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North Africa

Free trade docks hard

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

In June, Morocco entered into fresh free trade agreement talks to add Canada to its growing number of close commercial partners. The list of Morocco’s free trade allies already includes the European Union, the United States, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey and Jordan, alongside North African neighbors Tunisia and Egypt. Rabat hopes to diversify its markets and capabilities, which are currently focused on a small number of European partners, by dismantling tariffs with new partners like Canada. Meanwhile, Morocco’s new port facilities and burgeoning IT development are opening never-before-seen trade routes and commercial opportunities, allowing the country to reconsider its economic and political global alliances.

European countries have been Morocco’s principal trading partners since independence, with France, at 21 percent, and Spain, at 20 percent, the two countries with the largest volume of bilateral trade. In 2007, more than 60 percent of Moroccan exports were sent to the EU, while 58 percent of Moroccan imports came from the EU, for a total trade amounting to nearly $30 billion.

Beyond Europe

In a move set to significantly divert Moroccan trade away from dependence on EU markets, Morocco became the second Arab country (after Jordan in 2000) to sign a free trade agreement with the US. The US-Morocco agreement, which went into effect on January 1, 2006, has a particularly sweeping scope that took two years for negotiators to settle. It includes industrial products, agricultural products, services and public works contracts, in addition to measures relating to intellectual property, environment, workforce and governance.

Bilateral trade more than doubled in just three years, mostly to the benefit of the US, which now sells Morocco products ranging from Washington apples to drilling and oil field equipment. In 2008, US exports rose to $1.4 billion, from $480 million in 2005, while Moroccan exports during the same period climbed from $445 million to $878 million, according to the US Census Bureau’s Foreign Trade Division.

But in spite of a few isolated success stories, Moroccan producers are finding it difficult to penetrate the American market.

New reports are showing that Morocco’s traditional exports like textiles, fish, citrus, flowers, and artisanal handicrafts are not making it across the Atlantic. The Minister of Foreign Commerce declared in a February report that the US FTA has not succeeded in stimulating national exports. He cited the lack of diversification and sophistication of Moroccan exports as the main obstacles to entering newly opened markets.

Ahmed Reda Chami, Morocco’s minister of commerce, industry and new technologies, said there are fundamental incompatibilities between Moroccan products and the American consumer market.

 “The cultural and linguistic barrier… complexity of US distribution…[and] production that requires Moroccan companies to manage very important orders while at the same time ensuring a constant quality on the whole product line, and the devaluation of the dollar compared to the dirham, all reduce the competitiveness of our products,” Chami said in an interview with Oxford Business Group.

While national export levels are disappointing Moroccan administration officials, local press and watchdog groups warn that the US trade agreement undermines access to affordable medicines for Moroccan consumers, allows US companies to patent seeds and charge small-scale farmers royalties for planting crops, and sets back environmental and workforce standards.

So why open domestic markets to fierce competition if the benefits are so seemingly asymmetrical?

First, agriculture is still the backbone of the Moroccan economy. In order to advance from the vulnerability of depending on weather conditions for economic security, the administration is investing to diversify its economy and raise productivity. Foreign partners are essential to industrial modernization. The North African country is also looking to capitalize on its geographical positioning and political stability by becoming a competitive regional hub and platform for other countries to reach a wide range of international markets.

More than 160 high-tech western companies have recently set up shop in Casablanca and Tangiers

Future tech

Morocco’s national industrial strategy to develop high-potential aeronautics, automotive and electronics sectors, as well as nanotechnology, biotechnology and microelectronics — called “Plan Emergence” — has already helped attract more than 160 equipment manufacturers from Japan, France, the US and Spain in special zones in Casablanca and Tangiers. These companies are expected to generate 60,000 to 70,000 industrial jobs by 2015, according to Industry Minister Chami.

“Morocco signed many FTAs with several regions across the world: the EU, US, Turkey… These agreements have permitted our country to position itself as a ‘hub’ for the Mediterranean and a platform to reach the world,” said Saad Benabdellah, who heads the Moroccan Center for Promoting Exports, in an interview with local paper l’Economiste. “Just a few years ago, it would have been difficult to imagine that emblematic enterprises like Renault, Tata Group, Cap Gemini, Airbus and Safran would now be implanted in Morocco.”

Moroccan rapprochement with new international markets in North America, Asia and the Gulf does not seem to be hurting its relationship with the EU. The 27-country bloc overrode heated political objections to the status of the disputed Western Sahara territory and bestowed the coveted ‘advanced status’ designation on Morocco in December 2008. The ‘advanced status’ designation — a first in the southern Mediterranean region — makes Morocco less than a member but more than a partner to the EU, and is designed to integrate Morocco into EU policies and deepen free trade agreements.

August 28, 2009 0 comments
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North Africa

An apple a day…

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

For fairly obvious reasons, Morocco’s pork production sector has never been one of the country’s sectoral heavyweights. In a nation with a majority Muslim population and minority Jewish community, farmers catered mainly to European tourists, producing an estimated 270 tons of pork annually, generating around $1.48 million, according to 2008 figures. In a normal year, pigs would be a peripheral part of government planning, but since the emergence of A(H1N1) flu, better known as swine flu, the public health sector has received extra funding and ramped up its prevention programs.

Unlike Egypt, where the government responded to the outbreak by calling for the slaughter of the country’s 300,000 pigs, Morocco’s response has been more measured. There have been no calls to eliminate the pig farms and their estimated 5,000 pigs. The World Health Organization said killing the animals has no effect on the spread of swine flu since they do not transmit the virus. As of July 9, there were 21 confirmed cases in Morocco, according to the Maghreb Arab Press, though only two of these remain in hospital.

