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Levant

Billions in bonds rolled

by Executive Staff May 10, 2009
written by Executive Staff

The biggest voluntary debt exchange outside the US was successfully completed by the Lebanese government in March when it “rolled over” $2.3 billion worth of foreign currency bonds. The government exchanged four dollar-denominated bonds maturing in 2009 for new dollar bonds maturing in March 2012 and March 2017.

The minimum yield guidance was set at 7.5 percent for the new March 2012 bond, and 9 percent for the new March 2017 bond.

The government also offered holders of its 2009 euro-denominated floating-rate notes an exchange for a tap of the existing 5.875 percent euro-denominated bonds due in April 2012, with the minimum yield set at 7.75 percent. The government selected three banks — Byblos Bank, Credit Libanais and Credit Suisse — to act as deal managers for the exchange offer.

The Ministry of Finance said the purpose of the debt exchange was “to proactively conduct liability management, increase the republic’s financial flexibility and extend its debt maturity profile.”

The international financial sector reacted positively to this voluntary exchange, as it is expected to improve the government’s ability to deal with the large public debt and reduce roll-over risk in the near term.

Moody’s Investor Service upgraded Lebanon’s local and foreign currency bond ratings to B2 from B3, respectively. Moody’s said the reason for this upgrade was the substantial improvement in external liquidity, the proven resistance of the public finances to shocks, and the willingness and ability of Lebanon’s resilient banking system to finance fiscal deficits.

“This exchange improves the structure of the government’s very large debt stock by extending its average maturity and reducing roll-over risk in the near term,” Tristan Cooper, a vice president-senior analyst in Moody’s Sovereign Risk Group, told the Middle East and North Africa Business Report.

Concurrently, Moody’s upgraded Lebanon’s country ceiling for foreign currency bank deposits to B2 from B3, while its country ceiling for foreign currency bonds has been raised to B1 from B2. Standard and Poor’s also raised the country’s credit rating from CCC+ to B-.

Although the voluntary debt exchange was seen positively by credit ratings agencies, the amount transferred is trivial in comparison with Lebanon’s $47 billion public debt. Lebanon’s credit rating is still six levels below investment grade.

Eurobond deal

Source: Central Bank.

Average participation rate

Source: Central Bank.

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

A dawning market

by Executive Staff May 10, 2009
written by Executive Staff

The Damascus Securities Exchange (DSE) launched in March had been a long time coming, like a financial version of the play “Waiting for Godot.” Year after year, articles would emerge in the press — this magazine included — that the DSE was slated for launch by year’s end.

Back in June 2007, Executive paid a visit to the future site of the bourse in Birzeh in northeastern Damascus, then housing the Syrian Commission on Financial Markets and Securities. The Commission’s plain gray concrete building looked like any other non-descript government structure in a Damascene suburb: the ubiquitous Syrian flag draped over the main doorway, security guards milling around, and badly lit interiors.

The room on the ground floor that was to become the trading floor resembled a small theater or cinema, with 50 odd, dusty, red felt seats facing a curtained stage. Such a gloomy interior did not look like the ideal location for the country’s first bourse since the 1960s. But the temporary home of the bourse has had a makeover.

The exterior has been stone clad to resemble the checkered shirts favored by many bankers; an electronic ticker shows trades over the main entrance, and up-market cars are parked along the surrounding streets. But it is the interior that is starkly different from two years ago.

Greeted upon arrival by a be-suited young Syrian lady, she was ready to give a tour and explain what the bourse was all about. But she didn’t need to go into the details as twice a week, on the two days the DSE is open, the public is treated to a lecture on the workings of the stock market — how to trade, what buys and sells are, bidding prices, percentage change and so on.

Some 60 people were sat on one side of the viewing area of the bourse, a mixture of both genders from their mid-twenties upwards, while a dozen sat in more plush chairs nestled amid flat screen computer monitors on the other side — the VIP section.

As the spokesman gave his presentation, he repeatedly turned to point at the digital trading board that dominates the back wall. To the immediate right of it, there is the only indication — other than the title of the DSE — that one is in Syria: the national flag attached to the wall and a small camera next to it. Curiously, the portrait of President Bashar al-Assad had been removed since the official launch on March 10.

Where the dirty work is done

The actual trading section consists of 18 cubicles set on a raised platform separated from the ‘audience’ by a waist-high glass wall. Five traders were at work, tapping into their computers, and by mid-morning a mere three trades had been made.

But that didn’t deter the apparent interest by the public, listening attentively to the presentation and asking questions.

Such interest reflects not only how the bourse has been received locally and internationally — notable as the first stock exchange to open since the global financial crisis — but also the long route the DSE has taken to open.

Syria has played it slow and cool in introducing such an economic platform to a population that is generally poorly informed about free market capitalism. After all, millions were stung in Saudi Arabia when the kingdom’s fledgling bourse dropped in value a few years ago. It caused a great deal of consternation among a public that had ill-conceived notions about what a stock market truly entailed: they realized too late that stocks don’t always go up, and that an emerging bourse is not always the best place for one’s life savings.

Listed companies and companies that have acquired initial approval for listing in the market

Source: DSE

Companies that are expected to be listed in 2009

Source: DSE

Indeed, the DSE is only in phase two of its development — the launch and building up of interest and trading levels. Phase three will be a more mature stage, as more companies list and the bourse moves to a purpose built location at Emaar’s $500 million Eighth Gate real estate development on the edge of the Syrian capital, slated for completion in mid-2010.

There are currently eight companies listed on the DSE (five of which are banks), three have initial approval for listing, and a further nine are slated to list this year, mainly banks, insurance and telecom companies.

“We could reach double the number of companies by the year end. If we get 14 companies listed, it will be quite good,” said Bassel Hamwi, general manager of Bank Audi Syria and deputy chairman of the DSE.

“The DSE has risen fairly well, but we won’t reach a point where it mirrors the economy itself — that is some way off. Total capitalization is less than one percent of Syria’s [gross domestic product],” he said.

Trading levels are also low as the DSE has set a daily cap of 2 percent for shares to rise or fall, while they cannot be bought or re-sold on the same trading day.

“I think the cap should be temporarily raised to 5-10 percent to have some activity,” said Jihad Yazigi, editor of financial publication The Syria Report. “The number of shareholders is also very limited, not tens of thousands but only in the thousands.”

The DSE clearly has potential, with pent up demand by companies to access capital, family owned companies to list, and privatization being mulled by the government. A clear indicator of such potential was evidenced over the past month by brokerage firms scrambling for licenses as the government had set a limit of 19. Currently only five are active.

“There are 19 brokerage firms, which is more than the number of firms listed on the DSE,” said Yazigi. “But the DSE is very low, so it can only go up. It is very symbolic of the efforts to liberalize the economy over the years.”

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Built by foreign hands

by Executive Staff May 10, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Everyone has heard about the Lebanese expatriates who send money back home — a foundation of the country’s economy. But there is also a significant foreign workforce in Lebanon. Domestic workers from South Asia and laborers from Syria constitute at least 20 percent of Lebanon’s workforce. They fill gaps in Lebanon’s employment and (as a group) remit a significant amount of money to their home countries.

“Foreigners here work at jobs that Lebanese won’t do,” says Abdallah Rouzzouk, spokesman for Lebanon’s labor ministry. “It’s the nature of this country.”

According to figures from the Ministry of Labor, there are currently 93,000 registered foreign workers living in Lebanon. Of those, five percent are considered “highly skilled.” The ministry estimates there to be 300,000 foreign workers living in Lebanon.

But most estimates put the total number of foreign workers in Lebanon much higher — at 500,000 to a million. Most are Syrians, who need only their identity cards to enter Lebanon, and are engaged in temporary or seasonal work.

The next largest groups are Sri Lankans, Bangladeshis, Nepalese, Ethiopians and Sudanese. They account for approximately 20 percent of Lebanon’s workforce. But their incomes are far less than that of their Lebanese counterparts. Average per capita annual income for Lebanon in 2008 was estimated at just more than $11,000, meaning that the $300 per month normally earned by foreign workers is a fraction of what Lebanese nationals earn.

Most foreign workers’ income earned in Lebanon goes toward basic living expenses; they make very few purchases in Lebanon, and about a third of their money goes in remittances sent to their home countries.

According to a Western Union office in Beirut’s Hamra district, foreign workers regularly come to their establishment to transfer money to their home countries. Most of their customers are South Asians, as the Syrians tend to carry the cash they earn back to their country on weekends and holidays. The typical money transfer for foreign workers is $100 per month.

Paying dues

Dipendra Uprety, a Nepalese who works as a chef in Beirut, has lived in Lebanon for 11 years. Like his compatriots, he sends money back home on a regular basis.

