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North Africa

Primed to expand

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Last month, on the outskirts of Rabat, the department of investment (DI) held its annual investment conference ‘The Fundamentals of Investment’ with a particular focus on human resources.

During the conference, the DI announced a strategy for developing an efficient education system and labor market policies adequate for the needs of economic development within the framework of the UN Development Program’s Millennium Development Goals.

The flow of foreign direct investment (FDI) into Morocco has risen from $1.63 billion in 2005 to $2.24 billion in the first nine months of the year, excluding privatizations.

An Ernst & Young study on the country’s attractiveness, commissioned by the DI and presented during the conference, said that 46% of the 203 foreign companies surveyed found that the economic situation is more attractive than last year. A third of these companies have no presence in Morocco as of yet.

With inward investments flowing into the kingdom, the strain on the labor market, especially on qualified human resources, has emerged as an important challenge.

The country is facing a potential shortage of qualified engineers, with an increasing number of companies competing for a limited pool.

“One of Morocco’s comparative advantages, the availability of engineers at a good price, risks being eroded,” said Hassan Bernoussi, the DI’s director.

Engineers wanted

Employers in the tourism, textile and agricultural industries, as well as in new sectors such as electronics, automobiles and aeronautics will add to the demand for engineers. A cooperation agreement between the IT Industry Association and the government has identified a need for 30,000 IT engineers within the next 10 years.

For instance, the Casashore project, an outsourcing complex, is expected to create jobs for 1,500 engineers over the next three years.

“We are moving increasingly towards an information economy, where knowledge is becoming a determining factor for success,” said Rachid Belmokhtar, president of Al-Akhawayn University and head of the scientific committee of the conference. During the conference, the government revealed its intention to train 10,000 engineers a year until 2010, by creating engineering programs in the universities and by encouraging cooperation between universities and engineering schools. The prime minister’s office has nominated the Telecommunications Regulation Agency to organize the program.

Increasing graduates

The government intends to increase the number of graduating engineers to 9,000 a year by 2010. An additional 600 professionals will be trained as engineers and 400 engineers are expected to migrate to Morocco every year until the end of the decade. This summer, 24.4% of graduates remained unemployed, ready to be retrained.

The private sector is also poised to play a pivotal role in the training of professionals. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s largest exporter, recently concluded an agreement with the government of Morocco.

TCS will set up a 500-employee offshore delivery center catering to French and Spanish speaking parts of Europe, which will become operational in January 2007. The company will provide IT training services in the kingdom that will help create over 25,000 jobs in the offshore center by 2010.

Europe remains the main source of inward FDI, with an 89% share in 2005. However, growing investments by countries such as the US (predominantly in services and real estate) and Gulf states (in construction and real estate) are changing this trend.

Considering the growing interest by new investors, the DI decided to re-brand itself as ‘Invest in Morocco’ in order to focus exclusively on its role as an investment promotion agency.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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North Africa

Finally finished

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Egypt and Turkey have put the finishing touches on a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that is expected not only to open up new markets for Egyptian business but also boost the inflow of Turkish investments after it comes into force in February.

Trade between the two has been on the rise for the past few years, coming in at $1.1 billion for 2006, a 30% increase on the preceding year. With the FTA in place, both sides are tipping at least a three-fold improvement on the 2006 figures within three years.

The final inking of the agreement, which has been a number of years in the making, took place in Cairo on January 10. The agreement, based on a protocol signed in December 2005 by President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and his Turkish counterpart Ahmet Sezer, allows for Egyptian exports of industrial products to Turkey to be exempt from customs duties. Duties on imports of Turkish industrial goods to Egypt will be phased out over a 12-year period.

There will also be a progressive liberalization of trade in other areas, such as agricultural goods, both raw and processed, fisheries products and service industries.

Yet another step in improved relations

According to Egyptian Trade and Industry Minister Rachid Mohamed Rachid, the FTA is just another step in improving relations and trade ties with Turkey.

There are advantages for both in the way it will allow them to utilize a place of origin, meaning they can both work through the agreements each country has made with other nations, with Europe and other partnerships to help increase the flow of goods, he said after the agreement was concluded.

The minister also saw a longer-term benefit for Egypt. Should Turkey become a full member of the EU, it would act as a bridge between the EU member states and the Mediterranean countries, he said with an eye to the possibly distant future.