Pandemic preparation

Swine flu may strain Morocco’s already stretched healthcare resources, but the government has earmarked $105 million for the operation. The funds will be channeled to programs that prevent the disease from entering the country and to individual protection plans. The government has established tracking systems nationwide. The first follows airline passengers from countries with confirmed cases. Thermal scanners, which can detect elevated skin temperatures, a possible sign of infection, have been installed at entry points. In addition, the Ministry of Public Health has launched a public information campaign. Swine flu can be treated effectively if identified quickly, so making information available may prevent panic as well as save lives.

Overall healthcare indicators in the country are good and public spending is rising, but a shortage of doctors, a lack of access to health care for poorer citizens and modern lifestyles are starting to take their toll. A third of the population over the age of 20 has high blood pressure and nearly 7 percent of the same age group also suffers from diabetes. The Strategy 2008 to 2012 plan includes for the first time provisions to outsource medical services, with the private sector billing the government, according to Dr. Ennaceri Mimoun, head of the hospitals division at Morocco’s Ministry of Public Health.

The ministry has agreed that the national association of nephrologists (kidney specialists) can provide dialysis for patients on waiting lists in public hospitals, and Mimoun thinks that this can be extended to other services. Mimoun estimates a deficit of about 9,000 doctors in the public sector, compounded by the departure of highly experienced doctors, who “gravitate towards the comfort of working in the private sector.”

With the increased links between the two, however, doctors can treat poorer patients, while still maintaining their incomes.

Further funding from non-governmental organizations and foreign countries plays an important role in improving the sector. A new initiative launched in the Fes-Boulemane region will help to treat children with cancer. The regional division of the Ministry of Public Health and the local branch of l’Avenir, an association of parents and friends of children with cancer, have partnered to supply medicines, equipment, laboratory tests and X-rays. The European Union is planning to give $120 million for development. According to the head of the EU Commission in Rabat, Ambassador Bruno Dethomas, these funds will help sectors of the population who may not have access to health insurance coverage.

In addition to addressing the needs of its own population, the kingdom has the challenge of providing international calibre services for tourists. Currently, Moroccan law states that clinics must be owned and operated by Moroccan citizens. As visitor numbers increase and global sicknesses like swine flu move quickly across national borders, the government may need to allow foreign participation in the health sector, opening the door for new partnerships and investments.

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North Africa

A ripe economy

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Tunisia was ranked the most competitive business environment in Africa in a report released during the World Economic Forum summit in Cape Town. The 2009 Africa Competitiveness Report, produced by the WEF in association with the African Development Bank and the World Bank, gave the Tunisian economy a score of 4.6 out of 5 for competitiveness, ranking it the 36th most competitive economy globally and the fifth most competitive in the Arab world.

The report, based on hard data and responses to the WEF’s Executive Opinion Survey, singles out the country’s institutions as “one of its most competitive advantages,” resting on “fairly transparent and trustworthy relations between government and civil society.” As a whole, Tunisia’s institutions ranked 22nd globally, with a particularly high placing for efficiency of public spending (2nd), public trust of politicians (16th), low levels of favoritism among officials (14th) and transparency in the policymaking process (15th).

Beyond institutions, in the 11 other “pillars” assessed by the report, Tunisia also ranked highly in infrastructure (34th), health and primary education (27th), higher education and training (27th), goods market efficiency (30th) and innovation (27th). The only area it scored relatively poorly in was labor market efficiency, coming 103rd out of 134 countries assessed. Overall, Tunisia’s ranking places it nine positions ahead of its nearest African rival in the table, South Africa, which came 45th.

In a special chapter on enhancing competitiveness, Tunisia and three other African economies were highlighted for their achievements in ensuring strong growth by adopting development strategies that promote efficient market mechanisms. Alongside Namibia, Botswana and Mauritania, the Tunisian economy was praised as an example that high growth need not necessarily require a large economy. Like Mauritania, Tunisia has had a policy of economic diversification that in the 1970s helped the economy remain internationally competitive.

Flexibly fit

Tunisia’s efforts to integrate its economy into the global market saw it become the first Arab country to complete the steps to enter the European Union’s free trade zone in 2008. Tunisia’s recent policy of exchange rate flexibility was seen as a key factor toward helping the economy reduce tariffs and barriers to entry, enabling the textile sector in particular to compete within the lucrative European market without the need for protective measures. Stable fiscal policy has also contributed to low inflation, another key requirement for maintaining competitiveness, especially in the manufacturing sector.

Tunisia’s success comes despite its paucity of natural resources. Perhaps as a result of this though, some practices that have proved harmful to competitiveness in other African economies have been avoided. The absence of major state-owned conglomerates in the oil, gas or mining sectors means private capital is less crowded. The tax system is also less distortive to business practices, and agricultural efficiency is relatively high due to lower and better targeted subsidies. A consistent commitment to the principle of privatization has seen several major utilities move out of direct government control in recent years, while the proceeds of privatization have often gone toward paying down the government’s external liabilities.

However, while polling highly in many areas, the report nonetheless highlighted some aspects of the economy with room for improvement. Despite ranking second in Africa for technological readiness, in global terms information and communications technology penetration remained low. The figures suggest that, while at the higher levels of the economy Tunisia has largely succeeded in bridging the technology gap, the effects have yet to fully trickle down to the wider economy.

The report will be welcome news to the Tunisian government, which continues to demonstrate its commitment to a liberalized economy. Indeed, the publication coincided with a recent announcement by the cabinet that Tunisia would join six other Mediterranean countries in implementing a full “open-sky” agreement by 2010, a move that will make the country available to low-cost airlines and hopefully boost tourism.

August 28, 2009 0 comments
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North Africa

Banked with bells on

by Sam Inglis August 28, 2009
written by Sam Inglis

Financial reforms conducted over the past two decades have left the Algerian banking sector well poised to bounce back from the global financial crisis, according to the World Economic Forum’s Africa Competitiveness Report 2009. The report said Algeria was one of four African economies whose “competitive banking systems” and “functional regulatory systems” meant they were more likely to rebound positively. In particular, the report noted that while Algeria is “a slow reformer,” the country benefited from a financial system that “still demonstrates remarkable intermediation.”

