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Lebanon

A woman‘s work is needed in Lebanon

by Executive Staff May 1, 2007
written by Executive Staff

The Lebanese business community gathered recently at one ofBeirut’s posher eateries to celebrate the signing of a tradememorandum between the Beirut and Paris Chambers ofCommerce. However, it was neither the place nor the occasionthat was remarkable, but the fact that among the 100 or soguests, there were only a handful of women.

Studies conducted by the Gender Entrepreneurial Marketprogram (GEM) show that female labor participation inLebanon—which increased from 12.5% in the 1960s to 32.3%% in2000—was estimated in 2003, at 21.7% of the total laborforce. Tapping into this unexploited labor market, theLebanese League for Women in Business (LLWB), anon-partisan, non-profit organization, aims to empower womenin the economic environment by providing a structured forumfor women in order to achieve their entrepreneurial potential.

Filling the vacuum

The NGO was the result of a happy coincidence when the 12founding members met by chance at a conference forbusinesswomen in Tunisia in May 2005. “The conferencebrought together women from all over the MENA region, whichinspired us to reproduce a similar model in Lebanon,” saysNajwa Tohme, manager at Al Rifai Roastery and president ofLLWB. With only 22% of Lebanese women contributing to theworkforce, the founders of LLWB tried to utilize the laborvacuum prompted by increasing numbers of experienced maleemployees leaving the country in search of better careerprospects.

“We decided to support women, trying to facilitate theirentry into the job market. I don’t have exact figures formale versus female productivity, but as Mr. Adnan Kassar,Fransabank’s CEO, stated at our inaugurating conference,when women and men are put together in the same workenvironment, women tend to be more accurate and loanscontracted by female debtors seem also to result in lowerdefault rates.”

Opting for education and vocation

To accomplish its mission statement, namely to “encouragewomen to take the lead to succeed,” LLWB has opted foreducational and vocational programs, networking, advocacyand incubators. “We intend to organize conferences andtrainings that will assist women and point them in the rightdirection. The educational programs will address variousaspects of the business process such as setting up anoperation, drafting a business plan, market research, orapproaching financial institutions,” adds Tohme.

In addition, women employed in private companies willbenefit from the training sessions, by reinforcing theirknowledge base and learning to apply concepts to their ownactivities. To promote the role of women in economy, LLWBwill also approach fresh university graduates. Thereinsertion of women in the workforce after an extensiveleave of absence, usually caused by pregnancy, is anothergoal on the organization’s agenda.

“Once they’ve tended to their family and their children areall grown up, women feel left behind. We can update theirskills, through training sessions, in order to facilitatethe integration process. A perfect example would be offeringcomputer classes.”

Networking

Networking is another tool used for promoting women in theworkplace. This will be done mainly through the conferencingactivity where people can come together, exchange businessideas and present their products. The last field, advocacy,highlights women rights in business, it is supported by ateam of four lawyers, who are also members of the NGO. “Therole of women is quite narrow in business. If one takes aquick look at the banking sector, positions such branchmanager are within a woman’s reach, whereas boardmemberships are a rare occurrence, unless the woman owns astake in the organization,” adds Tohme. “Companiesadvertising CEO positions ultimately favor male over femalecandidates.”

Incubators, the last weapon in the NGO’s hand, offermanagement guidance, technical assistance and consulting,tailored to young growing companies. Once the NGO is largeenough and capable of offering a wide array of expertise,incubators will be used to guide women through the businessmaze. “This particular instrument is part of our medium tolong-term plan,” points-out Tohme.

As LLWB aims to achieve equal opportunities andunrestricted access to resource for women, as well as toenhance female entrepreneurship and leadership, Tohmebelieves that benchmarking will be measured against resultsachieved, as the NGO activities grow.

To build awareness among the business community, LLWBorganized a conference last month devoted to theassociation’s goals and mission, bringing in speakers todiscuss access to SME funding, such as Carlos Lebbos head ofspecialized credits at BLC, Tarek Itani, credit manager atKafalat and Nagy Rizk from the Building Block Equity Fund.NGOs, major business associations and companies as well asAmerican embassy officials were invited to take part in theevent. Few bothered to show up.

For more information: please visit the LLWB Web site at:www.llwb.org

May 1, 2007 0 comments
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Comment

Wolfowitz at the exit door?

by Claude Salhani May 1, 2007
written by Claude Salhani

So far this has not been a good year for President Bush.First, his plan to pacify Iraq by “surging” more Americantroops appears to have backfired. Since the surge beganIraqis have been dying in far greater numbers than everbefore, and terrorist bombings are claiming nearly 120 livesa day. And, U.S. casualties are increasing, adding pressurein Washington for an early troop pullout.

But if Bush faces a tough time on his handling of foreignpolicies, he now has serious problems at home as well. Afterloosing the majority in both houses of Congress to theDemocrats last November, the president has had anotherawkward moment vis a vis Paul Wolfowitz his choice to runthe World Bank.

Wolfowitz was supposed to fight corruption and alleviatepoverty. To make the task easier, “Wolfie,” as he is know tothose who like him, as well as to those who don’t, was givena yearly salary of $400,000—tax free—and an expense accountto match the status of the job.

As World Bank president, Wolfowitz oversees some 10,000employees around the world. Among them was, ratherawkwardly, his girlfriend, Shaha Riza. Wolfowitz, appearedto be playing by the book. In order to avoid a conflict ofinterest, when he took up his new job it was decidedinternally that she be moved to the US State Department,along with a promotion and a hefty pay rise—due to the factshe was being professionally inconvenienced by the move asit derailed her World Bank career path.

Appointed to the job by President George W. Bush in the formof a golden parachute after leaving the Rumsfeld Pentagon,Wolfowitz, a neoconservative who played a major role inconvincing the Bush administration to go to war in Iraq,stated he would apply a zero tolerance policy regardingcorruption. Now he was being accused of finding ahigh-paying job for his girlfriend.