Egypt and Turkey also see their FTA as a further step in the Barcelona Process, the plan to make the Mediterranean a free trade area by 2010, said Rachid.

Turkish Foreign Trade Minister Kursad Tuzman said there was much to attract Turkish business, especially the textile sector, to Egypt.

Egypt is a significant country for reaching a lot of markets, he said. Textiles and ready-to-wear clothing in particular are very important in Egypt. The country has high-quality raw materials in this field. Turkey, which conducts a lot of exports in the textile field, is facing difficulties competing against high quality and low priced products. Egypt has a highly skilled labor force.

Trade relations with Turkey were also given another boost when the government announced it had allocated a 2 million m2 plot in the October Sixth industrial city to serve as a free trade zone for Turkish firms. Some 100 Turkish companies, mainly in the textiles sector but also representatives of the automotive, chemicals and manufacturing industries are preparing to move in, an immediate by-product of the FTA.

Most of the industrial zone’s production will be exported, the majority going to Arab countries, with the $2 billion development expected to create more than 20,000 local jobs.

The move of Turkish firms offshore also represents a shift in that country’s economy, which has long touted itself as a destination for foreign capital based on low wages and materials costs.

Countering China?

The Turkish press in particular focused on the deal serving to counter increasing Chinese dominance in the global textiles trade and Beijing’s growing economic clout in the region. Turkey’s domestic textiles industry, long a driving force of the economy, has waned as China’s ready-to-wear clothing makers have waxed in the past few years.

However, for Egypt, China’s burgeoning economic presence on the world stage does not appear to cause the same foreboding as it does in Turkey, and Cairo has been actively working to boost cooperation and attract investments.

Indeed, those very Turkish industrialists setting up shop in Egypt to consolidate their position in the campaign to rein in China’s lead in the textiles wars might find they have some unwanted neighbors in October Sixth City.

During a trip to China last September, Rachid signed an agreement to establish a Chinese industrial zone to accommodate joint Chinese-Egyptian investment in textiles, footwear and pharmaceutical industries. The 500,000 m2 zone will also be located in the October Sixth City.

While Egypt is more likely to see an inflow of Turkish investment than Ankara is to see Egyptian FDI come the other way, both countries will gain from the FTA through an exchange of expertise, access to cheaper goods and, most importantly of all, the opening up of markets.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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GCC

KSA leads in cutting CO2

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

While public awareness of the dangers of global warming still has a long way to go in the Middle East, it is beginning to be taken increasingly seriously. Recent interest in the promotion of Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) policies is seeing the Gulf take a more development-oriented approach to the problems associated with global warming.

The risks associated with global warming to the broader Middle East are numerous. Some scientists have projected that the concomitant rise in sea levels could mean that by 2050 Egypt’s northern coast, including the ancient city of Alexandria (now the country’s second largest city), will be underwater.

The Gulf is already suffering from the warming of the oceans through a phenomenon known as coral reef bleaching, whereby a rise in sea temperature causes symbiotic algae that live on coral reefs to die, making the coral appear white. Equally, many of the luxury seaside developments now taking root across the Gulf could well fall pray to encroaching sea levels.

But perhaps most significant for the region in the medium-term is that the recent interest in global warming has become a new reason to encourage alternative fuels and a move away from fossil fuels, the Gulf countries’ chief export by far. It has also put pressure on the oil and gas industries in the region to go green and lower the emissions created during extraction. Due to their small populations compared to the amount of carbon dioxide they emit, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and the UAE are among the top five emitters per capita in the world.

Kyoto the center of debate

For the past decade, the Kyoto Protocol has been at the center of the debate over what to do about global warming. Signed in 1997, Kyoto aimed at cutting developed countries’ emissions by 5.2% by 2008-2012. However, it has never really taken off, undermined by the demands of rapidly developing economies like China’s for the energy that drives their growth and by the reluctance of some developed countries, most notably the US (which has pulled out of Kyoto), to impose emissions restrictions on industry that might slow down its economy.

In practice, the Kyoto Protocol provides two main ways to control emissions. The most common thus far is emissions trading, a system whereby companies are given a pollution cap to which they must adhere. Unused pollution credits can be sold on free markets to companies that require them. The EU currently runs the largest operating emissions market, the EU Emission Trading Scheme. To apply this idea to Kyoto, the trading would have to be internationally standardized with one market catering to all countries rather than companies.