The WEF’s blessing is good news for the sector, which in recent years has witnessed stalled efforts towards privatization, due in large part to the onset of the financial crisis in developed markets. Initial attempts to partly privatize Algeria’s biggest bank, Crédit Populaire d’Algérie, scheduled for early 2008, were delayed and eventually shelved when the subprime crisis began to take hold. Of six international banks permitted by the government to bid, three withdrew from the process, including Spain’s Banco Santander and troubled US giant Citigroup, leaving the planned privatization on shaky ground.

Since then, efforts to reduce the state’s role in the banking system have been put on the back-burner while the government focuses on its $150 billion infrastructure investment strategy and developing non-banking sources of capital. In 2002, the government diversified access to non-bank capital by creating a government debt market, through which the state’s large public enterprises were later encouraged to issue their own bonds. The result has been, in the words of the International Monetary Fund, a corporate bond market in Algeria “significantly larger than in other countries at the periphery of the European Union.” With the groundwork for non-bank capital already laid, and the beginnings of a medium to long-term yield curve developing in state bonds, the government appears to be focused on using the National Investment Program to deepen local capital markets further, as opposed to bank-based finance.

The judiciousness of this strategy, and indeed the slow pace of reform in the banking sector, has been supported by the need to absorb the relatively high structural liquidity surplus within Algeria’s banking system, which is the legacy of an export economy dominated by hydrocarbons. The IMF commended the Algerian government’s “prudent” monetary policy for successfully absorbing this liquidity, as well as bringing down foreign debt and keeping inflation stable. However, with export demand from Europe likely to remain weak for some time, Algeria’s banking sector will have an increasingly important role to play in domestic demand. 

It is in this spirit that the IMF in its 2009 consultation described financial sector reform in Algeria as “key” to improving productivity, developing the economy and sustaining non-hydrocarbon growth. In particular, access to loans for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) remains a challenge, with 20 percent of respondents to the Africa Competitiveness Report describing this as currently the most problematic aspect of doing business in Algeria.

Although foreign banks such as BNP Paribas, Société Générale and Citigroup have managed to gain a foothold in the system, state banks still account for approximately 95 percent of Algeria’s total bank assets and loan portfolios. While the government remains committed to prioritizing major state corporations for its growth strategy, the development of SMEs to service both these corporations and the wider domestic economy has been identified as a significant opportunity for further growth. 

To truly thrive though, successful enterprises will need access to capital. In the long run, it is likely that once the current financial crisis has abated, the government will look once again towards the privatization of some banks as a means of securing easier access to capital for SMEs.

Sam Inglis is Executive’s Mediterranean correspondent, based in Istanbul

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North Africa

The Maghreb’s sunny profits

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

The most significant step toward creating an ambitious, $500 billion solar project in the North African desert occurred on July 13.

Executives representing one Algerian and 11 European companies gathered in Munich that day to formally launch the Desertec Industrial Initiative, a new alliance for developing solar-thermal energy. In mundane business terms, the 12 companies signed a memorandum of understanding to create a new company by October 31.

The new company, named Desertec Industrial Initiative (DII), will tackle the creation of a complete network of electricity generation plants from renewable energy sources — mostly solar heat — and transmission lines around and under the Mediterranean with the aim of satisfying approximately 15 percent of Western European electricity demand by 2050.

News of the project quickly drew comments from supporters and critics alike, many asking if such a venture was at all serious.

A few years ago, discussion of solar energy was but a nice mind game, something for incorrigible idealists, aspiring but naïve scientists, academics tormented by fears of climate doom and influence-free politicians — the backbenchers who never get invited to the power lunches of the big companies.

But now the situation has changed. Like the economic climate and energy prices that have contributed to demand for energy efficient vehicles, the idea of solar power has gained traction in the real world, and is able to elicit professions of idealism from corporate executives who have billion-dollar signatory powers.

What makes the announcement of Desertec a milestone in the history of energy generation is convergence: specifically, price-cost ratios and technical capabilities have come together in a way that was not plausible five or six years ago.

The project presents the possibility of new future partnerships for the Mediterranean rim countries, making the region a new global player that can see eye to eye with other economic growth centers.

The sales pitch for solar power

The first selling point of Desertec is that it is possible. The technical basis of Desertec, are Concentrating Solar Thermal Power plants, which use sunlight in the generation of electricity via steam turbines. It is a tested and proven method that has been applied in commercial operations, which have been in business for more than a decade.

The other decisive technical component in the concept is power transmission. Here, the protractors of a Mediterranean grid say that the latest high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission lines are economical up to a distance of 3,000 kilometers with a attrition rate of no more than 3 percent per 1,000 km.

The second selling point is profitability. Cost of producing a kilowatt of electricity from Desertec’s renewable sources is projected to come down to levels that are comparable to, or lower than, costs of generating electricity from the burning of fossil fuels. The cost argument involves variables and assumptions but it is strongly supported by the trend of the past 10 years that has shown the cost of renewable energy drop at better-than-expected rates, including the cost of the other solar electricity generation method, photovoltaic, which is approaching the break-even point in Europe.

The third selling point is sustainability: the energy created by Desertec can replace dwindling fossil reserves, there are no CO2 emissions and it creates a new energy balance where production and consumption are distributed more equitably than in the oil-era scenarios of Middle Eastern energy exporters and consumers.

The Desertec plan for the Mediterranean rim

The draft of the Desertec power network is much more than a simple link from some Saharan solar farm or power tower to electricity grids in Europe. The roadmap for renewable energy circling the Mediterranean also entails wind, hydro and other renewable power generation plants. On the African and Western Asian side, more than 30 solar thermal plants would be augmented by a string of wind farms along the Atlantic coast and occasional hydro power and biomass installations.