To make matters worse, the scandal reached a climax as theBank was holding its yearly spring session in Washingtonwith the participation of finance and foreign ministers,central bank directors and financial gurus from around theworld. As the scandal gathered steam, the World Bank’s 24-member board said that the situation regarding the fate ofthe former US deputy defense chief should be dealt with,"urgently, effectively and in an orderly manner."

Calls for Wolfowitz’s resignation began to trickle in withsome finance ministers saying he should step downimmediately. But the US, which appoints the bank’s head,said it still supports Wolfowitz, who they claim had nothingto do with her new appointment. Riza, they argue, wasappointed by a World Bank ethics committee (Wolfie hadpreviously excused himself from all matters pertaining tohis companion). When she was transferred to the StateDepartment she was given the mid-range salary for her newlevel was based on the bank’s existing pay scales.

Dana Perino, a White House spokeswoman, said that PresidentGeorge W. Bush "has confidence in Paul Wolfowitz." Wolfowitzmeanwhile was booed at a meeting with World Bank staff.

By mid April Wolfowitz was told directly by one of his twodeputies, Graeme Wheeler from New Zealand, to step down at asession attended by senior staff members, according to somenews reports. The Bank’s executive board, the Bank’sgovernor as well as a number of European shareholders becameeager to see him go. Senior managers within the bank seemedsplit however, some backing Wolfowitz, others calling forhis resignation.

One of the bank’s main functions is to fight poverty aroundthe world. Yet by the Bank’s own admission, there are stillmore than 1 billion people living on less than $1 a day, and2.5 billion, or 40 percent of the world population,subsisting on less than $2 a day. Wolfowitz’s critics—ofwhich he has many—say that since assuming his new functionsat the Bank he has run the institution “much like a Chicagoward boss or mayor.” He has been said to resort to employ“patronage and intimidation” tactics.

When he moved to the World Bank from the Department ofDefense Wolfowitz took along his political acolytes,upsetting scores of long-time bank senior personnel.

Now there is growing fear in the Republican Party that adragged out “Wolfie-gate” will not help the GOP at a timewhen a vital presidential election is looming just off thehorizon. Many are beginning to echo what World Bankemployees have been saying: it is time for Wolfowitz to go.

Claude Salhani is an international editor and political analyst at United Press International (UPI)

 

May 1, 2007 0 comments
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Talking To

Inside Intel‘s brain: A talk with the boss

by Executive Staff May 1, 2007
written by Executive Staff

As part of Intel’s efforts to promote the use oftechnology with communities around the world and as arepresentative of the “Partnership for Lebanon,” IntelChairman Craig Barrett visited Lebanon last month. He alsospoke to Executive

How does the American Lebanese partnership andthe Berytech fund you contributed to, fit into the UnitedNations’ Global alliance for ICT you currently chair?

The UN Global Alliance has the same objectives as thePartnership for Lebanon, which aims to improve education,healthcare, economic development and the interaction betweengovernments and citizens. The partnership is obviouslyinvolved in Lebanon because of the destruction that resultedlast year from the conflict between Israel and Hizbullah. Weare not taking any sides on this issue, our concern is onlyfor the individual Lebanese citizen with the aim ofimproving his situation. On a much larger scale, the UNAlliance oversees what can be done to advance the status ofcitizens from emerging countries around the world. Theglobal goal is very similar to the Partnership’s one. As forthe Berytech fund, the issue of economic development is alsopart of the Partnership’s objectives and the UN GlobalAlliance. Economic development can come in various flavors:foreign investment, organic growth, economy, orentrepreneurial activity, in this last regard, Lebanonoffers a long cultural and societal history. The Berytechactivity aims to stimulate and promote economic growth,using education and potential young entrepreneurs. Berytechis unique in the sense that it is in an incubator: it takesideas, before they’re formed into business plans and givesthem a chance to grow and nurture. The investment inBerytech, a purely Intel venture, is totally consistent withthe partnership’s goals.

You’ve declared to the American congress that UScompetitiveness can only improve through education and R&D.Where do you see America standing in the economicenvironment in a few years, especially now that emergingcountries are slowly growing and siphoning off jobs?

The challenge the USA faces lies in the worldwidecompetition for educated workers and new ideas. It is thereason why so many of us lobby our own government for moreR&D and progress in education, especially in the areas ofmath and science. We are very concerned by the fact that ifthe US continue on their current course, it would faceserious problems in the future from a competitivestandpoint. We have proposed various efforts such as theincrease in research investment and improving the fields ofmath and science, which are both incredibly critical to thefuture of competitiveness.

You’ve said that “companies can’t save their wayout of a recession or even prosperity. Instead, they have toinvest in innovative products and technologies.” What isIntel doing in this respect?

If you look at our business at the beginning and the endof any year, separated only by a twelve-month period, about90% of our revenue in December is generated by products thatwere not available on the market in January. Unless you havea development machine that can create new products, androutinely achieve technology leadership, you cannot besuccessful. So when I say “you cannot save your way out of arecession,” it means that if you slow down the developmentmachine, trying to improve financial performance by onlycutting back on investments, you ultimately fail. If youlook at Intel’s general trend over its entire history, R&Dspending always tends to increase. We spend from $5.5 to $6billion every year on research and development, which is afairly large amount, larger by any country’s means.

E In a world where networking, computing andcommunications are converging even more, how is thisaffecting Intel’s overall vision and strategy?

The convergence of computing and communications is verycompatible with Intel’s philosophy and direction. Ascomputing, communication and rich content come together,more computing power to handle data is required. The trendis consistent with Intel’s generic approach, focusing onmicroprocessor power, on Moore’s law, continually improvingcomputing, generation after generation after generation. Idon’t see any disconnection between such a convergence andIntel’s direction.

As the economic environment evolves, Intel faceslower margins and increased competition from countries suchas China or India. How do you see the trend going and whatsteps is Intel taking to rise up to the challenge?