“I’m a professional chef, and I’m happy with my salary,” says Uprety, who also volunteers as a social worker at the Nepalese consulate. He’s decided to stay in Lebanon to help other migrant workers. “I’m fine, but there are others who aren’t.”

The majority of foreign workers in Lebanon are unskilled, performing strenuous, labor-intensive and often dangerous jobs. For Syrian men, this usually means working on construction projects. For South Asian women, this commonly entails employment as a domestic worker, often with no vacations or private accommodations. Depending on the situation in their home countries, Lebanon is often the best option, even if it is not always a good one.

“What’s pushing them here is poverty in their countries,” says Semil Esim, senior regional specialist with the International Labor Organization in Beirut.

Once the workers arrive in Lebanon, they usually find themselves in a situation where competition is impossible and loose labor regulations provide few protections to these vulnerable residents.

“Poor governance has created severe distortions in the labor market, such that migrant labor is not usually in the realm of competition with Lebanese labor. The latter has higher educational levels than foreign labor,” says Jad Chaaban, a professor of economics at the American University of Beirut. “More importantly, and in light of the current living conditions in Lebanon, the Lebanese labor force cannot accept the wage levels on offer to the foreign workers.”

Chaaban says most Lebanese wouldn’t work for the $330 per month minimum wage that foreign laborers often settle for. Even if the jobs paid more, Chaaban says there are social stigmas to consider.

“Lebanon has some of the best construction in the world. who does it? The Syrian worker”

Wouldn’t be caught dead…

“The culture of shame surrounding the cleaning, construction and agricultural occupations would tend to cause Lebanese job seekers to avoid these occupations, preferring to emigrate or otherwise remain unemployed.”

There have been few laws to regulate foreign work in Lebanon. In 1964, Lebanon passed the Foreign Labor Organization Law number 17561, requiring foreign workers to register with the government.

In 1993, Syria and Lebanon signed the Agreement for Economic and Social Cooperation and Coordination. The agreement outlines the gradual economic integration between Lebanon and Syria. Six clauses outline free movement of persons, labor, services, goods, capital and transport.

“Syrian workers are really good for Lebanon,” says Rene Matta, general manager of the Beirut-based Matta contracting company, where the workforce is 70 percent Syrian, almost all working low-skilled jobs.

As the system now works, Syrian laborers in Lebanon typically work on a freelance basis, meaning they are often hired on the spot, paid in cash, and their work can be terminated at any time. This non-committal understanding from both sides has served both parties relatively well for the past two decades, as Syrian workers have helped rebuild war-torn Lebanon and unemployed Syrians have earned a living in Lebanon’s construction boom.

“There should be more organization of Syrian workers,” believes Matta. But he acknowledges, “Working the way it is now, it’s hard for there to be regulations because of the high number of Syrians. But I don’t see it happening for another five to 10 years. If regulation started today, it would start a black market of Syrian workers.”

Nadim Houry, a Beirut-based researcher for Human Rights Watch, says Lebanon’s labor unions have lost their effectiveness.

“They no longer have effective gatherings,” he said. “They should be interested in low-skilled jobs. But it’s hard to talk about a labor policy in Lebanon when there isn’t one.”

The contributions of foreign laborers in Lebanon have not gone unnoticed. As Matta puts it, “Lebanon has some of the best construction in the world. Who does it? The Syrian worker.”

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Return of the tourist

by Executive Staff May 10, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Blonde girls in hiking boots and backpacks sightsee downtown. Men in clean white dishdashas walk on the corniche at sunset. Lost Americans haggle unsuccessfully with taxi drivers in Hamra. All signal that the tourists are back.

For the first time in four years, Lebanon has experienced an increase in winter tourism. The Ministry of Tourism says the first few months of the year saw a 20 percent rise in tourism from last year.

Political and security stability have been major factors, but credit can also go to local tour companies who have aggressively marketed their country. A string of favorable articles in Western publications promoting Lebanon as a good travel destination have helped. Lebanese ex-pats and tourists themselves can be credited with spreading the word about the country.

“My favorite thing I did in Lebanon was skiing in Faraya on a clear, sunny day,” says Hakon Fossmark, a 27-year-old student from Norway.

Fossmark has been using Beirut as a base to travel throughout the rest of the Middle East. He brushes off the travel warnings the US and European countries have issued about Lebanon.

“Certainly things can happen here, but it seems safer to walk around here than in Oslo,” Fossmark says.

Calm and sensible wins the day

It is this sense of stability that Lebanon’s tourism sector is counting on to make this summer a successful year for foreign arrivals. Lebanon’s Ministry of Tourism predicts 2 million tourists will come to Lebanon this summer.

“In 2005, tourism was dropping because of the assassinations and Lebanon’s security situation,” says Nada Sardouk Ghandour, general director of Lebanon’s Ministry of Tourism. “Tourism then increased after the election of the president. This past February, we had 98,000 tourists. We haven’t seen that in 20 years.”

Officials from the ministry have attended travel fairs and hosted conferences throughout Europe and the Middle East, including Iraq, to encourage tourists to visit Lebanon. Travel agencies are giddy.

“We’re getting more requests every month,” says Marwa Rizk Jaber, CEO of Beirut-based travel agency U Travel Middle East. “We had a lot of bookings for the ski season this year and most of the hotels in the ski resorts were fully booked during the months of January and February.”

This high demand has led to 90 percent occupancy rates at Lebanon’s 5-star hotels since the beginning of the year as well as an expansion of Middle East Airlines’ routes.

The Beirut-based travel agency Wild Discovery says inquiries about tourism in Lebanon are up 40 percent from last year. The agency is also sees the increased tourism levels in Syria as a complement to that in Lebanon.

“Lebanon is an excellent door to neighboring countries Syria and Jordan,” says Karim Saade of the Saade Group, which runs Wild Discovery. “Foreigners will come for several weeks and visit all three countries.”

Lebanon’s rural south and Bekaa have also seen an increase in visitor numbers. Carlos Khachan, founder of Club Grappe, says this is the first year he will take groups to South Lebanon to see wine-making monasteries and visit the Karam winery in Jezzine. His group has offered tours of the Bekaa’s vineyards and wineries in the Bekaa Valley since 2002.

“All of the diaspora are coming back for the elections, and they’re staying for the summer,” Khachan says. “If we work with them, it will be a good opportunity to promote Lebanon. Tourism is increasing because the political situation is getting better.”

“We are one of the pioneers of Arab alternative music. This atmosphere is very different from other places in the Middle East”

The Arab alternative

This improvement has brought what nightclub owners and others say is an influx of cultural tourists, who come to experience Beirut’s alternative music scene.

“We [are]one of the pioneers of Arab alternative music,” says Jad Soueid, a Beirut-based DJ. “This atmosphere is very different from other places in the Middle East, where there are restrictions on opening hours and alcohol. If they [the Israelis] leave us alone, we’ll have a good year.”

But Saade of Wild Discovery says it’s not just the threat of war with Israel and political instability that keeps the tourism sector in Lebanon from seeing its full potential.

“We can do better,” he says, suggesting that the Lebanese government do more to promote the country abroad, and reopen the National Council of Tourism, which has been closed for many years. He also thinks Lebanon should have more three-star hotels.

“Most of the new hotels here are five-star,” Saade says. “Because of this, Europeans find it too expensive, and that’s why they’re going to Syria more. We have an excellent brand as a country. We need to do more to promote it.”

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Routed back to the roost

by Executive Staff May 10, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Rony H. moved to Dubai in 2003 in the midst of the city’s building boom, and eventually got a job in the red-hot property market. By 2007 he worked as real estate broker, banking $10,000 a month selling condos and apartments.

“It was easy money,” Rony said.

But a year later, the bottom fell out of the real estate market as the global financial crisis hit the Gulf. Rony lost his job when the real estate company he worked for folded. The company’s owner fled.

“He has millions with him, and he’s in Germany in jail now,” Rony said, adding that he thinks his boss was laundering money. 

Rony wasn’t caught up in the scam, and he’s now returned to Lebanon after spending the last six months unemployed in Dubai. He’s one of perhaps thousands of Lebanese who have returned jobless and near penniless from the Gulf, a phenomenon that could drastically reduce the remittances that fuel a quarter of the country’s economy.

Last year, remittances from millions of Lebanese expatriates working and living everywhere from Kuwait to Australia totaled more than $6 billion. Thirty percent of Lebanon’s labor force resides in the Arab Gulf states like Dubai, according to Standard Chartered bank.

Overall, one in every three expatriate workers in the Middle East may be poised to return home or move jobs, according to a poll conducted by Bayt.com, which surveyed 22,000 people this spring.

Lebanon’s Central Bank has planned for a worst-case scenario of remittances dropping 30 percent, says Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh, although he says it’s still too early to gauge how severe the impact will be.