This grid of MENA power production would reach over to Europe via several routes, mostly crossing under the Mediterranean. Power lines in the draft plan follow both the short, western routes into Spain, but also island hop through Cyprus, Crete, Malta/Sicily and Sardinia/Corsica. And, of specific importance for the Levant region, about 35 percent of the solar power plants on the Desertec roadmap are located on the Arabian Peninsula, with transmission lines sketched to traverse Syria and link into Turkey’s Anatolia.

The draft concept on the Desertec site also mentions several pilot projects that would deliver electricity and water to MENA’s most oppressed — the people of Gaza.

“A solar power plant and drinking water plant on Egyptian territory for the benefit of the Gaza Strip would be useful as a pilot project,” the paper says, “for humanitarian reasons.”

This goodwill is sure to be confronted with challenges, just as the entire plan will probably see more changes than implementation of original draft components if the project eventually becomes a reality.

Source: Regional Press Network

The naysayers

When held against these pro-Desertec arguments, opponents of Desertec seem to be largely captivated by mono-cultural thinking and monopolistic fears. Some want the project to be stillborn because it could create power for big business and might threaten the growth of small-scale solutions for renewable power in Europe that could sustain an alternative cottage energy industry.

Other detractors north of the Mediterranean painted a dark image of political risks that would allow the power producing and power transmitting countries in MENA to use the network as a political pressure point. Others criticized the MENA countries as being vaguely “unstable.”

Such issues confront the energy industry aplenty, as political challenges are a major facet of dealing in the global energy supply infrastructure of today.

However, what is of much greater interest from the vantage point of the MENA side, is the question of how many opportunities for economic growth, sustainable investment and skills development would arise from Desertec and how much this project would do for peace by way of integration.

No one can reliably foretell how much energy will be consumed by the MENA countries by the middle of the century. Chances are that development of production capacities in the high-population growth countries of the region will trigger new opportunities for manufacturing and consumption.

But some have criticized the project for being dominated by European companies with only one minor MENA investor.

Independent experts with a favorable view of the Desertec concept have argued that it would be logical and desirable for the countries on the producing side of the solar rim to be the first to benefit from this energy source for their own domestic needs and general industrial development. But Desertec, representing a new energy infrastructure between Europe and the MENA, could become a catalyst for many positive changes in the social and economic disparities between the two sides of the Mediterranean.

Crucially, MENA private sector businesses will be able to exploit this opportunity if they succeed in accelerating their growth in governance and competence.

Desertec Industrial Initiative — the venture and the players

The 12 companies taking part in the Desertec Industrial Initiative (DII) partnership are from the energy, finance, technology and manufacturing sectors. The six DII participants that are household names and publicly traded on European markets have a combined market capitalization of approximately $200 billion. German firms represent nine of the 12 companies that put their signatures on the collaboration.

In terms of geographic reach of member companies, the partnership is firmly integrated in European business and energy operations and sweetened by the addition of an Algerian company, Cevital, whose core business is in producing margarine and edible oils.

Also on the list is ABB, the technology group headquartered in Switzerland and the privately held Spanish group, Abengoa. The former is not only a leader in products such as power plant turbines but also has a strong history of working with Arab clients. Recently the company received orders for power transmission projects in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

One of the main drivers of the DII partnership and one of three financial firms in the venture is Munich Re, the reinsurance company. Munich Re hosted the launch event, and board member Torsten Jeworrek explained the company’s interest in the initiative. He said the project was important given the increased number of climate-related catastrophes and the importance of clean energy in avoiding future escalation of costly catastrophes that will affect the insurance and reinsurance sector.

“We are pursuing a visionary plan,” he said. “If it is successful, we will make a major contribution to combating climate change. The ecological and economic potential is huge.”

Munich Re’s signature on the Desertec initiative was joined by two German lenders: national banking leader Deutsche Bank and HSH Nordbank, a financial institution specialized in corporate lending and business finance that is majority-owned by two northern German states.

EON and RWE are the energy companies that make the venture dynamic with their very strong positions in running infrastructure networks and utilities. In the list of German engineering providers, Siemens, the ubiquitous engineering multinational, is joined by two specialist firms, Schott Solar and MAN Solar Millennium.

Going another step into the analytics of the DII team, there is a 13th warrior as one participating company is itself a joint venture. MAN Solar Millennium was formed by German solar plant builder Solar Millennium and by MAN Ferrostaal, a Dutch-German group that delivers industrial solutions and constructs plants in, among other areas, the chemical and petrochemical fields.

Note: the majority owner of MAN Ferrostaal, with a 70% stake, is Abu Dhabi’s outbound energy investment unit, International Petroleum Investment Company. The state-owned IPIC completed the acquisition of the controlling interest in March of this year under an agreement that valued the stake at $697 million.

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GCC

For your information

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Regional power grid

Representatives from the six Gulf Cooperation Council states inked an agreement in July which facilitates the sharing of electricity by linking each country’s power grid to form a unified power network. Two important parts of the project have already been completed by the GCC states: the interconnectivity of Kuwait and Qatar’s electricity networks and the synchronization of the “GCC North Grid” which links the power grids of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Kuwait. The next phase of the project will entail the connection of the Oman and United Arab Emirates power grids to form the “GCC South Grid.” The final phase, expected to be completed in 2011, will link north and south grids. Upon completion the grid is expected to provide Kuwait and Saudi Arabia with an extra 1,200 megawatts (MW) of power, the UAE with 900 MW, Qatar 750 MW, Bahrain 600 MW and Oman 450 MW.

GCC countries estimate that when the agreement is implemented, it will save $1.4 billion per year by eliminating the need to construct new power plants in order to meet the region’s growing demand. Analysts have estimated that up to $50 billion could be spent to increase generation capacity by 60,000 megawatts in the GCC by 2015.