It is a rather interesting fact that people have beenwriting about Intel facing lower margins for years andyears. However, I am not sure the proposition is accurate.We have just announced, two or three days ago, that weexpect margins to increase for the second half of the year.For the past twenty years, margins have fluctuated betweenthe low and high fifty percent range. I also believe our CFOforecasted this year’s margins for the mid-fifties. Oursuccess is based on our leadership technology in the marketplace, providing us with a higher return on investment and ahigher margin on product. The challenge is to maintain ourmarket leadership position, which determines what marginswill look like. There is no question that the averageselling price for microprocessors has decreased over theyears, while our production machine is getting moreefficient, thus taking the cost down. As costs follow thefall in product prices, margin levels stay roughly constant.

How long will it take before we see seriouscompetition from countries like China and India in themicroprocessor industry? How does this affect Intel’s futureplans?

Intel has faced competition in the micro-processing area,from Europe, US, Japanese as well as Chinese companies.Competition is not something new to us, we respond to it byavoiding standstill, moving the technology forward instead,at a very rapid pace. This requires a very large investmentin R&D, which companies need to match if they want tocompete with us in the next generation of products. It isnot about figuring out how to make last generation productsat cheaper prices, but rather how to produce next generationtechnologies, which is what people in the market place want.I suspect we will continue to face competition in the nexttwenty years like we’ve done before, but the challenge forus remains the same.

Intel has long thrived by concentrating on PCmicroprocessors. Now Intel is trying to play the same rolein various fields such as consumer electronics, wirelesscommunications, and health care. What prompted the decisionto diversify your product base and which direction do yousee Intel taking?

The healthcare industry has not made very effective use ofcomputing technologies. It is a very large market withimportant opportunities for the sorts of products Intelmanufactures. In consumer electronics, the opportunityresides again in the convergence of computing,communications and content. The fact that computers havebeen built historically using Intel architecture, as digitalcontent becomes more important, consumer electronics, alsofocused on content, will become more computer-like. There isa definite opportunity to move our architecture intoconsumer electronics applications. This convergence ofcomputing, communications and content allows us to grow fromcomputers to consumer electronics devices.

How does this diversification affect the waychips are produced? Is it affecting collaboration withincompany teams as well as alliances with other marketplayers?

It actually expands the spectrum of companies you need todeal with. Historically, Intel always dealt with thecomputer industry, with large companies such as Dell,Packard and others. But as the convergence of computing,communication and content further increases, we end updealing more and more with consumer electronics and contentcompanies, we previously, were not much involved with. Weare still engaged in our standard computer business, towhich wireless communication capability and content are alsointegrated. These three elements coming together imply thatour products look less and less like standard computingplatforms, assimilating communication and contentinitiatives.

How difficult is it to brand an “ingredientproduct” such as Intel and convince customers to requireit?

You hire some very clever marketing people who create abrand like the “Intel Inside” branding campaign, the mostsuccessful “ingredient branding” campaign the world has everseen. We’ve been able to achieve this because of ourleadership position in the marketplace and used it toexpress the importance of our technology through aningredient branding campaign. If we had lacked leadershipposition from a technology standpoint, it would be verydifficult for us to convince anyone of the “ingredient’s”value. We were thus able to engineer a brand around ourpreeminent position in technology. Today, people are awarethat microprocessors are the PCs brains; everyone wants thesmartest brain and they want Intel. You need therefore bothgood technology and a very smart marketing person whosename, by the way, is Dennis Carter, to recognize this andconvince others to pursue it.

What is your view on the evolution of theinformation technology in the Arab world where, in somecountries, infrastructure is still nascent and monopoliesrun high?

There are excellent opportunities in the Arabic-speakingworld in this regard. Countries recognize the need for smartpeople and smart ideas as well as good infrastructure, andpart of this infrastructure relies on computing andcommunication. Many economies have weak communication orinefficient and extremely expensive infrastructures, such asin Lebanon, because of government control or actions on thesector. Ultimately those infrastructures need to become morecompetitive. There is great opportunity for investment,creativity and technology, which is what companies likeIntel are all about.

How do you picture the technology world in 15 years?

Fifteen years is such a long time in our industry, itmakes it very difficult to tell. The internet was born andgrew dramatically in the space of ten years. Digital camerasappeared, music also became digital, its delivery movingfrom a CD form to an internet feed. However, what is easy toproject is that there will be definitely huge changes andcompanies which are flexible and adaptable will be mostsuccessful in such a time frame. As an example, if you wereoperating like Microsoft in the software business ten yearsago, you could never have forecasted Google posing such abig challenge in the future. Google was born ten years agoin a university; it was not a product, not a business, butonly an idea. The beauty of our industry, its excitement,springs from the fact that concepts, often created by oneperson, can change the face of the whole sector. This meansthat any company wanting to be successful needs to keep itseyes wide opened continually for new ideas. This reasoningmotivates Intel’s involvement in so many joint researchprojects with universities and venture capital—the fundingof startup companies—and allows it to stay close to whatgoes on in the basic research and product worlds. As my bossAndy Grove used to say, only the paranoid survive,otherwise, one runs the risk of being defeated by newtechnologies.

May 1, 2007 0 comments
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Lebanon

Retailors join forces

by Executive Staff April 12, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Major Lebanese businesses, such as Aïshti, Bank Audi, ABC, Patchi, MEA, BankMed, InterContinental Phoenicia, Virgin Megastore, Global Refund and CityMall have joined forces in a new campaign dubbed “Bhebak Bil Rabih,” (I Love You in Spring.) Promoting Lebanon as a tourist and shopping destination in a conference held on March 1, business owners highlighted the activities planned, including fashion shows, festivals, prizes, car giveaways and more. Participants took, however, a stern stance against both the Lebanese government and politicians, who were taxed with irresponsibility for their failure to solve the ongoing political deadlock paralyzing the BCD (Beirut central district) since the beginning of December. 

“In this year alone, we have witnessed a 70% drop in activity. We’re currently trying to compile loss estimates, while our lawyers study different options, including a possible lawsuit,” said Tony Salameh, chairman of the Aïshti department stores. “A committee mainly responsible for looking into rental, electricity and tax expenses with a possible waiver of companies’ payments will be also formed.”