“Up till now, we haven’t seen really a negative affect or big change in remittances, and maybe it’s too soon for we are at the beginning of 2009,” Salameh said. “They are a pillar of stability and source of funding of the private and public sector, that’s why we give them importance.”

A river to a trickle

A decline of “between five percent and 10 percent in remittance inflows to Lebanon in 2009 would result in a current account deficit of 10 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) for the year,” wrote Byblos Bank in an article in ‘Lebanon this Week’, citing a prediction by Standard and Poor’s.

And any drop in remittances will mean Lebanese families have less to spend. Rony used to send $500 to $1,000 home every month to help his parents pay the bills. Now thousands like him, and their families, will be forced to survive on much lower salaries than were once available in Dubai.

“I need to find a job ASAP,” Rony says, indicating he’d readily accept a far lower salary than the one he had in the UAE. He says he’d accept “at least one thousand dollars per month, as a start.”

Others have, luckily, landed a job as soon as they returned to Lebanon.

Charbel Karam, 26, lost his job in January as a graphic designer at one of Dubai’s top advertising firms. With his top-notch experience, Karam quickly found a new job in Lebanon that gave him more responsibility, as an art director. He’s making about a third of what he made in Dubai, but he doesn’t mind.

“The cost of living is high in Dubai. It costs $25 for lunch,” Karam said. “I was making money but I wasn’t enjoying it.”

Both Karam and Rony had to leave cars they bought in Dubai behind. Karam says he’ll probably have to sell his late-model Chevrolet Lumina for less than he owes on it — which is about $25,000. Rony’s Nissan Murano has been left with a friend, who Rony says is taking over the loan.

Rony has other loans to worry about as well. His high-rolling, nightclub-loving lifestyle (“every night was a weekend,” he says) saddled him with $27,000 in credit card debt and personal loans.

“I spent all my money. I’m going to start from zero,” he said. Rony asked that his full name not be used in this article to protect him from creditors in Dubai.

The Lebanese Central Bank has tried to cushion and capitalize on the return of so many young expatriates by organizing new start-up loans to entrepreneurs and small businessmen, many of whom may be returning unemployed after losing jobs abroad.

The central bank has tried to capitalize on returning expatriates by organizing new business loans

Minds on the move

And the crisis may help reverse what many Lebanese lamented as “brain drain,” when fresh university graduates would flock to the Gulf for better salaries and benefits.

“[Companies from the Gulf] used to come and recruit at universities. It was so bad that we were finding it difficult to recruit people here,” said Nassib Ghobril, head of economic research & analysis at Lebanon’s Byblos Bank.

He points out that many of those graduates will now be competing with Lebanese returning from overseas for the same positions, which may glut the market with overqualified candidates.

But some returning Lebanese aren’t finding the financial adjustment so hard. It’s returning home to live with the family that is presenting more of a challenge.

“For six years I wasn’t living with my parents, and so it’s so weird. I’m a big guy now,” Rony said. “I’m not comfortable. If I have a lady come to my house, it’s bad. So once I get a new job and good salary, I will move.”

But adjusting to a new lifestyle is something the vast majority of Lebanese in the diaspora will probably not experience. The Standard and Poor’s analysis indicates Lebanon’s expatriate workers are “older, better established and, on average, more wealthy than the diaspora of other MENA countries,” according to Byblos Bank.

Younger Lebanese employees who lose their jobs, like Charbel Karam, may face the most problems in the coming year. Karam is thankful he lost his job early, so he could find a job in Lebanon before an onslaught of expats start returning home.

“Everybody is moving back, so whatever [employment positions] are available now are going to get filled up pretty soon, if they’re not filled up already,” he says.

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Telecom’s tortuous tangle

by Executive Staff May 10, 2009
written by Executive Staff

In a country where people seem to do more fighting than talking, the need for an efficient telecommunications sector could hardly be more essential. But like many things in Lebanon, the possibilities are often overridden by reality.

“The [telecommunications] situation in Lebanon in many respects, if not all respects, resembles a disaster zone,” says Riad Bahsoun, telecom expert at the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).

The country’s government-run telecommunications sector lags far behind the rest of the region, with customers suffering exorbitant fees, bad service, poor governance and policies based more on political considerations than economic impetus.

In Jordan for example, the purchase price of a postpaid mobile line (around $12) is about one-fourth the cost of its $50 Lebanese counterpart. Lebanon’s mobile rates per minute are three to four times higher than the world average. The mobile market penetration rate stands at around 32 percent in a region where the penetration rates of some countries are over 100 percent. Lebanon still does not have access to broadband Internet.

The problems started in 1994 when the Lebanese government began rebuilding the telecommunications infrastructure destroyed during the civil war. That is when the government issued four decrees that dictated the manner and direction the telecommunications sector would take.

Calling in the dark

“The government arbitrarily decided to separate the telecom industry, without any knowledge, into fixed services, mobile services or data and internet services,” explains Bahsoun, who is also vice-chairman of the South-Asia Middle East & North-Africa Telecommunications Council.

The resulting governance structure is what Lebanese see today when they look at the tangled web of telecommunications institutions, agencies, regulators and companies.

The decrees resulted in the creation of two general directorates within the Ministry of Telecommunications (MoT). It also created OGERO, the government-owned company that, confusingly, contracts with the government to provide fixed line and internet services. It also created the Global System for Mobile (GSM) office to operate the mobile market.

Bahsoun says the government’s creation of the telecom sector left much to be desired.

“In each segment [the government] started to interfere — govern wrongly with wrong political decisions — in operational decisions,” he says. “Enormous amounts of money and chances were lost.”

In terms of potential however, Lebanon is a telecommunications pot of gold. Its strategic location, educated population and low penetration rates make it a prime candidate for a thriving telecom sector. But it has not come to pass.

“There is a direct correlation between government ownership… and inefficiency,” says Ghassan Hasbani, vice president and partner at the consultanting firm Booz & Company.

Nearly all telecommunication revenues go directly to the government. The only exceptions are providers of end-user Internet and data service such as Inconet Data Management (IDM), Cyberia and others. But even these providers are dependent on the government- owned infrastructure and are subject to revenue sharing agreements with the government. That said, no one seems to know how much money the providers and data operators are making, and how much they are paying to the MoT.

“The Ministry of Telecommunications has something like a dozen revenue sharing agreements with data operators where by the government receives 20 percent. They have never been audited,” says the ITU’s Bahsoun. “Those who may decide to audit are those who receive the money.”

Originally forecasted Lebanese telecommunications reform schedule

Source: TRA
* The privatization of the mobile sector will depend on the regional and international financial market conditions
** Two mobile operators and Liban Telecom
*** Two mobile operators and Liban Telecom
**** Two national broadband licenses, subject to CoM’s decision

Market indicators

Source: TRA
(*) Per household
Note: Mobile and ADSL figures are as of Q2 2008; Fixed and Internet figures are for 2007.

Privatization

Many industry experts say privatization is the key to improving Lebanon’s telecommunication sector. But efforts to free telecoms from government control have proved futile despite attempts to corporatize and privatize the sector.

In July of 2002, the Lebanese government passed Law 431/2002, called the Telecommunications Act, which established the legal framework for the creation of a joint stock company named Liban Telecom.

“I took part in about 35 committee meetings to pass the telecommunications law and we had a dream that it would be implemented immediately,” says Yassine Jaber, current member of the Lebanese Parliament and former Minister of Economics and Trade.

Liban Telecom is intended to be a government-owned body with a corporate framework that eventually replaces the MoT. It is mandated to encourage development, approve licenses, participate in privatization and encourage transparency. But it doesn’t exist yet.

What does exist is the Telecom Regulatory Authority (TRA). The TRA was also created by Law 431 to regulate Liban Telecom’s operations and to encourage competition and investment in the Lebanese telecommunications market.

Although Liban Telecom is nonexistent, the TRA was established in April 2007 “in a sort of cloud,” says one telecom executive. Its first five-member board meeting was held almost five years after Law 431 was enacted.

Kamal Shehadi, chairman and CEO of the TRA, says Lebanon’s politicians lack the will to implement the reforms stipulated in Law 431. He points out that putting the law into action would “cut the umbilical cord between politics and telecommunications.”

The TRA to date has no legal mandate over the MoT or any of its organs, which include both mobile, fixed line telephony as well as Internet access.

“We regulate the market. We don’t regulate the internal governance of a company,” Shehadi says. “We do not get involved in the internal governance of the ministry; that is not our business.”

MP Jaber explains, however, that according to the law, the TRA should be the only entity that manages the sector. “Unfortunately, because of politics [the MoT] has sidestepped the TRA.”

As Lebanon’s telecommunication drama has dragged on, the allure of maintaining government ownership has outweighed the benefits of privatizing the sector.