Emaar Properties merger

Emaar Properties, the second largest GCC company by market capitalization, announced on June 26 its plans to merge with three real estate units of Dubai Holding: Sama Dubai, Dubai Properties and Tatweer. An Emaar press release stated the merger will be finalized by September.

“The proposed consolidation will create a robust and strategic asset base while joining the strengths of the management teams and employees of these companies,” Emaar Chairman Mohamed Alabbar said in a letter posted on the Dubai bourse website.

The merger will result in an entity worth $52.85 billion and will have $4 billion in debt obligations — 7 percent of total assets.

Emaar share prices suffered in the wake of the news. Share prices fell 8 percent in the first three days following the announcement, and bottomed out at $0.60 on July 14 — down from $0.80 on June 29. Since hitting bottom, Emaar share prices have started to pick up, reaching $0.70 on July 22.

EFG Hermes said on July 8 that its researchers did not view the merger as positive. The note said the consolidation might lead to the dilution of Emaar’s minority shareholders and increase the exposure of the combined entity to the troubled real estate market.

Oil demand temperate

The International Energy Agency (IEA) announced that it expects global demand for oil to grow by a mere 0.6 percent, or 540,000 barrels per day (bpd) from 2008 to 2014, bringing total global consumption to 89 million bpd. The medium-term estimate is substantially less than last year’s prediction of a one million bpd yearly increase. The agency attributed the drop in demand to the ongoing effects of the global economic downturn. On the bright side, the agency said the decrease has allowed the market to limit price fluctuations resulting from interruptions such as attacks on Iraq and Nigeria’s oil infrastructure. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (OPEC) supply cushion is expected to reach 7.67 million bpd, up from last year’s forecast of a paltry 1.67 million bpd.

The IEA also cautioned against unrealistically optimistic talk of economic “green shoots” spurring oil price recovery. The agency said the recent rise in prices may have nothing to do with the health of the world economy, but “could also simply reflect the rebuilding of depleted inventories across several industries, making it arguably premature to predict an imminent and strong economic rebound, not least because the elimination of spare capacity, the deleveraging of the private sector in several highly indebted countries and the rebalancing of global demand are still at an early stage.”

Despite the news, regional oil and gas production looks set to increase. Last month, Saudi Aramco and Total entered into a joint-venture and signed 13 agreements with contractors to build a $9.6 billion refinery. Also, officials at Egypt’s state-owned gas companies announced the start of a bidding round to explore the countries gas prospects. In a similar move GASCO, the majority of which is owned by the Emirati government, awarded $9 billion in gas contracts to companies from Italy, UAE, South Korea and the United States.

Iraq also launched its first post-invasion bidding round with disappointing results highlighting the still fragile political and security environment. Only one contract was awarded to a joint venture of BP and the China National Petroleum Corporation, to develop the Rumaila field, Iraqi’s largest. The bidding round came on the same day as the deadline for American combat troops to pull out of Iraqi cities.

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Levant

The money wash

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

In the wake of the financial crisis, governments have been considering ways to bolster foreign investment and shore up the financial system. Turkey hit on the idea of an ‘asset amnesty’ to attract deposits from wealthy expatriates and return money to the banking sector. 

Starting last November, the scheme was extended in June, and looks like it will be extended again in September when the current deadline ends. The scheme may be novel, but it has proved controversial.

“The Turkish government has instituted a policy for Turks to bring back their money no questions asked — a few million dollars to come home, they say no problem, we’ll take 2 to 3 percent tax,” said an investment banker in Istanbul who wanted to remain anonymous. “It has not been completely welcomed around the world, as dirty money is going to be cleaned in Turkey, but for Ankara it’s a stop-gap method to boost foreign direct investment.”

Economists are skeptical about how successful the amnesty has been in attracting capital, arguing it can only be a temporary measure and that the amnesty’s attraction has been eroded by the first amnesty period being sold as a ‘one off chance,’ only for it then to be extended. Ankara’s extension of the amnesty has also sent a clear message to the International Monetary Fund that Turkey is not keen on implementing a $25 billion loan agreement with the fund to stabilize its $700 billion economy, which is expected to contract 5.9 percent this year, according to the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Additionally, the asset amnesty has been met with displeasure by the European Union, which wants Turkey to tighten financial regulations in line with EU accession requirements, as well as curb money laundering and the flow of narcotics into Europe. The OECD’s Financial Action Task Force (FATF), a Brussels-based body set up to combat money laundering and terrorist financing globally, has also voiced its concerns, coming at a time when FATF has been exceedingly critical of Ankara’s efforts to rein in anti-money laundering and counter terrorist financing.

Boosting foreign direct investment?

On paper, the asset amnesty has boosted assets, with the declared amount of the first amnesty amounting to 14.8 billion Turkish Lira ($9.6 billion), but the reported inflow has been limited to $3.9 billion, according to research firm YF Securities. According to an economist who was not authorized to speak with the media at an Istanbul brokerage house, the amnesty has not been as successful as the government hoped.

“The amount declared may be much less,” he said. “The government said there was to be only one asset amnesty in November, but [that] turned out not to be the case, and people remember these things, so it is not good for fiscal quality. If you are going to do it, do it only once.” 

“It is not a sustainable financing source, for any economy, not just Turkey,” he added.

The economist said the government wants to see if the asset amnesty extension will bring more deposits.  He said the “government wants to keep this card in its hands, as the new decree gave them the possibility to extend it for three months beyond September.”

Economists have pointed out that the people most likely to utilize the amnesty would have done so in the first few months, making the extension unnecessary, and that the amount raised from the second asset amnesty round will be significantly less than the first. And while the money that has flowed in has bolstered banks’ assets, allowing for more credit, inflows are not expected to enter the stock market or other asset classes.