Michel Ferneyni, owner of La Posta, said Lebanon’s political situation presented an unfathomable paradox that started first with the “ongoing dialogue” resulting in the closure of the BCD, followed by “pacific demonstrations,” which crippled the country’s economy. According to participants, to date, over 80 companies have closed down, most of them permanently. Rumors also circulated about the Habtoor Hotel being put up for sale.

Paul Ariss, president of the Syndicate of Restaurant Owners, who met recently with leaders from all political factions, announced that the prime minister’s office had formed a committee, including representatives from the economy, tourism and finance ministries as well as leaders of industry associations to look into possible solutions. In addition, he asked the government to subsidize no interest, medium and long-term loans for existing businesses.

“The greatest damage done is not merely to Lebanon’s economy, but to its image as well, as the people are increasingly losing faith in their country,” concluded Ferneyni. “Many employees, even those with a secure job in Lebanon, are opting for a career abroad, and will never be coming back.” 

April 12, 2007 0 comments
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Lebanon

Radio Orient goes global

by Executive Staff April 12, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Radio Orient, aka Izaat Al Shark, has become the first Arabic language radio station broadcasting worldwide. In its January issue, Forbes included the station, which is owned by Future TV, as number 17 on its list of the top 40 brands in Middle East. This month, in order to take advantage of its new global reach and maximize its coverage, the station is revamping its grid of programs, bolstered by three major shows as well as a prime entertainment program called “With a Stars.”

Available all over the MENA region through its internet and satellite networks, the radio station is using local channels to retransmit its programs. “In some countries they’re even retransmitted in full,” said Elie Rahme, manager of Radio Orient in Lebanon. The program grid has been modified to take advantage of its new global coverage, including the morning show (airing during peak drive time in Australia), the afternoon show (broadcast in the morning in the US), and the night show. The program “With a Star” features a different Arab star every week, with giveaway prizes that have participants calling in from the all over the world.

Although Rahme did not reveal international market penetration figures, he stated that the international audience participation to the station’s various programs is substantial. “The fact that people call from the United States, Iraq, Australia or Africa provides us with a clear idea of the station’s global reach,” he explained. 

Radio Orient is supported by a staff of 17 employees based in Lebanon, with the sound operators and editors shared with Future TV. The joint features of the TV and radio stations explain the unified overall marketing approach, however, it should be pointed out that they do not share advertisement booking deals. “People advertising with Future TV will not necessarily use our radio network, because each medium achieves a different type of exposure,” explained Fayez Bizri, Future TV’s financial manager.

According to Bizri, Radio Orient complements Future TV’s network by reaching beyond the traditional televised medium. “Whether they’re at work or driving in their cars, most people have access to a radio. This exposure will likely increase in countries where driving distances are longer,” says Bizri.

When asked about the cost of the worldwide reach of Radio Orient, Bizri did not disclose any figures, saying, “It is difficult to tabulate leasing, licensing and marketing expenses involved in the process.” He did state, however, that the most advanced technology had been used to place the radio station on the satellite system.

Further bolstering Radio Orient’s appeal is the growth of Future TV’s network. “The TV station expansion plan includes the addition of a 24-hour news channel – scheduled to air in April or June – which will definitely benefit Radio Orient by providing up-to-the-minute reporting,” said Rahme.

During April, Future TV will witness another major overhaul besides its new expansion plan and program grid, when current Chairman Nadim Munla will be replaced by BankMed executive, Samir Hammoud.

April 12, 2007 0 comments
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Financial Indicators

Global economic data

by Executive Staff April 12, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Obesity

Percentage of population aged 15 and above with a MBI greater than 30, 2003 or latest available year

Source: OECD

More than 50% of adults are now defined as either being overweight or obese in no less than 10 OECD countries: the United States, Mexico, the United Kingdom, Australia, the Slovak Republic, Greece, New Zealand, Hungary, Luxembourg and the Czech Republic. By comparison, overweight and obesity rates are much lower in the OECD’s two Asian countries (Japan and Korea) and in some European countries (France and Switzerland), although overweight and obesity rates are also increasing in these countries. Focusing only on obesity, the prevalence of obesity among adults varies from a low of 3% in Japan and Korea to a high of 31% in the United States.

Based on consistent measures of obesity over time, the rate of obesity has more than doubled over the past twenty years in the United States, while it has almost tripled in Australia and more than tripled in the United Kingdom. The obesity rate in many Western European countries has also increased substantially over the past decade.

Gender differences are striking. Over all countries, more men are overweight than women, but in just over half of OECD countries, more women are obese than men. Taking overweight and obesity together, the rate for women exceeds that for men in only two countries—Mexico and Turkey.

Forest

Forest and other wooded land

As a percentage of land area, latest available year

Source: OECD

The percentage of land covered by forest and other wooded land varies widely from country to country: from shares of over 60% in Finland, Sweden, Japan and Korea to 10% or less in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Ireland and Iceland.

Long time series are required to capture changes in forest areas. Increases are generally due to active government policies of land afforestation while decreases may be caused by fires, clear-felling of forests without replanting, and conversion of forest land to residential, agricultural and other uses.

The area of forests and wooded land has remained stable or has slightly increased at national level in most OECD countries and has remained stable in the OECD as a whole. However, forest areas have been decreasing at the world level due in part to continued deforestation in tropical countries.

Tsunami aid

DAC member country responses to the tsunami disaster

Millions of US dollars

Source: OECD

The unprecedented humanitarian response to the Indian Ocean tsunami prompted governments, international organizations, private individuals, charities and companies to pledge $13.6 billion to the affected countries. Of that, $5.3 billion was from OECD member governments, and a further amount from private citizens in OECD countries.

Donor governments and the European Commission have committed $1.7 billion to emergency aid and $1.9 billion to longer-term reconstruction projects, to be spent by 2009. More than 90% of the emergency aid—nearly $1.6 billion—was spent in the nine months immediately following the disaster. For reconstruction, $473 million has been spent, leaving $1.4 billion committed and in the pipeline for spending over the coming years.