The main alternative to emissions trading is articulated in Article 12 of the Kyoto Protocol as the CDM. It calls for developed countries with a commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to invest in emission reduction projects in developing countries instead of upgrading their own system. CDM advocates believe this will achieve the same targets in emission reduction at a lesser cost and have the added bonus of encouraging foreign direct investment (FDI) and technology transfers in the developing world. Some 434 CDM projects have so far been registered worldwide, with India and Brazil the top two advocates of the system.

Gulf countries are now trying to increase their involvement in finding solutions to tackle the challenge of climate change while maintaining economic growth. In September 2006, Saudi Arabia hosted the first International Conference on the Clean Development Mechanism, calling for more CDM projects in the region. Mohammad al-Sabban, a senior economic advisor to the Saudi minister of petroleum, described CDM projects as a win for the investor, a win for the country hosting the project, and a win for the environment.

There is a wide variety of CDM projects Gulf countries could benefit from, ranging from promoting the use of clean technology to the reduction of gas venting and flaring to carbon sinks. Some of these technological innovations could even help hydrocarbon exporters extend the longevity of their reserves by 10-15%.

CDM projects have already taken hold in other Arab countries—for example Egypt’s Zaafarana wind power plant on the Red Sea or Morocco’s Essaouira wind power plant on the Atlantic Ocean. At the Riyadh conference, participants suggested a variety of CDM applications of relevance to GCC countries, such as water desalinization plants powered by renewable energy to oil industry specific projects such as carbon trapping, where carbon dioxide is injected into oil fields rather than released into the atmosphere—which can have the effect of increasing the recoverable reserves of maturing oil fields. Countries in the Gulf have also become more aggressive in accounting for their CO2 emissions, with gas flaring now far less common than in the past, and an improvement in the shut-off valves for flare headers, to ensure minimum leakage into the atmosphere.

CDM helps bottom line

Participants at the Riyadh conference from the financial world noted that CDM projects, with their inherent public benefit, could be compatible with Islamic finance—a factor that could make it easier to raise funds regionally. But one major attraction of CDM, particularly for host Saudi Arabia, is to attract FDI as part of the kingdom’s effort to diversify its economy and encourage the transfer of technology.

Indeed, Saudi Arabia’s keenness to move ahead with CDM projects was striking. Al-Sabban, the conference’s chair, promised proactive implementation of CDM policies; public-private cooperation on projects; the rapid development of a legal and structural framework; the creation of workshops to educate local businesses and incentives to reward leading CDM projects.

Such enthusiasm could go hand-in-hand with many GCC countries’ recent focus on encouraging local research and development, especially considering the very specific needs of these countries. CDM technology is, in many ways, on the leading edge of technological innovation. These companies are beginning to realize that companies on the other side do research, says Dr. Jim Holste, the associate dean for academic affairs at Texas A&M University in Qatar, which specializes in petroleum industry research and teaching. If you simply sit back as a consumer of technology, you’re always behind.

One example of technological innovation Holste gives is the recovery of associate gas—gas dissolves in an oil field. Currently associate gas is flared (burnt) which is wasteful and not good for the environment, he said. Synfuels—a Dallas, Texas, based company—has been developing new methods to recover these gases and convert them to liquid fuel (GTL) with a much leaner installation than ordinary GTL facilities. There have been discussions between Synfuels and Kuwait and Qatar about implementing the new technology. It has the ability to be profitable on a much lower scale, Holste says.

CDM, then, could kill two birds with one stone: help GCC countries do their bit against global warming and encourage research that can give a longer lease of life to ageing oil fields.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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GCC

Sector set for expansion

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

It has been a busy few weeks for Kuwait’s telecommunications sector, with the country’s existing mobile phone network operators announcing ambitious expansion plans overseas, while facing the prospect of a new rival in the domestic market.

Kuwait’s mobile phone market is set for a major upheaval after the government announced on Dec. 17, 2006 that it would allow a third license to join Mobile Telecommunications Company (MTC) and the Wataniya Telecom Company.