“Most of the people that wanted to benefit have already reported their holdings abroad, and the government intends to [make] additional legal arrangements to make it more attractive,” the economist said. “I am not too optimistic on that due to macroeconomic fundamentals. The good thing is that the current account deficit is in decline due to falling oil prices, but Turkey needs external sources to finance the capital account deficit, as the rollover of the private and public sector for foreign borrowing is up to just below 100 percent.”

Turkey’s public debt is projected to reach $50 billion this year, and the continuation of the amnesty has thrown doubt on Ankara’s ongoing talks with the IMF for a loan between $25 billion to $40 billion. If inked in September, the IMF would require structural reforms and stricter controls on government spending.

“The [amnesty] extension being introduced in such a manner is another signal that the IMF is not part of the government’s game plan, as the fund would have a say on amnesties, at least in the way they are implemented,” the economist said.

Dirty laundry

It’s unknown how much of the declared $9.6 billion repatriated during the asset amnesty is dirty money. But the amnesty has not put Ankara in the OECD’s Financial Action Task Force good books, with Turkey, positioned as it is as a crossroads between the East and West, serving as a transit hub for narcotics trafficking and organized crime.

In 2007, Turkey was heavily criticized by the FATF for failing to enact 33 out of the task force’s 40 recommendations on anti-money laundering and combating terrorist financing. Criticism included the lack of a precise definition in the law on money laundering, and the low number of suspicious transaction reports.

A 130-page report submitted by Turkey’s financial intelligence unit, ‘Mali Suclari Arastirma Kurulue’, or MASAK, to the task force’s general assembly in February, stated that since 2007, Turkey had adopted a bill on the prevention of money laundering that required financial institutions to issue suspicious transactions reports and have compliance units. According to MASAK, there has been a huge rise in suspicious transaction reports year-on-year, from 180 in 2003 to 4,318 in 2008.

But while the report highlighted Turkey’s more active role in curbing money laundering, MASAK noted there has been a dramatic rise in proceeds from the illicit drug trade within Turkey, which it estimated at $5 billion a year. Reports related to fraud and fraudulent bankruptcies had also increased significantly, attributed to the financial crisis in late 2008.

Tight financial regulations on market trades have also boosted money laundering, with Turks seeking to evade a 10 percent capital gains tax paid out to play the markets, resulting in the use of intermediaries to get around taxation.

“We’d have ‘mustachioed [disguised] Turks’  to get money out to say Geneva, or get a prime brokerage account with a big London firm to do the trading,” said the former investment banker. “As this is technically illegal in Turkey, it is always being looked out for and is very tightly regulated.”

Providing further regulatory challenges to the Turkish authorities is the country’s low banking penetration rate, estimated at just 40 percent of the population.

“Turkish people have huge under-the-mattress savings; penetration of the banking system is not like Western economies,” said the economist. “People tend to keep foreign currency or gold.”

Penetration rates are, however, likely to increase this year following the introduction of a new finance ministry regulation requiring rent to be paid via bank accounts. The asset amnesty could also help.

The European Union connection

While the EU is critical of the asset amnesty and Turkey’s anti-money laundering and combating terrorist financing regime, counter terrorism experts say that the EU is not doing enough to assist Ankara in combating the narcotics trade and groups like the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).

“Despite the PKK being a banned organization by the EU, many member states are ambivalent about cracking down on its sophisticated networks and infrastructure within the Kurdish diaspora communities around Europe,” said John Solomon, global head of terrorism research at World-Check, a British company that maintains a database on high risk individuals and entities. “This lack of political will has afforded the PKK a safe haven to raise funds, plan attacks and disseminate propaganda.”

A Turkish study has claimed that the PKK has controlled an estimated 80 percent of the European narcotics trade on and off for decades, with the group earning an estimated $140 million a year. According to Interpol, at one time nearly 200 PKK front organizations in Europe were suspected of involvement in the narcotics trade.

“Due to the surge in poppy production in Afghanistan post-2001, and Turkey’s strategic position relative to lucrative western markets for refined heroin in Europe, it is quite possible that the PKK’s involvement in the trade has intensified,” Solomon said.

Some of that drug money could have been cleaned since the November asset amnesty, and the extension would give ample opportunity to clean further funds. In order to boost deposits, Turkey has shown a willingness to take in the good as well as the bad.

August 28, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Selling what is not theirs

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Abdullatif Kalafani, an 81- year-old Palestinian exile living in Lebanon, is the owner of house number 15 on al Burj Street, now renamed Liberation street, in Haifa. Kalafani is one of many Palestinians who still owns property in Israel, but maybe not for long. House number 15 has been put up for sale in one of the public auctions that developing municipalities are running in different urban areas like Haifa, Acre and Jerusalem.

Since 2007, the Israel Land Administration (ILA) has been issuing tenders for auctioning properties that belong to some 800,000 refugees who were forced out of Israel in 1948 and 1967. So far, 282 tenders were issued in 2007, 106 in 2008, and 80 in the first six months of 2009.

Adalah, a legal center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, is trying to stop the issuance of these tenders, saying that selling these properties is illegal under both Israeli and international humanitarian law.

In May this year, Adalah sent a letter to the Israeli attorney general, the ILA attorney general, the general director of the Israeli government-owned housing company Amida and to the Custodian of Absentee Property, demanding cancelation of the tenders.

“So far we have not received a reply from the attorney general, except that it is being dealt with and as soon as they finish, they will get back to us,” says Suhad Beshara, a lawyer from Adalah. “Most probably they will reply. In any case, we probably will be filing a petition to the Supreme Court.”

Breaking their own law

Many Israeli laws issued in the 1950s restrict the sale of refugees’ property, unless the owner chooses to sell. According to Adalah, the Absentees’ Property Law issued in 1950 stipulates that property belonging to absentees — Palestinians who fled during the war of 1948 — were handed to the Custodian of Absentee Property for guardianship until a solution regarding Palestinian refugees was reached. Since these properties were acquired, many were leased, but not sold, until the auctions began to take place in 2007.