Together, Indonesia and Sri Lanka have received more than 60% of the funds committed so far.

Government debt

General government gross financial liabilities

As a percentage of GDP

Source: OECD

From 1990 to 1996, government gross financial liabilities were rising in most countries. Since then, government debt has been decreasing as a percentage of GDP in many of the 27 countries in the table. There are, however, exceptions: government debt ratios continued to increase particularly fast in Japan and Korea and significantly in France, Germany and Greece. Korea’s government debt ratio rose by over 7% per year from 1990 to 2003, but this is measured from a very low initial rate and by 2003, Korea’s government debt ratio was still among the lowest in the OECD.

In 2004, government debt ratios exceeded 100% in Greece, Italy and Japan and was close to 100% in Belgium. Most countries were in a band between 40% and 70%, with three countries reporting debt ratios of under 20%—Luxembourg, Korea and Australia.

April 12, 2007 0 comments
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Financial Indicators

Regional equity markets

by Executive Staff April 12, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Beirut SE: Blom  (1 month)

Current Year High: 1,625.45  Current Year Low: 1,168.36

Between Feb. 28 and March 16, the BSE saw a spike in hope, as much as spikes go in a coma. The index moved from a year low of 1,168.36 points in late February to 1,248 points on March 16, basically driven up by talks between the opposing sides in the Lebanese political quagmire. As the voices announcing impending solutions faded, so did the traders’ enthusiasm and the third week pushed the BSI lower, to 1,224.19 points on March 26. Research, which Dubai-based investment bank Shuaa conducted on Audi Saradar banking group and concluded with a Neutral recommendation, led Audi to shoot back and claim that the fair value of its stock is significantly better than the $61.09 calculated by Shuaa. Audi shares closed at $63 on Mar 26.

Amman SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 7,407.15  Current Year Low: 5,267.27

The Amman Stock Exchange moved sideways in a range above 6,200 points to close at 6,219.51 points on Mar 26. Arab Bank made headlines, beginning with having to deny a story in a US newspaper that warmed up allegations from a lawsuit that the bank had been used to finance “terrorism.” Later in March, the bank said it halted negotiations on a share sale to a strategic investor thought to be Emaar Properties, and the Jordanian government was said to be increasing its shareholding in Arab Bank in order to keep the Hariri family shareholders from buying up a controlling stake. The stock saw some lively trading in March, with a downward drift. Real estate firm Taameer Jordan was one of the main volume movers toward the end of March. Its share price regained in the second half of the month what it had given in the first half.    

Abu Dhabi SM  (1 month)

Current Year High: 4,648.80  Current Year Low: 2,899.43

The Abu Dhabi Securities Market could not sustain the gains it had made in late February when it clawed its way above 3,000 points. The index dropped by 4% between March 1 and its close of 2,939 on March 25. At the end of the month, property and energy stocks were on the sunny side of the ADSM while banking values were selling. National Bank of Abu Dhabi, which issued 40% cash dividend and 30% bonus shares on March 22, traded down by 11% in the week between March 19-26. Banking news from neighboring Dubai with its impending merger between Emirates Bank and National Bank of Dubai mean the NBAD will, upon completion of the merger, lose its claim to being the biggest bank in the UAE.

Dubai FM  (1 month)

Current Year High: 6,987.91  Current Year Low: 3,675.93

The DFM had a bad month in March, as its index weakened by almost 13% to a new year low of 3,675.93 points on March 25, from 4,207.51 points on Feb. 25. The DFM’s own shares started trading. Emaar, which pleased some analysts with a lower than expected dividend of 20% but disappointed stock owners with the move, traded down and was pushed even to a 12-month low of AED 10.60 on March 25 after Dubai Holding said it will acquire 28% in Emaar through a land-for-shares deal. Shuaa Capital bought back 3 million shares and the stock jumped 10.8% on a single day with high trading volume before sliding again.

Kuwait SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 10,812.30            Current Year Low: 9,164.30

The Kuwait Stock Exchange had a period of growth as its index strengthened by almost 6% to 10,341.3 points on March 26 from 9,769.2 points on Feb. 27. Telecommunications events supplied major influences on the KSE. In the beginning of the month, the share price of Kipco got a boost from the company’s extraordinary profit from selling shares in Kuwaiti mobile operator Wataniya to Qatar’s Qtel. Shares of MTC, the leading telco in Kuwait, advanced 15% to KWD 3.20 on Mar 26, from KWD 2.79 on Feb. 28. At the end of March, MTC emerged as highest bidder in the contest for Saudi Arabia’s third mobile phone license.

Saudi Arabia SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 17,730.96            Current Year Low: 6,916.85

The Saudi Stock Exchange ended a month of modest gains and sideways movements with a splash of cold water. The TASI lost 522 points, or just over 6%, on March 26 in its worst one-day drop since falling 6.3% on July 19 of last year. Sell-offs on March 26 included blue chip companies and leading banks such as Sabic, Al Rajhi Bank, SEC, and the two telcos. For the month, the market moved from 8,356.48 points on Feb. 27 to 8,098.36 points on the evening of March 26. Insurance industry IPOs came in a bundle of five simultaneous subscription offerings worth combined SAR 266 million. The Saudi government created a new $320 million company to operate the SSE, with a long-term view of taking the bourse public. 

Muscat SM  (1 month)

Current Year High: 5,956.46  Current Year Low: 4,657.16

After a slide in February to 5,781.1 points on Feb 26, the Muscat Securities Market went down by 216.73 points, or 3.7%, between Feb. 26 and March 14 before regaining some ground to close at 5616.24 on March 26. The sultanate’s primary market raised new expectations as four companies announced IPO plans. Besides engineering firm Galfar’s OMR 60 million flotation, Oman Merchant Bank and government-owned investment firm Takamul (in May) and Oman Oil Marketing Company are the IPO candidates for 2007. Additionally, Al Omaniya Financial Services will float a two-year OMR 8 million convertible bond.