In January, Telecommunications Minister Jibran Bassil said the Lebanese treasury earned more than $1 billion from the mobile market in 2008, and banked over $300 million from the operations of OGERO. The government’s control over the telecommunications sector is often justified as necessary to ensure a constant revenue flow into the government’s coffers and to pay its debt. But that argument has become less justifiable as the rest of the region leapfrogs the Lebanese telecom industry.

“Government ownership in mobile [telecommunications] is generally not conducive to productivity,” says Booz & Company’s Hasbani.

The idea to privatize the networks inched closer to realization in November 2007, when Lebanon was slated to auction its mobile networks. The decision was reversed only a few months later due to Lebanon’s political stalemate. After the Doha accords, privatization was again put on the table. Then the financial crisis hit, and the proposal was put on the shelf. Again.

In February, the mobile management contracts of Lebanon’s two mobile networks were renewed under a new agreement between the government and Lebanon’s two mobile operators: MTC, part of the Zain group, and Alfa, now managed by Orascom.

“The contracts have to be renewed because there was simply no way for the council of ministers and the TRA to proceed,” Shehadi says.

Previously, MTC and Alfa were paid a flat fee of around $5 million a month to manage the networks. In the past, both operators paid all the operating costs associated with running the networks. This arrangement was, by nature, antithetical to encouraging growth in the sector, because any increased expansion of the networks would increase operating costs, thus reducing the bottom line of the operators.

But Claude Bassil, general manager of MTC in Lebanon, says that under the new management contracts, “the objectives of both the Ministry of Telecommunications and our own are aligned.”

MTC currently receives $6.66 per active subscriber and Alfa receives $6.75 per active subscriber, drastically changing the revenue model, and giving the operators incentive to expand.

Probably the most important element of the new arrangement that will impact the growth of the mobile market is the new pricing structure put in place by the government at the beginning of April.

The plan lowers prices for prepaid monthly subscriptions ($45 to $25), prepaid minute rates ($0.50 to $0.36), monthly subscription fees ($25 to $15) and postpaid minute rates ($0.13 to $0.11) in a move that has been eulogized by many as the sector’s first shift toward a viable pricing structure. The new contracts can be renewed for a period of one year, or revoked if privatization of the mobile networks ever becomes a reality.

With a subscription-based revenue model, the interests of the mobile operators now focus on expanding Lebanon’s overburdened and aging mobile network infrastructure, part of which fizzled out in late March during the prime-time hours.

Samer Salameh, chairman and CEO of Alfa, says the problem was caused by a software bug in a faulty switch that was provided by Nokia Siemens Networks. The switch has been replaced by the company.

“The network… is around 14 years old,” Salemeh says. “Imagine a car that is 14 years old and how it will run today if you don’t change the oil. This is what we have.”

As Executive went to print, both mobile operators were aiming to expand their respective networks by 400,000 subscribers each by May, to reach a nationwide total of 2.4 million subscribers.

The expansion is made possible by an agreement between the operators and the government. The government has agreed to take on the costs associated with any kind of capital expenditure, purchasing everything from towers to switches to buildings. The operating costs are being incurred by the mobile operators. Such an arrangement has made their bottom line look rather dim.

“We would be lucky if we actually make any money this year,” says Salameh. “We are actually forecast to lose some money.”

So why are the mobile operators willing to accept a loss-making agreement? The answer, it would seem, is that they want to get their foot in the door if the government ever decides to sell a chunk of the mobile network.

“We are not interested in [just] managing the network,” says Claude Bassil of MTC’s unique contract in Lebanon. His company usually owns and manages all aspects of the telecommunications network it operates.

At this point the government’s privatization yo-yo has become commonly accepted practice. And further conditions are now being applied to the sale of the networks. The government changed its sales pitch in February after signing the management agreements, saying that it will only offer a minority share for sale to a strategic partner, because the “majority should be reserved for the Lebanese as investors, as individuals or as funds,” says Minister Bassil.

The idea of a minority share has been met with staunch opposition from industry experts who fear that such an initiative would be contrary to the promise of privatization. Hasbani says the move could also reduce the perceived value of the networks, and scare off potential investors. TRA’s Shehadi says the plan is ludicrous.

“These are proposals that have no basis whatsoever in the reality of the telecommunications market,” he says. “They are unprofessional proposals made by people who have never transacted in the telecom market and have never worked on a licensing effort or privatization.”

Proponents of selling a minority stake say such an arrangement is in the interest of Lebanon’s citizens.

Hizbullah — allies of Minister Bassil’s Free Patriotic Movement — has come out in favor of the minority share plan. In the party’s political platform it stresses “the preservation of this national wealth through the sector development and improving its services.”

Ought to audit

Aside from the problems with operations and debates surrounding privatization, irregularities abound in the telecom sector, especially in the auditing process, ITU’s Bahsoun says.

“For 14 years the fixed services network has never been physically audited,” he says. “The operations of OGERO have never been financially audited. And the two mobile networks that have existed in Lebanon since 1995 have never been physically or financially audited.”

The decision to physically assess and audit the networks rests with the Lebanese government, through the MoT, and there is a disagreement as to whether a full technical assessment of the mobile networks has been completed. Shehadi says that OGERO to date does not have an updated fixed asset registry, making it impossible to perform a financial or technical audit.

“There is no such thing as an audit for OGERO,” says Shehadi. OGERO did not respond to requests for comment on this allegation.

On the mobile side of things, the government has appointed PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) to produce an audited financial statement in order to gauge the financial position of Lebanon’s mobile telecommunications. Gilbert Najjar, head of the Owner Supervisory Board, the government entity that oversees the GSM office at the MoT, explains that according to International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), PWC has fulfilled its obligations and both mobile operators have provided their financials. That said, his office requires a full audit of all the major accounts of the two operators, instead of just the sampling procedures carried out under the IFRS.

“I told the auditors that I will not approve accounts on this basis because I am dealing with the accounting of government money and I need to have a proper check of all documentation,” says Najjar. “I need the major accounts checked and audited on a proper basis, I cannot do it on a sampling basis.”

The issue has been pending since the mobile operator’s contracts were signed in 2004. Only when all parties involved sign off on a final audit will the case of the mobile operators’ financial standing finally be closed.

“At the end of the day you need the government of Lebanon, the operator, and the auditor to come together and this has not happened,” says Claude Bassil of MTC.

This creates a problem for the TRA, because as Shehadi says, his agency is tasked with providing potential investors with the information they need to invest in the mobile networks.

When asked about why these requests have fallen on dead ears, Minister Bassil says, “[The TRA] has nothing to do with privatization; it is something that the minister decides and a policy that has to be adopted by the council of ministers and by our parliament.”

The Owner Supervisory Board is currently in the process of an internal audit of its major accounts.

“These are unprofessional proposals made by people who have never transacted in the telecom market”

Goop in place of governance

In 2005, then Telecommunications Minister Marwan Hamade appointed then general director of operations and maintenance at the MoT, Abdulmenem Youssef, to be chairman and general manager of OGERO. OGERO is contracted to, and paid by, the Office of Operations and Maintenance at the MoT. Bahsoun says this arrangement presents a clear conflict of interest where “the right hand plays the left hand.”

Executive attempted to contact Youssef several times, but he did not respond to requests to address Bahsoun’s allegations.

The Capital Expenditure Committee, called CAPEX, of the Owner Supervisory Board is the government entity that monitors the mobile network operator’s capital expenses. The CAPEX Committee also contains members of OGERO’s board.

“All the CAPEX Committee members either work for OGERO or the MoT and that has been the case for the past few years so there is nothing new,” says MTC’s Claude Bassil.

But Gilbert Najjar says only one board member of OGERO, Alain Bassil, also currently sits on the CAPEX committee.

“It was a decision taken by [former] Minister Hamade and by the general directors of telecommunications who at the time had the powers of the TRA,” Najjar says.

Lebanon currently buys its bandwidth from the cypriot telecom authority, effectively making it a bandwidth colony

Internet at a snail’s pace

The cost of the telecom sector’s spider web of authority is apparent in the archaic speed of Lebanon’s Internet connections. The minister himself seems to have little hope in curing the situation.

“I am sorry to say that as the telecommunications minister, I tried to make some headway with respect to [improving Internet access and services,] but was incapable of doing so,” he said in a speech at the Arab Telecom and Internet Forum last month.

Lebanon currently buys its bandwidth from the Cypriot Telecom Authority (CYTA), effectively making it a bandwidth colony. Plans are in motion to increase Internet speeds. In June, a government project will lay 4,700 kilometers of fiber optic cables in the form of an outer ring and an inner ring to encircle the country. The project is set to be completed by 2011 and cost the government $64 million.

Shehadi says the TRA has also initiated a plan to allow private license in the broadband arena. There is also a plan to connect Lebanon to the International Middle East Western Europe 3 (IMEWE3) network, which could add more bandwidth to the country’s decrepit Internet infrastructure. But Riad Bahsoun of the ITU says the plan would require someone to cut through what may be considerable bureaucratic red tape.