Decision comes from political pressure

The decision by the Kuwaiti cabinet to back the proposal for a third operator came after considerable pressure from the opposition, which had long contended that the establishing of Wataniya in 1999 had not done enough to boost competition in the telecoms market.

Under the cabinet’s proposal, 60% of shares in the new firm will be available to the public, 24% to state-owned authorities including a pension fund and an investment body and the other 16% to a core local or international investor. The government had rejected a bill tabled by the opposition earlier this year to set up a third operator but appears to have accepted both the economic viability of a new venture and the public pressure for a wider range of options.

The third license has been something of a political football in Kuwaiti politics, with the government contending that it was a matter for the cabinet to decide on while the opposition-dominated National Assembly took the position that it was a legislative issue.

Speaking on December 10, before the cabinet formally approved the proposal for the new network, Communications Minister Maasouma al-Mubarak said that while the government was not opposed to issuing a third license, or more if needed, any such company would be set up through the ministry of commerce and industry and not through mechanisms established by the assembly.

The government firmly believes that establishing companies is the sole jurisdiction of the government and not the legislative power, she said.

Regulation required

Al-Mubarak also said that the government was looking to establish a communications commission to regulate the telecom market, a step that would, to some degree, allay opposition concerns over a lack of competition and ensure transparency.

Whenever the new company becomes operational, it will face fierce competition in the tight Kuwaiti market. The country already has one of the highest levels of penetration in the world, with 2.5 million of Kuwait’s population of 3 million currently subscribing to either MTC or Wataniya.

Though Kuwait’s two domestic mobile phone firms may be facing additional competition at home, the threat hasn’t fazed either MTC or Wataniya. Both have recently announced new plans to expand their already sizeable international operations.

On Dec. 17, MTC announced that it was considering placing a bid for Paktel, Pakistan’s fifth-largest mobile phone company, after the operator’s Luxembourg-based owner Millicom made public plans to bow out of the Pakistani telecoms sector. If the sale goes through, it would give MTC a further 1.5 million subscribers to those it has in its 20 existing overseas operations and allow it to access a rapidly growing market.

Only days before, the international arm of rival Wataniya signed an agreement with the Palestine Investment Fund (PIF) to set up a new mobile phone company in the Palestinian territories. The deal will see the Kuwaiti company manage the operation and hold 40% of the new firm’s shares, with the PIF having another 30% and the remaining slice being offered to the Palestinian public through an initial public offering (IPO).

In September, the Palestinian government’s Ministry of Telecommunications and Information Technology awarded Wataniya the tender to establish the second mobile phone network after the company submitted a bid of $179 million for the rights.

The expansion into the Palestinian market will further consolidate Wataniya’s overseas holdings, with the company also operating in northern Iraq, Tunisia and Algeria.

News of the shareholders agreement came only a day after the Kuwait Projects Company announced that it was considering selling its 24.9% stake in Wataniya, with the proposed move being linked to the general downturn in the region’s stock markets.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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GCC

Oman working to broaden economy with push in tourism sector

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

As is the case with most of the states in the Gulf region, Oman is actively working to broaden the base of its economy and to provide employment opportunities to its expanding local workforce. One sector that has been identified as having great potential is that of tourism, an industry that Oman is particularly well positioned to foster.

Slow out of the blocks

In some ways, Oman has been slow out of the blocks in the race to promote itself as a holiday destination, with a separate Ministry of Tourism only established in 2004. That said, the Sultanate already had in place a sound tourism infrastructure and has fast become a serious rival to other Gulf states, such as the UAE, that have also seen tourism as a viable option for their economies.

Market analysts are predicting the Omani economy to expand by 5.9% in 2007, following 5% growth last year, placing it just behind Qatar and the UAE and well ahead of Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait. Contributing to the solid growth rates in 2006 and 2007, the tourism sector grew by 16% in 2006 and looks set for a bumper year in 2007.

Oman’s tourism sector launched itself into 2007 on a high, fuelled by strong bookings through the Eid al Adha break, with hotels and resorts reporting a 90% occupancy rate during the holiday.

Oman has joined the regional mania for building whole self-contained metropolises from the ground up, with the announcement of the Blue City project on the coastal region at Al Sawadi. The project, with a total budget estimated at between $15 to $20 billion, will include more than 200 villas, some 5000 apartments, four hotels, golf courses and retail centers.