Bahrain SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 2,251.15  Current Year Low: 1,996.68

The Bahrain Stock Exchange closed at 2,130.71 points on March 26, down by 0.6% when compared with its level on Feb. 27. The index had dipped lower in the middle of the month but things appeared uneventful and volumes were once again low. Esterad Investment Company moved up 12% in the second half of March and Nass Corp saw some volume toward the end of the month. Mobile phone operator Batelco announced the purchase of 20% in Yemeni network SabaFon for $144 million.

Doha SM: Qatar  (1 month)

Current Year High: 9,878.10  Current Year Low: 5,825.80

The downward movement of the Doha Securities Market slowed but did not cease and the DSM index slipped 3.5% to 6,060.16 points on March 26 from 6,277.1 points on Feb. 27. This performance put the DSM again as the GCC’s largest underperformer for the year-to-date with a drop of 15% since Jan. 1. After dividend events, banking stocks such as Ahli and Commercialbank paced the market’s downward trend in the later part of the month. Qtel, which initiated the purchase of 51% in Kuwait’s Wataniya telecom, stabilized toward the end of the month. Nakilat continued its rise that started in February and gained 18% in March. DSM market authorities suspended a brokerage for one month for violating regulations.

Tunis SE  (1 month)

Current Year High: 2,712.33  Current Year Low: 1,861.15

The Tunisian Stock Exchange in March traded sideways on a high plateau and the Tunindex closed at 2,610.14 points on March 26, about 100 points below its year high from Feb. 9. Tunis International Bank participated as lenders in a 55 million euros project finance facility for a new residential project in Libya, the first such finance arrangement in Libya’s real estate sector.

Casablanca SE All Shares  (1 month)

Current Year High: 11,552.97            Current Year Low: 6,563.27

The Moroccan exchange broke through the 11,000 points line in early March and scaled further index gains to close at 11,478.87 points on March 26 in continuation of its rise which brought its gain for the year to date to a tidy 21%. Morocco’s central bank said it expects commercial banks in the country to be compliant with Basel II rules by this summer. With ongoing reforms, the central bank also hinted that a loosening of restrictions on investing in foreign bourses might be on the books, which might take steam out of the Casablanca Exchange and its extended rally.

Cairo SE: Hermes  (1 month)

Current Year High: 65,135.08            Current Year Low: 41,965.37

The Cairo and Alexandria Stock Exchanges entered the month with a week of downward motion to the 61,000 points level but the index moved back up and closed at 63,859.80 points on March 26. While Telecom Egypt shares made some gains in late March on news of higher 2006 results and a very faint outlook of a secondary 20% flotation in a few years’ time, Orascom Telecom Holding received three regulatory decisions against its MobiNil affiliate and got disqualified from bidding for the third Saudi mobile license, with rumors going wild on the reasons. Al-Watany Bank found several suitors interested in buying a strategic stake. Emaar Properties subsidiary Emaar Misr said it would file a complaint over a CASE decision refusing to list its shares.  

April 12, 2007 0 comments
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InsuranceSpecial Report

Islamic Insurance: The concept

by Jihad Feitrouni April 12, 2007
written by Jihad Feitrouni

People have used insurance in the past to protect against impact of damages and risks.

In the absence of the social insurance, which Islamic countries shoulder to counter the effect and impact of damage to a nation and its assets, and as the majority of countries relinquished their responsibilities in reinforcing cooperation between their people, there grew the need to look for an alternative that guarantees to protect against damage and loss. This alternative is insurance companies operating in Islamic countries, similar to those commercial insurance companies operating in western countries.

Since the nature of transactions practiced within non-Islamic commercial insurance companies do not comply with provisions of Islamic shariah (and often insure establishments and companies that practice types of business not in compliance with shariah provisions), it became essential to look for an Islamic alternative, one that adopted cooperative insurance principles in its business transactions. Islamic insurance is known as “a collective insurance contract” by virtue of the fact that every contributor pays a specific amount of money as a donation for the purpose of indemnifying other contributions on the basis of solidarity and takaful.

Insurance operations are managed by a specialized company on basis of proxy wakala against a pre-determined charge. The subject of the contract is the commitment by all those insured to bear the risk sustained by another contributor. Thus, it is a contractual relationship based on solidarity and takaful to spread risk.

The role of insurance companies in the Islamic insurance system is to manage insurance operations by way of underwriting and execution since this is beyond the policy holder’s capabilities due to the large number of contributors. The company enters into agreement with the contributors by which it collects insurance premiums and pays incurred indemnity to those who have sustained damages in accordance with the regulations, principles and criteria dedicated for the purpose, in addition to all other operations which are required within the insurance industry. All these duties are performed in its capacity as a proxy wakeel against a predetermined charge. The company promises, in the name, and interest of the contributors, to either indemnify against a great portion of damages and losses sustained or indemnify it totally.

As for insurance premiums which are collected from contributors, it is usually enough to cover operational costs, pay incurred indemnity amounts or allot to all types of technical reserve amounts.

For the purpose of determining the amount of insurance premiums, formal statistical principles are applied for each type of cover. Should the premiums not be enough to meet the liabilities, the deficit will be covered by the shareholders on the basis of al qardh al hasan or  “Good Loan,” and if the company has a reserve balance as a result of insurance premiums profit surplus, the deficit then will be met by that surplus.

Jihad Feitrouni is the general manager of Dubai Islamic Insurance & Reinsurance

April 12, 2007 0 comments
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InsuranceSpecial Report

Region’s insurance market has ups and downs

by Executive Staff April 12, 2007
written by Executive Staff

The insurance industry in the Middle East has been sitting on the launch pad of great expectations for a very long time. Regulatory changes and the growth of Islamic insurance services are central to suppositions that more customers will flock to insurance around the region. In terms of geography, the main carriers of promise are Saudi Arabia and Syria: two severely underinsured countries which both last year implemented legislation opening significant new spaces for insurance providers.