“IMEWE3 is a good decision, but it has to go through Alexandria, and the internal security services in Egypt are not happy because they probably haven’t gotten their share of the corruption,” says ITU’s Bahsoun.

There is little hope that the ills of Lebanon’s telecom sector will be remedied until the results of the June parliamentary elections are in and a new government has been formed. When asked whether any headway can be made with regards to privatization or reform during the current government’s term, Minister Bassil laughed and said, “Definitely not. We can wait.”

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Editorial

Let talent roam free

by Yasser Akkaoui May 10, 2009
written by Yasser Akkaoui

In spite of everything, the Arab world is adapting to the current crisis. There is developing, out of the gloom, a positive attitude. There have been no more dramatic crashes and we are factoring this reality into our ‘books.’ In short we are less traumatized. It is as the French say, la vie c’est l’habitude. Still, looking at the numbers, the crisis is very much a reality and will not be going away any time soon. So despite this new-found stoicism, measures to spur growth are still needed.

This is where the UAE’s policy of insisting that foreign talent leave the country within one month of leaving a job — enforced or voluntary — is, at least in the current zeitgeist, somewhat short-sighted. A nation in the grip of an economic crisis needs consumers. This is real economics and a scheme should be developed whereby these people — many of them Lebanese, it must be said — be allowed to stay and, more crucially, to spend their money (not, mind you, money that has come from welfare, but for example money from unemployment insurance policies that the unemployed themselves have paid for). Let them stay and spend on their cars and spend on their apartments as they forage for new work.  Then, there would be no urban myths of sand-swept airport parking lots filled with abandoned cars with credit cards tossed casually onto the passenger seat.

Without these people, there will not be ‘real’ economic activity. And the policy of ejection will have an even greater impact on those economies that have already been buffeted by what are arguably the worst economic winds in 60 years. We must be thankful that Dubai’s neighboring emirates — especially Abu Dhabi — have not been hit as hard and have, by maintaining a degree of price relativity, not seen prices, real estate in particular, plummet.

Keeping these valuable human assets on the ground will bring out the best in their entrepreneurial survival instincts. They will regroup; they will network; they will seek out new opportunities and all the while they will be spending and this can only lead to eventual growth. It has happened in Lebanon since the 1970s, when civil war forced the Lebanese to be at their most creative, and it is still going on — despite the best efforts of our politicians to squash any economic dynamism — as many struggle to recalibrate their business lives to the new reality.

Let human talent roam free and it will thrive.

May 10, 2009 0 comments
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Finance

The financial crisis – Banked with optimism

by Executive Staff May 3, 2009
written by Executive Staff

One year ago, with the global economy fully immersed in its ongoing downslide, Philippe Dauba-Pantanacce, a senior economist for the Middle East region at Standard Chartered Bank, went on a speaking tour. As he listened to economists and audiences from around the region, Dauba-Pantanacce couldn’t help noticing a disconcerting trend — many people thought the economic crisis was ending, and the world was headed for a recovery.

“Of course,” Dauba-Pantanacce said recently, “we can see now, in fact, that’s not what happened.”
Dauba-Pantanacce, who encourages people to call him Philippe (he knows his name is hard to pronounce for non-francophones), prides himself on bringing a dissenting view to economic discussions. In the fall of 2007, for instance, Standard Chartered had been one of the only major banks to predict that interest rates in the United States would drop to one percent. They were right.
Late last month, Philippe brought his contrarian’s instinct to a roundtable discussion on the global economy and its impact on Lebanon, held at the Intercontinental Phoenicia Hotel in Beirut and organized by Executive. At the moment, the outlook for Lebanon, which had thus far weathered the economic crisis with surprising resiliency, did not look good.
Nassib Ghobril, the head of Economic Research at Byblos Bank, had recently been reading a handful of country reports from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and others — “they were all very gloomy,” he said. Just that week, for instance, the Economist Intelligence Unit had downgraded Lebanon’s expected economic growth in 2009 from 2.7 percent to 2.4 percent. It was the third such downgrade this year.
The focus of this pessimism, as everyone at the table knew, was the expected decline in earnings around the world — especially the Gulf, where some 30 percent of Lebanon’s expatriate workers are based. That fact continues to threaten a dramatic decline in Lebanon’s remittances, which constitute at least 25 percent of gross domestic product.
Philippe was not dissuaded. He believed that things could be worse and, in fact, thought they might be getting better. Philippe is willow-thin and he has an easy-going affability. He was wearing a tailored, dark suit with a bright pink tie. Sitting next to him on one side was Pik Yee Foong, the chief executive officer of Standard Chartered in Lebanon, who had earlier introduced him as “Mr. Philippe.” On the other was Abdel Rahman Mogharbel, a manager at the Banking Control Commission at the Central Bank of Lebanon, which has been credited by many, including Philippe, for insulating Lebanon from the crisis with its conservative policies.
“We are calling this crisis the Great Recession, versus the Great Depression,” Philippe said. “The fourth quarter of 2008 was appalling, but the first quarter of 2009 was better.” Where Lebanon is concerned, Philippe sees remittances declining less precipitously than most due to the stability of the Gulf, adding that low oil prices will drastically reduce the cost of energy, a major burden on the country’s expenditures.

Gulf of hysteria
The focus of Philippe’s analysis was an outlook for the Gulf countries, particularly the United Arab Emirates, that was stronger than that of most other economists. For months, the business press had been filled with articles predicting the demise of Dubai — the downward spiral, they called it — and Philippe thought the whole thing was overblown, a lot of “hysteria.” As he saw it, the downturn in Dubai had been driven by an over-inflated real estate market, but that the market “correction” was, “for the medium to long term, a good thing.”
“Where will the engine of growth come from in Dubai?” Mazen Hanna, an economic advisor to Saad Hariri, asked Philippe. Like several of the Lebanese economists at the roundtable, Hanna found Philippe’s take on the Gulf a little hard to believe. Dubai’s economy, he pointed out, was “one of the most affected today because it was the most exposed internationally.”
Philippe’s answer was, to some extent, non-academic — we don’t know all the details, but the money keeps coming from somewhere. He mentioned some maturing bonds that had recently been paid out by an unknown investor.
He went on, “This crisis has put Dubai to the test, but more than Dubai it has put the UAE as one country to the test.”
Dubai had been bailed out by Abu Dhabi (another thing Philippe says he had predicted with certainty before most other analysts), which may have cost Dubai its independence, but in exchange had actually fortified the UAE’s economy in the long run.
Now instead of two separate economies — one, Dubai’s that was heavily based on real estate speculation (and thus highly unstable), the other, Abu Dhabi’s, that was solely based on oil and gas reserves (and thus ephemeral) — there is now a shared, diversified economy.
Going forward, the UAE — with a distinct geographical advantage, and a “logistical structure” (including major ports and airlines) that Philippe considered 10 years ahead of anyone else — could position itself as a major transportation hub and the “warehouse of the region,” he said.
With regard to Lebanon, Philippe pointed to something more intangible: the strength of domestic confidence.
“Domestic consumption can drive every force of the economy,” he says, pointing to the US, where 70 percent of the GDP comes from it.
Meanwhile, he says the Lebanese people’s great faith in their national banking system has meant that deposits nationwide have, and will continue, to rise. More bank deposits means more money to offer as loans.
Once again, the Lebanese were less bullish than Philippe.
This was something one private banker — who preferred to remain anonymous — knew a thing or two about, and she pointed out that one  of the reason the banks in Lebanon were so well capitalized was because the Lebanese had so little faith in other markets. “Even if you have a political crisis in Lebanon the outflows have nowhere else to go,” she said. “It’s very superficial.”

A bad moon a-rising
Standard Chartered’s Pik Yee Foong said that although the deposit to loan rate in Lebanon was fairly well endowed, there were “mixed signals” on demand for loans.
And Imad Jamil Zbib, an assistant vice president at American University Beirut and a former professor of business, saw a more pressing indicator: graduating seniors were having a hard time finding jobs, especially now that they had to compete with more experienced young professionals returning from layoffs in the Gulf.
Yasser Akkaoui, the editor-in-chief of Executive Magazine, who was moderating the panel, asked the collected experts what they thought were the biggest risks for the Lebanese economy.
The obvious answer was the unstable political situation. “I think the political deadlock in the country had derailed the privatization process,” Mazen Hanna said, referring to efforts to privatize Électricité du Liban, as well as the telecommunications networks.
He went on to address the dangers associated with Lebanon’s dependence on remittances and expatriate investments, which account for a large percentage of the banking sectors’ deposits.
“My greatest fear is a point in time where you would find that this financing is no longer available to the government, and the government in such a world would have no recourse to the rest of the world because of the current situation… That would be the gloom scenario.”
On this, at least, Philippe agreed. Much of the domestic spending he had pointed to was dependent on what he called the domestic dynamic: “a feeling, real or imagined, of security and political stability.” A major security or political crisis in Lebanon could upset the whole balance. He agreed privatizing EDL was also essential.
But if his dissenting predictions were right — as they had been so often in the past — then the stability of the Gulf countries ought to be a sufficient bulwark, at least, against Mazen Hanna’s “gloom scenario.”
For most of the conversation Abdel Rahman Mogharbel had been tight-lipped, not willing to say too much, perhaps worried that, as a representative of the Central Bank, his thoughts could be misconstrued as foresight. Finally, he turned to Philippe, smiled, and said dryly, “You seem optimistic.”