According to Renny Borhan, senior vice president of Hill International, the US construction firm that won a six-year contract in early January to provide technical advisory and oversight services for the project, the new mega development will be a significant boost to the Omani tourism industry. “The Blue City development will make the country of Oman a major destination in the Middle East,” Borhan said.

Tourism as a cure for unemployment

Oman’s government has identified the labor-intensive tourism sector as a way of relieving the growing unemployment problem. The 2007 budget unveiled by Economy Minister Ahmed bin Abdulnabi Macki on January 7 included a number of large ticket items to boost tourism-related infrastructure. Foremost among these are funding for further improvements to the Muscat Seeb International Airport, as well as consultancy studies for the construction of two new airports. Other general infrastructure projects, including major highway links and water, wastewater processing and electricity upgrades will all have a positive effect on the country’s tourism sector.

In addition, the state has provided the required land and a soft loan of $7.75 million to assist in the development of a golf course, a residential complex and hotels close to Muscat. On January 6, the Oman Arab Bank and Bank Dhofar signed an agreement to finance the residential phase of the project, which has already seen the completion of a series of high-end villas and apartments that will cater to the region’s golf lovers and those from further afield. The course will be fully grassed during 2007 and brought up to international standards, another step in Oman’s campaign to increase its share of the tourism market in the Gulf.

However, while Oman has seen a flourishing of tourism developments in recent years, with many lavish new projects either on the drawing board or set to start construction in 2007, the country has also somewhat sought to distance itself from the luxury brand holidays offered by its neighbors. Omani tourism operators, encouraged by the government, are looking to cash in not only on the sun and fun aspects of tourism but there has also been a strong emphasis on adventure tourism including diving, safaris, off-road driving, trekking, camping and mountain climbing.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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GCC

Regional stock storms

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

Despite the market volatility throughout the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region, the Muscat Securities Market (MSM) has experienced overall growth of 12% in 2006.

In a report issued in August, Merrill Lynch named Oman as one of the top four most attractive markets in the Middle East and North Africa region. The other countries named in the report were Egypt, Bahrain and Kuwait.

Neighboring markets in the Gulf slumped from record highs earlier last year. In Saudi Arabia, the downturn came after three years of growth.

Ahmed Saleh al-Marhoon, the director general of the MSM, said that what happened this year was unprecedented in the region. The unrealistic index increases were bound to lead to a correction, which is what started happening in late February 2006.

In Saudi Arabia, the Tadawul All Share Index grew almost eightfold between March 2003 and February 2006. By late November, the Tadawul was operating 49% lower than the same period during the previous year. Meanwhile, the Dubai Financial Market had fallen 64% and Doha 42% over the same period.

MSM sees realistic increase

Comparatively, the MSM did not suffer from such a slump. “If you trace the movements, you will see a realistic increase reflecting real economic growth,” al-Marhoon said.

A small dip was recorded from March through the summer and al-Marhoon explained this as normal market behavior. “The MSM is not immune to sentiments in the region,” he added.

A limitation for attracting investors to the MSM, despite its stability, is its size. The market has about 140 listed companies of which about 40 actually get traded. The Bank Sohar initial public offering (IPO) was the only IPO released on the market in 2006.

Earlier in January, Bank Sohar released the $51.9 million IPO, which represents 40% of the total paid up capital, the minimum required to be listed on the MSM as decided by the regulator, the IPO oversubscribed by six times.

The market wants more IPOs

Al-Marhoon said that the market would like to see more IPOs, as a way to enrich it and attract more investors.

A number of other IPOs were expected last year, notably through government privatization. However, these have been delayed. Al-Marhoon said the government was still committed to privatization but procedural matters had to be dealt with.

Meanwhile, Galfar Engineering and Contracting, the sultanate’s largest private construction company, announced last July that it would go public by November, but this was delayed until 2007. The company is expected to release $130 million, said Mohammed Ali, the managing director of Galfar.

Al-Marhoon said that most IPOs expected over the next few years would come from some of the new tourism developments and oil related industries.

The MSM has also identified the large family businesses and groups that are active in the private sector, which as of yet have tended not to go public.