Saudi Arabia is currently buzzing with an insurance gruenderzeit, at least as far as its stock market. All seven companies that staged initial public offerings in the first quarter of 2007 on the Tadawul bourse were insurers, and they offered $162.3 million worth of shares to Saudi subscribers.

The largest of the seven IPOs was that of Medgulf Insurance, the biggest provider in the kingdom after NCCI, the former monopoly provider that pioneered the move of insurance companies to the Saudi stock market when the state-owned company was privatized to 70% through an IPO. Medgulf, which had previously operated in Saudi Arabia through a Bahraini offshore unit, offered 25% of its shares for $53.3 million in late February. Other shareholders in Medgulf Saudi are the companies of the Medgulf Group from Bahrain and Lebanon (together 35%), Saudi Investment Bank (19%), and 21 other investors, most of them Saudi individuals, who hold between 1% and 2% each.   

Medgulf’s late February IPO was preceded by that of Malath Cooperative Insurance and Reinsurance, which offered shares to investors in a $38 million IPO in early February. By taking 47.5% of its capital to market, Malath conducted the largest IPO in the first quarter of 2007 in terms of percentage offered and was the first of 13 insurance providers to fulfill a mandate to take part of their capital public as one of the conditions under which the 13 firms received licenses from Saudi authorities in 2006.

Saudi market looking bright

In March, the Capital Market Authority in Riyadh directed five insurers to undertake simultaneous initial public offerings at the standard share price of SR10 ($2.7) set by the CMA. Subscription to the stocks was open from March 17 to March 26, and the companies offered shares worth a total of just under $71 million.

The five firms that conducted subscription in March were relatively small, offering between $8.3 million and $21.4 million in shares representing between 31% and 40% of their respective capitals for subscription periods that ended on March 26. The companies coming to market are SABB Takaful, and cooperative insurance companies Saudi United, Saudi IAIC, Saudi Fransi and Arabian Shield.

Subscription rates for the five March IPOs were not yet announced when Executive went to print. But the two earlier IPOs got the warm welcome of high demand for their share offerings. Malath reported subscription coverage of 499%, worth $189.4 million. Medgulf reported that its offer attracted subscription requests from 1.4 million persons and demand for shares reached $209 million, or a 400% subscription rate.

The high subscription rates to the two offerings may be indicative that the rulings of Islamic scholars in support of mutual insurance are having more influence than opposing views circulating in Saudi Arabia, which still maintain that all insurance is a game of chance, and thus objectionable under the ban against activities that entail elements of uncertainty and gambling, as well as taking interest from investment portfolios.

While the oversubscription figures signal that the Saudi retail investors regard insurance companies as primary market opportunities that are acceptable under the investors’ religious standards, one cannot easily surmise that the financial attractiveness of insurance IPOs with CMA-mandated issue pricing is a guarantee for the companies’ success in either the retail insurance market or on the bourse.

According to estimates quoted frequently in discussions on the Saudi insurance market, the insurance sector is estimated to value about $2 billion and to have a potential to grow to $4 to $6 billion over the next five-to-ten years (without much adjustment of these estimates in the past two years). This is a minute percentage of the country’s economy, especially when considering that GDP increased to $347.4 million in 2006 and per capita GDP (measured in purchasing power parity) has been growing at rates of more than 5% in 2006 and is expected to grow by another 5% in 2007.

The reasons for optimism on Saudi insurance sector performance in the coming years arise concretely from motor and health insurance requirements, which have become mandatory, and, in general terms, from the kingdom’s economic development and its population growth. There is little evidence to suggest that optimism on the growth of insurance awareness among retail customers and in media, or on vast expansion of insurance sector expertise and human capital, has a strong base. 

While the creation of an insurance sector is seen as an important addition to the financial industry and equity markets of Saudi Arabia, it also seems unlikely that the sector’s arrival will provide a large short-term contribution to widening the institutional investment market or set new milestones in corporate governance. Examples of insurance sectors in other GCC markets over the past few years show them as holding significantly less importance than most other sectors which financial analysts track through sector indices.  

Syrian market grows, too

Just as regulatory forces have been setting the pace for insurance development in Saudi Arabia, authorities in Syria have been infusing a spark of opportunity into their country’s outlook for creating a sustainable insurance industry.  Since last year, insurance firms have received license approvals and started setting up shop in Damascus.

In March, Noor Takaful, a shariah-compliant insurer in Syria whose founding partners include a Kuwaiti-Pakistani insurance joint venture and Jordanian companies, said it would complete a public offering for $15.03 million, or 50.1% of its capital before the end of last month. Similarly, Kuwait-affiliated Syrian insurance company Al Aqeelah Takaful told Executive that it plans an $18.74 million offering for 51% of its capital before the end of spring. Managers at Noor and Al Aqeelah said the firms intend to start operations in April and August, respectively.

The lust for public offerings of financial companies in Syria rests on the foundation of heightened readiness by Syrian authorities to issues operator licenses to insurance providers and is nurtured by tax incentives, which offer firms a 10 percentage point lower tax bracket if they solicit capital participation from the public.

Lebanese insurance firms have been participating in prying open the Syrian market. Arope, a member of the Blom Bank Group, started operations in Damascus in July of last year. While it is too early to look at results of the venture, said Fateh Bekdache, Arope’s general manager in Lebanon, the experience of building something where no private sector insurance existed previously is intriguing. “The start is bumpy,” he said, “simply because it is a new law and a new sector. But it is extremely interesting to start something.”

Like BSO Bank, the Syrian bank linked to the Blom Group, Arope Syria chose to undertake a public offering that brought it tax benefits, which Bekdache cited at a rate of 15% of local taxes instead of 25% of local taxes for companies that prefer a private ownership structure without public offering.

Adir, the insurance daughter of Byblos Bank Group and France’s Assurances Banque Populaire, opted for private ownership in its Syrian venture, which last month received a preliminary license from Syrian authorities and expects to be up and running within six months.

According to Jean Hleiss, Adir’s assistant general manager, the new company will start operating with a $25 million capital and offer general and life insurance products in Syria under the name Adonis Insurance Syria.