May 3, 2009 0 comments
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Levant

Campaign priorities – The Grand Serail’s to-do list

by Executive Staff May 3, 2009
written by Executive Staff

Lebanon has an exasperating array of economic issues which will need to be tackled by the new government that will be formed after the June 7th general elections. Many leaders speak about economic plans and reform, but can their walk match the talk?

“Not one of the current candidates for the upcoming elections has a clear understandable economic vision for Lebanon,” says Oussama Safa, the general director for the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies. “This shows that accountability and checks and balances have no part in the elections. The elections are a battle of slogans not programs.”

As part of this magazine’s election coverage, Executive has asked Lebanese business figures, academics, economists and civil society leaders to provide what they think the economic priorities for the next government should be.
Stability seems to be top priority.

“If there is political stability and security then there will be confidence. Confidence is the key aspect to economic growth,” says Nassib Ghobril, head of economic research for Byblos Bank.

Safa says that to achieve stability, Lebanese politicians must place their first priority on “forming a national unity government and staying away from controversial issues.”

However, March 8 and March 14 have already begun to disagree over the meaning of a national unity government. The March 8 coalition has made clear that, for them, a unity government means that the minority has veto power in the next government. March 8 has already offered March 14 a blocking minority if the opposition wins. But March 14 has made clear that they want direct competition in this election where the winner takes all. Prime Minister Fouad Saniora told Reuters that “a national unity government is not only favorable but it is important… But for us to depend on ‘veto power’ governments means that we will reach… a point where we cannot advance.”

Stability is one priority that does appear to be achievable, despite the current disagreement over the makeup of a unity government. Rapprochement between Syria and Saudi Arabia helps, and increases the prospect of a government with a minority wielding veto power. Antoine el-Khoury, general manager of BREI Real Estate, says “we should be smart enough to find common ground.”
Besides stability, Khoury and other interviewees say the new government should focus on reducing the role of the state, fighting corruption, increasing transparency and containing the economic crisis.

Reducing the role of the state

The cost of doing business in Lebanon is prohibitive for Lebanese businesses and foreign investors. Reducing the role of the state is seen as a key step toward creating a better environment for these business interests. This is seen as particularly urgent given the increased competitiveness of the region and the global financial crisis.

In their report ‘A New Path for Economic and Social Development in Lebanon’, Marc Daou and Jad Chaaban — president of the Lebanese Economic Association and an economics professor at the American University of Beirut (AUB) — articulate how Lebanon is in danger of being overrun by the rest of the region: “Human capital, Lebanon’s main competitive advantage, has deteriorated. Despite spending lots on education, the quality of learning is low compared to other countries, and outcomes are not up to expectations.” One of their recommendations is to “reduce the role of the state to the regulation and provision of public goods.”

Nassib Ghobril of Bank Byblos argues that the new government should go even further than this. Ghobril claims that 2007 was one of the worst years in Lebanon’s recent modern history but the economy still grew by four percent.
“What does this tell us? We only need a minimal government in Lebanon,” he says.

The level of bureaucracy that the state imposes on businesses in Lebanon can be incredibly taxing, says Safa. “It takes 42 days to set up a business in Lebanon which is probably the longest in the world.”

Another reason the private sector wants the state out of its business is because of the negative relationship between the two. Khoury says that when his company goes to the civil service they make him and his company “feel like thieves,” just because they are businessmen. He says that at the same time the government is not doing enough to promote responsible businesses. “We feel alone fighting against irresponsible businessmen draining the resources of the country,” remarks Khoury.

The bloated Lebanese bureaucracy is viewed as needing a complete overhaul, which would include shrinking and reorganizing the government. One interviewee who requested to remain anonymous says that certain parts of the administration are very corrupt. The procedures laid out by the various administrative departments are deliberately unclear and inconsistent; a citizen always needs to hire mediators. He also added that his company must pay bribes to various part of the government administration to get the public documentation.

Corruption and transparency
Lebanon is currently ranked 102nd of 180 countries on the Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI). Other indicators such as the Global Integrity Index, the World Bank Governance Indicators, as well as the Open Budget Index confirm Lebanon’s desperate situation when it comes to corruption and transparency.
The Lebanese Transparency Association (LTA), the Lebanese chapter of Transparency International, has been working hard to bring the government to account. Gaëlle Kibranian, program manager for the Democratization and Public Accountability program at LTA, says Lebanon’s situation is dismal.
“Lebanon remains [a] confessional [system], which shapes the relationship between citizens and state, as well as the lack of separation of powers,” Kibranian says. “This leads to nepotism, clientalism, and patronage.”
Kibranian argues that one of the first measures the government should be taking is to “implement the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC), which was ratified by Lebanon.”

Khoury confirms the need for more ethics, particularly in regards to the real estate sector, “which is not only important for us but also in attracting investors.”
But it’s not all bad news and there is some hope that politicians will take corruption seriously. The elections and the new election law are a case in point. Kibranian notes that the monitoring and controlling of this year’s campaign spending has made a difference.

“It has meant that politicians are taking the question of corruption very seriously, trying to abide by the law, in order to avoid future challenges,” claims Kibranian.
Apart from outright corruption through bribes, Safa gives another view of the problem in relation to overlapping interests. He says close relationship between the government and the Lebanese banking sector is too close for comfort.
“The bankers and financers are in bed with the government — the prime minister is a former banker and the Lebanese government owes billions to the Lebanese banking system,” Safa says. “The result of this is that different economic sectors are ignored.”

The power of the banks was recently illustrated in their rejection of a proposed interest rate increase and a social security proposal that was stopped by the Bank Association. According to Nassib Ghobril, 54 percent of the public debt is owed to Lebanese banks, illustrating what a stranglehold the banks have on the Lebanese government.

But the banks have recently been held up as Lebanon’s savior, and rightly so, in the face of the global economic crisis. The firm foundations of the Lebanese banking system, demanded by the Lebanese Central Bank, have saved the economy, thus far, from significant harm amidst the turmoil of the global economic crisis. The economic crisis continues however, and the experts say the new government should focus on protecting Lebanon.

The global economic crisis    

The president of the World Union of Arab Banks, Joseph Torbey, recently called for the Lebanese government to create a ‘national strategy’ to strengthen the financial and monetary system against the financial crisis. Torbey says a strategy is urgently needed, given Lebanon’s large public debt.

This was backed by Freddie Baz, general manager of Bank Audi sal-Audi Saradar Group, who wrote in the Daily Star that the financial crisis was worse than anyone could ever imagine. A similarly gloomy view was reflected in a comment by an anonymous J.P. Morgan adviser quoted in the Star. The advisor didn’t see an end to this crisis before 2015.

So, despite the fact Lebanon has so far escaped the consequences of the global economic crisis, and even benefited from the crisis through increased deposits, there may still be a long, rough road ahead.

Although Lebanon may have benefited from increased deposits, Bank Byblos’ Ghobril says many of the resources for financing the public debt are now gone due to the financial crisis and the lack of liquidity.

The chance to privatize the telecommunications sector and Middle East Airlines has now been missed. Ghobril says even if the privatizations continue, it will be a long time before investors are willing to pay the prices they were eyeing just a year ago, in 2007.

“A Credit Suisse report stated that the government could have received $5 billion for the telecom network but in the current financial crisis the valuation has collapsed,” Ghobril stated.

Most significant for Lebanon is the predicted fall in remittances, which account for 27 percent of Lebanon’s current account receipts — the highest such share in the region. Ghobril warned that the future is precarious for Lebanon economically because of the likelyhood of a huge drop in remittances.

“Standard and Poor’s carried out a stress test that showed that if remittances drop by 20-30 percent, as expected, this would lead to a current account deficit of 17 percent of GDP,” Ghobril says.

Not only does Lebanon have to cope with its citizens abroad not sending money back, but Safa says the new government will also have to cope with “waves of Lebanese [who] may return.”

“A main challenge for the government will be finding jobs for all of these returnees,” says Safa.