Al-Marhoon said that he would like to see more family businesses go public. He said it was in their interest, as it would allow for new blood, new ideas and diversification.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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GCC

Economic projects

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

On December 16, Amr al-Dabbagh, the governor of the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority (SAGIA) discussed how the kingdom’s ambitious economic cities projects would break new ground in the integration and use of information and communications technology (ICT).

Al-Dabbagh spoke during a forum entitled Intelligent Cities, held in Riyadh. The forum discussed the concept of the project and the investment opportunities associated with the cities. All are to be solely funded by the private sector but al-Dabbagh was quick to emphasize the government was offering tremendous support to the initiatives.

In addition, the head of SAGIA also announced two new cities, which would bring the total to six. Studies are underway to establish two new economic cities in the northern and eastern regions, al-Dabbagh said.

The four cities announced to date are King Abdullah Economic City in Rabigh, on the coast north of Jeddah, Prince Abdulaziz bin Mousaed’s Economic City (PABMEC) near Hail, Knowledge Economic City in al-Madinah, and Jizan Economic City. SAGIA estimates that these projects alone will attract $80 million in investment.

Liberalizing restrictive regulations

SAGIA was founded in 2000 on the back of the government’s new Foreign Investment Law which paved the way for liberalizing some of the kingdom’s traditionally restrictive regulations regarding the rights of private foreign investors. The authority has the mandate to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) and increase economic diversification, particularly through knowledge-based enterprises.

The government’s economic strategy, of which SAGIA is but a part, centers on diversifying the economy. Another vital aspect is the creation of employment opportunities for the growing population—an estimated 60% are under the age of 14. Among these and other strategies there remains a strong emphasis on spreading wealth equitably throughout the kingdom.

The economic cities projects are intended to go some way in fulfilling both SAGIA’s stated objectives and the government’s broader economic vision by enabling diversification and creating jobs, as well as steering the kingdom into a prime position to compete on the global stage.

Al-Dabbagh and the other speakers emphasized that through the creation of completely new cities on Greenfield sites, a great opportunity existed to give Saudi Arabia a huge competitive advantage in terms of ICT and the benefits it can offer to business and industry. Combining the concepts of the ‘digital city,’ originally coined by the Intel Corporation, the ‘smart city’ by Cisco and the ‘internet frontier’ by Microsoft, SAGIA intends for the cities to be at the cutting edge of ICT systems, integrating all aspects of the infrastructure networks to enable transfer of information at every possible level. Attendant to this would be software and content creation opportunities.

Abdullah al-Rakhis, the chairman of Rakisa Holding, the company responsible for developing PABMEC, said the project would create a ‘silicon valley’ style area at a cost of some $22 million. This project at Hail is specifically intended to focus on ICT, taking a less prominent role in other areas. He said that the project had the potential to create some 600 jobs for women alone.

A human resource challenge

Al-Rakhis was also quick to highlight how aware of the human resource challenge his project and the broader ICT sector needed to be. “We have started to send a number of Saudis to the US, Canada, Ireland and Singapore for training on smart infrastructure facilities,” he said, speaking of the initial preparations already being made. He also spoke of the associations Rakisa Holding had already made with companies such as Cisco and Intel in terms of training.

Intel Corporation’s Chairman Craig Barrett, who was in Riyadh, unveiled a series of agreements with the Saudi government, including a commitment to train 50,000 Saudi teachers in their Intel Teach Essential Program. His comments echoed those made in a similar speech by Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates back in November. He also signed a number of commitments to spur on ICT development and train Saudis.

Also, earlier this year, fellow US firm Cisco Systems announced an investment of $300 million in the kingdom’s ICT sector when John Chambers, the president and CEO, visited the kingdom.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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GCC

Two private air licenses

by Executive Staff February 8, 2007
written by Executive Staff

After much speculation, two private airline licenses have been awarded, heralding the beginning of a new era for aviation in Saudi Arabia.

The Supreme Economic Council, which is personally headed by King Abdullah and steers the kingdom’s economic development, decided in 2005 to liberalize the sector and allow private operators to set up and compete with the state-owned Saudi Arabian Airlines.

There were six applicants for the licenses last year, which the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) whittled down to two. The successful bidders were Sama Airlines and National Air Services (NAS) both winning on a mandate to offer low cost services across the kingdom with a view to expanding outside in the future.