Moustafa Assir, a lawyer at Alem Associates in Lebanon, goes back even further to 1947, and says that law 194 issued by the United Nations during that year stipulates that refugees have the right to go back to their land, unless they are considered the “enemy.”

“Lebanese people are considered Israel’s enemy, but Palestinians aren’t,” he said.

Moreover, Beshara says the tenders also violate the Israel land law of 1960, which says that all land  owned by the state of Israel and therefore include the Palestinian real estate controlled by the development authority, cannot be sold.

In a reply to Adala’s accusations, the ILA told Al Jazeera TV that after the 1960 law was issued, there was a follow up bill which was passed in the same year. It included seven exemptions. One of them allows the sale of absentee property located in an urban area that is under 20,000 hectares (200 million square meters).

Adalah also thinks Israel is breaking international humanitarian law, which requires the respect of private properties and prohibits its expropriation following the termination of warfare.

A possible reason

Adalah’s Beshara told Al Jazeera the auctions might be done for political reasons. Israel may be auctioning the properties to create a situation “that would eternally frustrate any potential attempt in the future to fairly and justly resolve the issue of Palestinian refugees.”

Once sold, Palestinian refugees will not be able to claim their property back, since it would already belong to another owner. 

Kalafani, who lived his first 20 years in Haifa, is worried about losing his home. He told Al Jazeera that even though there is little chance he could go back due to his old age, he believes that there is a chance his descendants will. 

August 28, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Come, marry and be civil

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Firas Yazbeck and Naomi Arends arrived to the municipality building in Larnaca, Cyprus on a Monday morning. In just a few minutes, the Lebanese-Dutch couple had filled out their marriage documents as they waited in the queue to take their vows. In the waiting room, a promotional video of Larnaca — and all the activities visitors can do in one day — played on a TV.

Like many Middle Eastern couples, including those from Lebanon, Yazbeck and his new bride chose to marry in Cyprus, and spend their 10-day honeymoon on the island as well. Marriage in Cyprus is simple, it’s easy, and it’s one way to get around Middle Eastern marriage laws that don’t allow people from different religions to marry.

“It’s so close to Lebanon,” notes Yazbeck, a 27-year-old Maronite Christian. “It’s a good place for a civil marriage and a vacation.”

Still, he hopes his home country will allow civil marriage, which he thinks would be good opportunity for reconciliation between Lebanon’s different religious communities.

That sticky sectarianism

As modern and western-leaning as Lebanon is, the country does not allow civil marriage. For years, activists have advocated for the introduction of civil marriage in the Middle East, particularly Lebanon.

Last February saw a number of small victories for advocates of civil marriage in the region. In Lebanon, Interior Minister Ziad Baroud signed an order allowing citizens to remove their religious affiliation from government papers. Around the same time, activists held an inter-faith group marriage on Valentine’s Day. On Facebook, members of various Lebanese pro-civil marriage groups total more than 20,000 — compared with 13 on the social networking site that is against it.

But major obstacles still remain before the Lebanese are willing to legalize civil marriage. The act is no easy feat in a nation where the legal foundation is based on sectarianism. In 1997, the late President Elias Hrawi suggested implementing civil marriage in Lebanon, but was met with opposition from both Muslim and Christian leaders. For now, Lebanese who do wish to have civil ceremonies can do so outside the country and then register their marriage in Lebanon, which the state then recognizes as a legal marriage.

It takes around a half hour to make the short flight to Cyprus from Beirut, marginally longer from Damascus, and marriage is big business. Ever since the British mandate in 1923, the small island has been performing civil marriage ceremonies for locals and foreigners alike. Until the 1980s, citizens of the United Kingdom comprised the majority of marriage tourists to Cyprus. But over the past 30 years, most of the couples getting married in Cyprus have come from the Middle East.

Eager to capitalize on the pre-existing demand for civil marriage services, over the past several years travel agencies, embassies and municipalities in Lebanon and Cyprus have been coordinating to offer couples tourism and marriage packages, including everything from plane tickets and hotel rooms, to marriage paperwork and ceremony arrangements.

Hrach Kalsahakian, sales and marketing manager at the Cyprus Tourism Organization, says the Cypriot wedding business sector is only growing.

According to the Cypriot embassy in Beirut, there were 400 Lebanese couples who wed in Cyprus in 2007, compared with 278 in 2000.

“This sector is expected to grow because more and more people are discovering this side of the island and, on the other hand, more professional and sophisticated companies are providing wedding services,” he says. “The growth however is gradual and not excessive.”

Could other countries in the region, seeing Cyprus’ success in the marriage and tourism business, try to emulate the island country’s example? Not likely, believes Kalsahakian. He says, “Civil marriage is generally allowed wherever the role of state and religion is separate. This is difficult to achieve in most Middle Eastern countries and it is not expected to become a reality in the near future.”

Marry away but celebrate at home

Marwa Rizk Jaber, CEO of Beirut-based travel agency U Travel Middle East, whose Cyprus package tours include five to 10 couples traveling to marry every year, doesn’t see any economic loss to Lebanon due to many of its citizens having to go to Cyprus to get married.

“If someone is planning to do a big wedding in Lebanon, he will do a civil marriage in Cyprus and then do a big wedding in Lebanon,” she said. “It would be good to allow it in Lebanon, for the simple reason  that Lebanon has always been an open country although it’s based on religious confessions.”

Rola Badran, a Shiite Muslim, and Rami Khattar, a Druze, got married in December 2008 in a civil ceremony in Paphos, Cyprus, because their different faiths meant they couldn’t have such a ceremony in their home country of Lebanon.