The wrap-up

The challenges for the Lebanese economy and next government are enormous. It is clear that the main priority for the next Lebanese government should be stability, and once this is achieved then the many challenges to the Lebanese economy can be addressed.

These challenges are intertwined and can be solved through the creation of good governance policies. Good governance in the current sectarian system is yet to be achieved and many doubt the upcoming election results, regardless of who wins, will change this feature of Lebanese government.

However, if the above priorities are addressed in an economic strategy that is then implemented, the economic woes of the budget deficit, the balance of payments, social inequalities and the trade deficit could all start to be ameliorated. Being content with stability, however, may be more realistic.

May 3, 2009 0 comments
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Finance

UAE – Sovereign salvation

by Executive Staff May 3, 2009
written by Executive Staff

The decongested streets of Dubai seem strangely incongruent with the message that the federal government of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) would have you to believe — that the effects of the global financial crisis haven not been severe in the UAE.

Egyptian investment bank EFG-Hermes estimates that the total population of the UAE — of which more than 80 percent is comprised of expatriates — will contract by  5.5 percent by the end of this year, propelled by Dubai which is forecasted to lose 17 percent of its inhabitants. While the well-endowed government saves its economy through multi-billion dollar bond issuances, setting up emergency funding facilities and pumping numerous liquidity injections into the banking sector, bankers can take a big sigh of relief, but not  for long. Indeed, the deep-pocketed sovereign is propping up the country’s banking system — addressing major issues such as tightened liquidity conditions and toughening up their risk management strategies. But with the ailing real estate market and soaring job cuts, banks have more to worry about than just increasing their cash flow.
In order to efficiently manage the effects of the financial crisis, the UAE sovereign entities are aiding the banking sector to positively, and briskly, move forward. With liquidity conditions finally looking up, analysts say the UAE economy — including its banking sector — is on the mend. As the world faces an indefinite period of recession and recovery, many investors are looking for safe havens to secure financial opportunities. Once the real estate sector hits rock bottom, the UAE hopes individuals and investors alike will flock back to the country, allowing Dubai to continue its reign as the region’s top trading and business hub.
With its affluent, robust government standing behind it, the UAE banking sector is well positioned to fight the crisis head on. Unfortunately, the ongoing property crisis has taken its toll on banks’ profitability and swollen their portfolios. The government has tried to jump-start recovery through various cash injections and recapitalizations, and there are hints of mergers and acquisitions among the UAE’s 52 banks. Bankers are hoping that this year will be less tumultuous than the last, aiming for conservative risk management policies and overall cautious moves.

Sheltered from on top
With the largest debt in the Gulf, the UAE’s only hope is through its sovereign entities, like Dubai Inc. Dubai Inc. is a collection of government-owned companies with an estimated $80 billion in short-term debt to date, a significant increase from the $60 billion debt it had in November of last year.
Once the global financial crisis washed over the Gulf, the federal government of the Emirates reacted “practically overnight,” according to Rajai Ayyash, country manager for UAE, Kuwait and Oman at The Bank of New York Mellon.
Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) started by setting up a $32.6 billion emergency funding facility in the fourth quarter of 2008. It then injected $4.4 billion into Abu Dhabi banks, and issued a $20 billion bond to the government of Dubai. Now with the most recent move taken by Abu Dhabi to raise $10 billion in bonds through international investors from Europe and North America, it is crystal clear that the affluent UAE government is willing and able to prop up its economy and banking sector.
“From a capacity point of view, the federal government is in a good position to provide support and we think that this is one of the main advantages for UAE banks, compared with other systems in the MENA region,” says Dr. Mohamed Damak, a ratings specialist in the financial services group at Standard & Poor’s in Paris.
Classifying the UAE government as “interventionist toward the banking system,” Damak says “from a willingness point of view, the willingness is apparently there and the track record is strong in terms of support.”
Without a doubt, if it weren’t for the deep-pocketed Emirati sovereign helping to fix the fight, the banking sector and the entire economy would have been dropped to the canvas in the opening rounds of global financial turmoil. Still, even with the government’s efforts, the effects of the international financial catastrophe have been rather bleak.
In mid-April, the CBUAE announced that its assets and liabilities had declined by 32 percent to $52.7 billion at the end of 2008, down from $77.8 billion in 2007. The last time the CBUAE posted any such decline in assets was in 2003, when assets shrank by a mere 1.4 percent. Currently there are no figures as to how much local banks lost last year, but so far nine of 18 listed national banks that have released results have recorded higher profits – including NBAD, National Bank of Ras Al Khaimah, Sharjah Bank, Emirates NBD, while the other nine banks — Dubai Islamic Bank, Mashreq Bank, Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank (ADCB) and Dubai Commercial Bank — have suffered noteworthy losses.
National Bank of Fujairah, for example, reported losses of $13.7 million in 2008 and $88.2 million in 2007. The largest bank in the region by assets, Emirates NBD, faced fallout in relation to the Madoff scandal in the US, says Raj Madha, director of equity research at EFG-Hermes in Dubai.
ADCB also took hits from US exposures and First Gulf Bank (FGB) had hedge fund exposure. “In all these cases they’re trying to shut down these exposures, but they shouldn’t have been in those [situations] in the first place,” Madha says. “In most ways, it’s difficult to say what they should be doing now because now we’re seeing what they should have been doing a year ago.”
An area in which the government’s efforts have made a difference in recent months is addressing the liquidity situation. Before the fateful weekend of September 13, 2008 banks in the Emirates were awash with liquidity as foreign ‘hot money’ was streaming into the country, with investors expecting a revaluation of the dirham. Cash deposits surged thereafter, and the flowing liquidity empowered banks to go on a lending binge.
As noted by a recent Moody’s report, the national banks used short-term deposits to fund long-term loans. After letting go of the idea of a currency revaluation, foreign investors were briskly withdrawing their money and thus liquidity in the Emirates began drying up. It was in late 2007 that the UAE started feeling the noose tightening on liquidity, and Moody’s estimates that liquidity fell to around four percent of total banking assets. Bankers estimate that more than $51.7 billion exited the country in 2008.
The various sovereign measures taken since the fourth quarter of 2008 have resulted in more liquidity in the banking sector in recent months. Youssef Nasr, chief executive officer of HSBC Middle East, says the amount of liquidity had “significantly improved” in the last four to five months.
Ayyash agrees with Nasr, pointing out that currently “individuals and family businesses are more confident in the local banking sector and are thus depositing more and more cash [into the banks].”
“Also, international banks are back [on] the scene again, selectively reestablishing lines, which is very important,” Nasr says.
Madha accredits the enhancement of the liquidity situation to banks yielding their offers of high deposit rates — some as high as seven percent — as well as significantly lowered inter-bank rates.
“The spread over US dollar libel has come down more into line with the rest of the GCC countries, which is obviously a positive,” says Madha.
Others agree that the liquidity situation is healthier than it was just a few months ago. But it is still not as high as it was this time last year.
“[The] liquidity situation is still under pressure compared with the situation a year ago, when the system was flush with liquidity coming from outside, betting on the revaluation of the dirham,” Standard & Poor’s Mohamed Damak says. “But, we understand the situation has eased significantly in the past few months due to the intervention that was put in place by authorities.”
But New York Mellon’s Ayyash is confident that “liquidity is no longer an issue.”
However, Moody’s Middle East analyst John Tofarides says that while liquidity has gotten much better, it is “still being financed by the government.”
“In order to assume normal deposit growth, you have to have, at the same time, economic growth, because deposits are created by a function of economic growth,” Tofarides says. “If we have a slowdown in 2009, then the deposit growth would be — under normal circumstances — negative, but here we have government support injecting money from outside the system, thus balancing it out.”

