he said.

Given the rough ride this year, Lebanese industrialists could use some better cards to play.

October 1, 2012 0 comments
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The Resistance goes on

by Nicholas Blanford October 1, 2012
written by Nicholas Blanford

President Michel Sleiman’s proposal for a national defense strategy, which includes placing Hezbollah’s arsenal of weapons under the command of the Lebanese army, is an attempt to fine tune an idea that was first aired around a decade ago.

The Sleiman proposal was unveiled at a meeting on September 21 that grouped most of the country’s top leaders for yet another of the seemingly interminable national dialogue sessions. Although the national dialogue began in early 2006 with the fate of Hezbollah’s arms as its chief raison d’être, the participants have only agreed on one item: closing the bases manned by Syrian-backed Palestinian factions in the Bekaa Valley and in Naameh south of Beirut.

However, despite unanimity on that decision it has yet to be put into effect and the Palestinian military bases continue to operate unmolested.

Sleiman’s proposal is unlikely to meet the approval of all participants to the national dialogue, let alone reach the stage of implementation. The bottom line is that Hezbollah will not voluntarily disarm nor hand over control of its weapons or decision-making capabilities to an external force. Ali Ammar, a Hezbollah Member of Parliament, was quite clear about this when he stated in June 2006 — a month before the war with Israel — that “the resistance will go on; the extent of the resistance is not the Shebaa Farms… nor the return of prisoners [from Israel], but its extent is when it becomes impossible for Israel to violate Lebanon’s sovereignty even with a paper kite.” In other words, the lifespan of the resistance is potentially infinite.

The late former MP Nassib Lahoud was an early proponent of blending Hezbollah into the army. With the onset of a debate on the fate of Hezbollah’s arms in the wake of the Israeli troop withdrawal from South Lebanon in 2000, Lahoud suggested that the resistance be turned into a paramilitary border defense force deployed along the southern frontier but placed under the command of the Lebanese army. His proposal was an attempt to find middle ground between the maximalist positions of Hezbollah, which wanted to keep the resistance intact, and the party’s critics, who wanted to see the resistance entirely disarmed.

Hezbollah argued that the success of the resistance in confronting Israel is that it has its own chain of command and is not part of the fabric of the army and therefore the state. The absence of a formal military chain of command and the relative degree of autonomy given to unit commanders (rare among Arab armies) allows the resistance to react more quickly to developments, ran Hezbollah’s argument. Furthermore, Hezbollah did not operate from open military barracks and bases such as those manned by the Lebanese army because of their vulnerability to attack. Instead it was a guerrilla force — fluid, mobile, stealthy — all the better to confront Israel’s conventional army.

Even as Hezbollah was advancing this argument a decade ago, its fighters were busy building secret underground fortresses in the hills of South Lebanon, a development that only became apparent with the advent of the 2006 war.
Before Syria’s political disengagement from Lebanon in April 2005, the future of the resistance was a largely academic debate: Hezbollah had no intention of disarming and the Syrians provided political cover. The national dialogue sessions first convened in 2006 when the debate over Hezbollah’s arms intensified and the party was compelled to at least accept the establishment of a forum to discuss the issue.

The key question, however, is who decides whether Lebanon goes to war or not — the state or the secretary-general of Hezbollah.

In 2006, the state was powerless to make such a decision as events on the ground moved too quickly. But if Israel was to launch a pre-emptive attack on Hezbollah in an attempt to degrade its military capabilities, would Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah look to the government for the green light to retaliate? Of course not. And he has implicitly stated that Hezbollah reserves the right to decide the manner of response to an attack by Israel in a series of “deterrence” speeches he has made in the past five years.

Sleiman’s proposal will continue to be discussed for many more months at future sessions of the national dialogue. But Hezbollah can probably rest assured that it will never proceed any further than the table in Baabda presidential palace.

Nicholas Blanford is the Beirut-based correspondent for The Christian Science Monitor and The Times of London

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Since its first edition emerged on the newsstands in 1999, Executive Magazine has been dedicated to providing its readers with the most up-to-date local and regional business news. Executive is a monthly business magazine that offers readers in-depth analyses on the Lebanese world of commerce, covering all the major sectors – from banking, finance, and insurance to technology, tourism, hospitality, media, and retail.

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