“Civil marriage should be legislated in Lebanon as soon as possible,” says Badran. “It’s a unique country where Muslims, Christians, Druze and a variety of religions live all together and share their social, economical and political affairs. Civil marriage will give freedom to the young citizens and even older ones to unite under one umbrella.”

Some people believe that lobbying by Lebanese citizens and civil society groups will put pressure on the country’s politicians to change some of the sectarian laws, including the legalization of civil marriage.

“The idea is to have enough citizens who will remove their religions from their ID cards. This creates enough citizens not registered with any courts,” says Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut. That way, he says, “the government doesn’t have a legal way to link people to religious communities. If you have 20,000 people, then there’s enough pressure on parliament. That’s one of the approaches to force the issue of civil marriage.”

Wedding packages to Cyprus:

There are a variety of wedding travel packages to Cyprus. Some include just the basics, while others handle every detail down to the champagne and the confetti.

  • U Travel, an agency based in Beirut, offers basic packages starting at $300 per person, depending on airfare and hotel category.
  • Nadia Travel in Beirut has a two-day package for $1,900 that includes transportation, hotel stay, marriage and document fees and administration.
  • The Beirut-based Aeolos offers packages for $1,800, which include transportation to Cyprus, hotel, all travel, marriage and visa fees.
  • Skarvelis Weddings in Cyprus offers some of the most comprehensive wedding packages. All include wedding documentation administration and a wedding coordinator, a decorated Mercedes, flowers, a wedding cake and champagne. The packages start at $1,200. Their most high-end package, for $5,400, includes 44 photos, Rolls Royce for the bride, white Mercedes for the groom, floral arrangements, hair and make-up for the bride and spa treatment. The packages all include a planning and coordination fee of $567 but not the town hall fees – these are an additional $400.

Alternatively, if couples do not want a package they can just pay the $600 planning and coordination fee and the $400 town hall fee and then choose additional extra items such as a cake, flowers, etc.

August 28, 2009 0 comments
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Lebanon

For your information

by Executive Staff August 28, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Undervalued real estate

According to a Bank Audi real estate report published in July, property prices in Lebanon posted a moderate decline of 10 to 15 percent since the global recession hit the region. In the first five months of this year, sales transactions posted a mild drop of 6.7 percent year-on-year. In the same period, construction permits rose 4.3 percent.

The report says the resilience of the Lebanese real estate market compared to the region goes back to the strong demand drivers and ‘stringent’ regulations related to lending in the banking sector — both eliminated the possibility of a real estate bubble.

The report says despite the high prices of residential properties, especially in Beirut, the market remains undervalued on the regional and global levels. Beirut’s residential market is still cheaper than its MENA counterparts. The price of a 120 square meter high-end apartment is, on average, $2,229 per square meter, while the regional average is $2,682, according to the report.

The office market is also undervalued, says the report, noting Beirut’s central district ranks 33rd out of 57 office hubs in the world in terms of occupancy. In 2008, office prices in Beirut averaged $585 per square meter; the MENA average was $874, and the world average $793.

Economic growth up

In June, the International Monetary Fund published its periodic report on Lebanon’s economic outlook, upgrading its previous 2009 forecast for gross domestic product growth from 3 percent to 4 percent, with the potential to increase as long as domestic, political and security conditions remain positive.

The report said the global financial crisis’ impact on Lebanon has been “muted,” for various reasons. Inflows of commercial bank deposits, “which are the main financing source for the large government deficit, have remained strong,” the report said.  US dollar deposits have decreased, aided by stable security conditions and the significant interest rate disparity between deposits in Lebanese lira and the US dollar. The IMF also said there has been no pressure on the lira-dollar peg, and that the Lebanese Central Bank has quickly accumulated international reserves.

Lebanon’s banks have “had virtually no direct impact from the global financial crisis, given [their] limited exposure to failed foreign financial institutions or wholesale funding markets.” Lebanese banks continue to be highly liquid and capitalized. Unlike their regional brethren, the country’s domestic banks have not needed emergency liquidity injections or any form of public bailouts.

“Cyclical indicators point to a soft landing of the Lebanese economy in spite of the global financial crisis and recession. Economic activity has continued to expand robustly through the first quarter of 2009,” the report said. The IMF says that although merchandise exports have declined due to lower external demand, they only account for a small amount of the economy, and therefore have not significantly impacted the overall GDP. On the upside, construction activity is performing well, as are the tourism and financial services sectors.

BSE dives

After the Lebanese elections, the performance of Lebanon’s seven listed stocks slightly improved. But in the beginning of July, the Beirut Stock Exchange (BSE) dropped 6.1 percent, the market’s largest drop since its $5 billion crash in November 2008. The week of July 6 to 10 witnessed a weekly decrease of the entire BSE by 6.1 percent, which brought the market back to levels prior to the re-election of Parliamentary Speaker Nabih Berri. Real estate giant Solidere, largest stock by market capitalization, led the drop.

Due to a massive sell-off by an unknown shareholder on July 9 and 10, Solidere’s market value was slashed by 15 percent overnight. Some economists attributed the drop to the lack of progress on the formation of a government.  Moreover, a downturn in global stock markets and the dividend distribution of Solidere could also have played a role in the company’s share-price drop.

On July 9, buyers and sellers took advantage of the $3 gap between Solidere’s global depositary receipt (GDR) and its domestically-listed shares. The decline of around 8 percent in the company’s GDR value in London was most likely due to hedge fund selling, analysts said.

Nassib Ghobril, head of the economic research and analysis department at Byblos Bank, says politics are the main driver behind BSE volatility. “Solidere has always been a representative of political sentiment in the country,” he said. “After [Saad] Hariri became the [prime minister-designate], it jumped. The movement in the stock market does not represent the underlying performance of the listed companies on the BSE, unfortunately.”

August 28, 2009 0 comments
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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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