UAE bond
The first quarter of 2009 has been quite eventful for the UAE, with the federal government issuing two separate bonds just less than two months apart. The first was issued in February, announcing a $20 billion bond for Dubai’s sovereign. Luckily, half of this was automatically raised by the CBUAE, leaving the remaining $10 billion to be raised in two to three years — when the bank thought it would be needed.
As of April, Dubai had already distributed more than half of the funds from the first $10 billion tranche to several quasi-government companies in the form of loans, with an appealing interest rate of four percent.
Director general of Dubai’s Department of Finance, Nasser al-Shaikh, told DubaiEye Radio on April 22 that “all the support that we extend… is in the form of loans, the tenor of which is a bit shorter than our commitment to the central bank to ensure that we have the money paid to us before we repay it to the central bank.”
Declining to name the recipients, al-Shaikh did mention that state-affiliated real estate companies had taken some money from the funds. Al-Shaikh added that the government would not wait for the initial $10 billion to be fully used up before rolling out the second $10 billion. Exactly when the next $10 billion would be launched depends on the requirements of “more than 10” quasi-government organizations he said, adding that the government is looking at numerous options “within and beyond the country” for raising the funds.
An EFG-Hermes Research analysis released in April pointed out that, “[such] comments stand in contrast to newsflow earlier in the year, which indicated that the second tranche would not be needed for two to three years.”
Whenever the rest is used, the bond “puts confidence back into the market,” says Dr. Eckart Woertz, program manager of economics at Dubai’s Gulf Research Center. “It helps Dubai to alleviate the worse fears for 2009, to ensure refinancing; not more, not less.”
As for the $10 billion Abu Dhabi bond program announced in April, only $3 billion has actually been launched so far. Hamad Al Hurr Al Suwaidi, under-secretary at the Department of Finance, commented last month that Abu Dhabi intends to raise the remaining $7 billion for the program over the next two years.
Of the program’s $3 billion launched, al-Suwaidi noted that investors from North America and Europe bought 90 percent of the 10-year issue bonds, and 75 percent of the five-year issue bonds, on the $3 billion. Asian investors constituted around five percent of the total bond program.
Dr. Giyas Gökkent, chief economist and acting head of asset management at the National Bank of Abu Dhabi (NBAD) — the country’s second largest bank by total assets — reveals that “the purposes of the Abu Dhabi bond issue were: one, to create a sort of benchmark for other borrowers and secondly, to gauge market appetite for bond issues from the region and the UAE. The oversubscription showed that clearly there is demand for good credit, so the reason why Abu Dhabi is doing [this bond] is clearly because they have a large number of projects and from a capital use perspective, [Abu Dhabi] found it useful to go this route.”
Gökkent adds that the bond was issued to aid the funding of projects going forward in Abu Dhabi, while in Dubai the bonds are being used to finance Dubai Inc. debts.

What the bonds mean for the banks
Logic would lead one to believe that people will begin depositing money into local banks as confidence creeps back into the market. Moody’s Middle East analyst John Tofarides says the bonds “will help [the banks] indirectly because this money will eventually be directed to the corporates; it will be fed through the banking system so at some point it will sit as deposits in the banks and then move to the uses of the corporates and pay contractors.”
Shayne Nelson, regional CEO of Standard Chartered Bank for Middle East and North Africa, echoes this sentiment, stating the bond “indirectly helps the banks and gets the economy moving.”
NBAD’s Gökkent believes that these bond programs “[lessen] the pressure on the banking system,” as the federal sovereign is giving “a fresh $10 billion to the Dubai government to inject in various companies, which means that the money did not come from the banking sector itself.”
“It’s complementary to the banking sector resources and it therefore does not put further pressure on the banking system, as the banking [sector] in the UAE had a somewhat high loan-to-deposit ratio [and] the balance sheets were already somewhat stretched,” Gökkent says.
HSBC Middle East CEO Youssef Nasr says the Dubai bond is “very positive,” adding that “the amount is sufficient for meeting all of Dubai’s current maturities of debt in 2009 and it allows the Dubai government to proceed with its budget plans.”
All in all, the bonds “seem to be achieving what [they were] designed to achieve,” states EFG-Hermes’ Madha.

Risky business
Presently, the real estate market is still a chief concern throughout the banking sector. Bank of New York Mellon’s Ayyash asserts that “the real estate sector is the most significant sector in the UAE economy and it has been hit the most.”
Woertz believes that the property market in Dubai is “pretty much a mess.” Gökkent mentions that “some banks got ahead of themselves, offering credit [to real estate developers and investors] without looking at the risk” involved. Woertz trusts that Dubai will remain a trading hub, and that more people will move to the UAE once the property market hits rock bottom.
“Investors will come back,” he says. “Many investors will go bankrupt, new investors will come in and buy it cheaper […] that’s capitalism, basically. It’s the end of many real estate investors over here, but not the end of the Dubai model.”
The situation is changing so fast in Dubai it’s hard to tell exactly what is happening. The lack of transparency doesn’t help one to get a clear picture either. What is known is that the population grew exponentially over the last 10 years, with expats coming to make up an estimated 80 percent of the population. That growth helped fuel construction and real estate prices. Now, the UAE’s growth is slowing.
As the end of the school year creeps up, the UAE is waiting to see how many more expatriates leave once they can take their children back home. With Dubai canceling 54,684 residency visas in January 2009 alone — around 1,764 per day, according to EFG-Hermes — foreign laborers losing their jobs create a ‘skip risk’ for national banks.
The law in the UAE does not permit unemployed expatriates to reside in the country for more than one month after being terminated; it forces them to leave the country and thus puts them at higher risk of defaulting on all sorts of loans taken from local banks. Woertz illustrates this concern, saying “there is a larger risk for banks here than elsewhere, because the expatriate incentive to walk away is pretty significant. Even the obligation to walk away — you’re not allowed to stay here if you don’t have a job here.”
Nasr explains that the reason the law is so strict on expatriates being forced to leave after only four weeks of unemployment is an “old philosophy… If you don’t have a job, you might become a burden on the state,” Nasr says. “It’s being offset by the fact that if the person has to leave it means he has an empty house, he won’t pay his debt, he’ll turn back his car.”
Nasr says the government is trying to find middle ground with the law, and allowing people to stay six months is being considered. But Nasr says until the law is amended and people start staying in the country, “skip risk is something we’re all going to have to deal with.”
Woertz says that even if the UAE extends the residency law to six months, “why should you stay?”
“You don’t get any unemployment benefits, it’s still pretty expensive although the rents have come down. So if you’re fired now, just forget it.”
Whether the law is altered or not, banks will definitely need to watch out for foreign borrowers skipping town and defaulting on their loans.
Dealing with this hangover in the banking sector has created room for some bankers to reach some  rather obvious epiphanies. Robert Thursfield, a director in equity research at Fitch Ratings in Dubai, asserts that national banks’ approaches to risk management “have become more cautious, although given the rapid growth of the last few years, this was inevitable once liquidity tightened significantly.”
Woertz says he thinks banks will be more risk-averse this year, while cutting lending to implement stricter rules on mortgages and credit card limits. What banks need to do this year, insists Nasr, is have capital and “get deposits first and then lend, not the other way around,” which is what was happening in 2008.
Due to numerous ill-calculated moves prior to the global meltdown, this year banks will naturally witness a significant slowdown in growth and profitability. Woertz is pessimistic, and doesn’t “see any growth potential at all — growth potential was yesterday.”
With such rapid growth over the last few years, the UAE will unavoidably experience a slowdown in bank profitability, albeit most banks will still manage to profit while a few others could break even in 2009.

‘After the drunkenness’
Referencing the Arabic expression, ‘After the drunkenness, there is an awakening,’ Nasr notes that, “we went through a period of drunkenness. But it’s back to basics [now].”
Unfortunately, he says, many of bankers forgot what banking was all about “for a few years.” Investors went a little crazy in recent years, diving first into stocks and then irrationally investing in the real estate market, with banks taking the brunt as they gave out loans at an excessive pace, disproportionate to their actual lending capabilities. Woertz says the loan-to-deposit ratio is over 100 percent in the UAE, “so it’s not as conservative as the 85 percent in Saudi Arabia.”
“Banks in the UAE grew their loans by more than 70 to 90 percent in 2008,” notes Gökkent, suggesting that the number is quite excessive.
“People tend to prefer shorter-term deposits and longer-term loans,” Nasr says. “The banking system plays a useful role in terms of bridging this gap between deposits and lenders, [especially] when they have different liquidity preferences.”
He adds that “we started getting into situations where banks were using overnight money or one month money and making 10-year loans. That’s irrational because you’re assuming that it’s going to roll over for the next 10 years, but it doesn’t happen [that way].”
Now, banks in the UAE — and around the globe, for that matter — will be focusing on reprioritizing their domestic agendas. The primary concern for national banks is to reassess and beef-up their risk management strategies, which can be done through more conservative lending policies and basic, cautious banking.

What to do?
Outsiders might find it strange as to why there have been no big mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in the UAE since the crisis took hold. But “under normal circumstances,” explains Gökkent, “[M&A] should have already happened because there was stress in the system… but because the UAE is so well endowed in terms of large accumulation of assets over the years, so far they haven’t had the need to do that.” This leads back to the eminent benefit of having an ultra-wealthy government backing you up.
This year, Madha believes that banks should be “sticking to the knitting.” While the UAE government has laid the foundation for recovery, banks can now focus on their core business and best practices. After the drunken hangover fully passes, banks and the economy of the UAE will have an opportunity to realign their agendas. Ayyash says the “only thing we can do is not to fall into the same trap and have all your portfolio concentrated in one sector; maybe they need to diversify and redefine their portfolios.”
Nasr predicts that “some banks will become more focused on retail or commercial business [and] become more specialized.”
In 2009 UAE banks will have to either sink or swim. Banks should keep in mind that, “The banking system is not an end, it’s just a means,” says Woertz.

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