Although the Syrian insurance market has been a favorite topic of expansion dreams among Lebanese insurance companies for years, the difficult situation of the Lebanese economy and its repercussions on the insurance sector seem to have somewhat stifled the eagerness for going cross-border. Bank-affiliated firms like Arope and Adir appear to have advantages in venturing east because they are part of groups with deep pockets and have greater access to working capital than standalone operators.

Additionally, having a bank in Syria enhances efficiencies, because the Syrian Insurance Supervisory Commission and the central bank gave “full approval to run insurance operations in the branches of banks,” Bekdache said. Thus, in addition to its head office in Damascus and an office in Aleppo, Arope Syria can base employees in the branch network of BSO and sell its insurance products there.

Lebanon not a fertile growth area

Meanwhile, in Lebanon, insurance growth prospects are faint, at least in the short run. The sector did not take direct hits during the war in July and August of 2006, said Max Zaccar, chairman of Commercial Insurance. “The Lebanese insurance sector was not affected negatively by the war, in terms of premium income,” Zaccar told Executive, adding that marine and transport insurance lines saw small growth in premiums because of greater insurance needs in the summer, and that payment morale among insurance clients actually improved.

Despite the war and political troubles at the end of the year, 2006 was better for Lebanon’s insurers than 2005, added Bekdache. He attributed last year’s satisfactory performance to very good business in the first half and a few good months immediately after the end of the Israeli war.

But for 2007, things are a lot murkier. The main problem is that Lebanese businesses are not making new decisions, because they are waiting for political progress to materialize. Under the circumstances, which include cash flow problems in many companies and private households, “the insurance sector has no new business and companies are fighting over what is there, competing with reduced prices to take slices of business from one another,” Zaccar said.

He added that local insurers also continue to be in a clinch with the Ministry of Economy, over the ministry’s plan to legally mandate insurers to structure companies separately for life and general business, and meet $10 million capital requirements that would only make sense with much more substantial premium incomes than the providers can muster in Lebanon’s $600 million premiums-strong market.   

GCC feeling the pinch

GCC insurance companies felt pressure in 2006, mostly from the downturn in returns for their investment portfolios. As many of the sector companies are highly capitalized and have concentrated on their investment portfolios for the good profits they had in 2005, shifting focus to increase underwriting income quickly does not seem to be an easy path, given that the maturing of regional insurance markets has been following the mantra of the snail, despite all sector talk about rapidly growing insurance industries in countries such as Bahrain and Qatar.

Islamic insurance products will add to the widening of the market, but also in this segment, hype over fast gains and limitless potentials has not been substantiated by the equivalent growth of underwriting activities. In Oman, for example, insurance penetration—the ratio of insurance premiums to GDP—has remained below 1% and the share of life insurance has stagnated below 15% of all premiums, according to a study by BankMuscat.

In all GCC markets, most of the underwriting, moreover, is concentrated in motor and health insurance, exactly the two coverage areas which have more risk and less reward to offer than most other insurance activities. Takaful family and takaful life products, which assist households in creating wealth, may provide a way into greater presence of the benefits that responsible insurance offers to a country, but even by one optimistic scenario for Saudi takaful life insurance growth, premiums would pass the $1 billion mark only by 2015.

The founding wave of new insurance companies thus seems to be the most positive development in regional insurance affairs for the time being. Add to this that multinational insurance firms have shown interest in the market and that a player like Allianz—the world’s number two in the insurance sector—has taken a license to establish a takaful unit in Bahrain. Lebanon also just might harvest some further gains from the interest of multinational players, as the local affiliate of a big international firm is rumored to be in negotiations to buy another firm with several branches in the Middle East, in order to broaden the multinational’s access to the region’s markets.

April 12, 2007 0 comments
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Banking & Finance

Money Matters by BLOMINVEST Bank

by Executive Staff April 12, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Regional stock market indices

Regional currency rates

ARAMEX launches 30,000 square foot one-stop shop at Heathrow

Dubai-listed transportation and logistics solutions provider ARAMEX announced the merger of three of its European companies into one 30,000 square foot one-stop-shop at Heathrowairport, outside London. As such, upon the acquisition of UK-based Priority Airfreight and Dublin-based TwoWay Vanguard, ARAMEX unified these two companies with its Heathrow operations at ARAMEX House, its new premises in Heathrow. ARAMEX reported net profits of AED95.2 million ($26 million), up 28% year-on-year.

Al Baraka posts 20% increase in net profits to $123.7 million

Al Baraka Banking Group (ABG), an international Bahraini-based Islamic Bank, recorded net profits of $123.7 million, up 20% from $102.9 million in 2005. The bank’s total assets were at $7.6 billion, up 21% for the same period, while costumer deposits rose 15.3% to $6.2 billion. ABG underwent an initial public offering in June 2006, leading to a 73% increase in shareholder’s equity to $978.6 million. ABG recently signed a memorandum of understanding with the Arab Trade Finance Program (ATFP), thus becoming the program’s eleventh national agency. ATFP will thus provide credit facilities through a line of credit opened at ABG.

Country profile: Egypt

International rating agency Moody’s Investors Service released its latest report on Egypt affirming Egypt’s government bond ratings at Baa3 with a negative outlook in local currency, and Ba1 with a stable outlook for foreign currency bonds. The report stated that Egypt has been experiencing upturns in growth since 2004, mainly boosted by a rise in international oil prices, a strong tourism sector and strong export performance. Moody’s estimates Egypt’s GDP real growth rate at 6.9% in 2006, up from 4.6% in 2005, and forecasts real growth rates of 6.0% and 5.5% in 2007 and 2008 respectively. Moody’s notes that Egypt’s fiscal deficit declined in 2006 for the first time in five years. The reforms introduced since 2004 are starting to materialize as tariffs and taxes are being reduced and privatization is being revived. Moody’s also stated that despite a manageable external debt burden and an important geostrategic position, the government’s weak fiscal position and fast-growing population are the main credit challenges facing the Egyptian government.

April 12, 2007 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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