Riyadh-based NAS is one of the best known regional private aviation operators in the kingdom, which has one of the highest appetites for private air travel in the world. Ali al-Naqbi, Chairman of the Middle East Business Aviation Association, recently said that the business aviation sector in Saudi Arabia accounted for 50% of the total for the whole region—a market he estimated would be worth $800 million by 2012.

NAS has developed NetJets, a fractional ownership and leasing program in the kingdom and also operates evacuation services for oil companies operating in remote locations, along with other bespoke services.

Founded in 1999 and focussing on top-end private aviation, NAS’s board announced last April at a shareholders’ meeting that it intended to increase the paid up capital to $266.7 million through a 30% equity sale to Abraaj Nas Investment Co, a subsidiary of Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal’s Kingdom Holding Co. It was said at the time that this was meant to facilitate new strategic directions, which would now appear to be towards budget travel and acquiring a civil aviation license.

Getting into the low-cost market

Mohammed al-Zeer, the president of the company, recently explained to the press that the decision to break away from the top-end of the sector and enter into the low-cost carrier (LCC) market had been made after careful consideration and consultation with companies such as the British-based budget airline EasyJet. Subsequently EasyJet has announced that it has entered talks regarding franchising its brand to NAS.

The company will start its LCC services with a fleet of five single aisle planes. In December, the company announced its intention to purchase additional craft as part of a $2 billion expansion program, which would increase its entire fleet to 100 by 2010.

The other licensee Sama is similarly aiming to develop services geared towards the low cost market. Founded by Prince Bandar bin Khalid al-Faisal, who owns Investment Enterprises, it has a paid-up capital of $53 million. Other shareholders in the enterprise include some of the largest names in Saudi business such as the Dallah and Olayan Group and some wealthy individual investors.

Sama intends to begin operations flying between Dammam, where it will be based, Jeddah and Riyadh, before pushing further afield and regionally when it receives licensing from neighboring jurisdictions.

With targets similarly ambitious to those of rival NAS, Sama’s CEO, Andrew Cowen, explained to the international press, “We plan to grow our fleet from the existing four committed aircraft to around 35 by 2010.” He declined to specify the leasing company they were in talks with, but did say that the terms would be between five and seven years.

Takeoffs as yet delayed, however

It is not as yet clear when either airline will commence full operations but they are set to compete not only between themselves but also with the state incumbent, Saudi Arabian Airlines. The national carrier is undergoing a slow and reputedly painful process of privatization. One Riyadh analyst said, referring to the reported bloated bureaucracy and over-staffing, that it should benefit from the competition in the long run—whether or not this will speed up the lackluster path to privatization remains to be seen.

What is clear though is that the consumer is set to benefit with the arrival of two new operators. With 33 million passengers passing through Saudi Arabia’s 27 airports in 2006, the market is large and all indications point to further growth. International Transport Association figures released in November 2006 indicate that regional carriers experienced a 15.4% increase during the first nine months of the year.

The GACA is spending $8 billion expanding and developing the existing airports in Jeddah, Madinah and Tabuk to bring them up to international standards. There is also an additional international airport on the drawing board as part of the enormous King Abdullah Economic City development in Rabigh, on the Red Sea coast, north of Jeddah.

February 8, 2007 0 comments
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Banking & Finance

European – Lebanese partnership on tap

by Executive Staff February 1, 2007
written by Executive Staff

New seeds for economic growth were engineered last month in Beirut when the European Investment Bank and Byblos Bank Group announced that their collaboration had progressed another step towards establishing an investment company, which will take private equity stakes in small and medium enterprises in Lebanon and three other Middle Eastern countries—Syria, Jordan and Egypt.

The joint venture of Byblos and the EIB’s Facility for Euro-Mediterranean Investment and Partnership (FEMIP) involves EIB capital participation of up to 7.5 million euros ($9.8 million) in the private equity firm which plans to formally commence operations in the middle of this year.

According to Byblos Bank, the investment company by name of Byblos Ventures will initially work with a capital of $20 million, but the partners have made provisions to be able to expand this amount to up to $50 million if the project sprouts with full vigor.

Private equity projects taking off Private equity projects are a hot issue in the Middle East. A new lobby group for this financial method said last month that private equity funds in the GCC countries last year attracted investor interest to the tune of raising $10 billion in 2006, an almost 76% increase in new funding over 2005. As recently as three years ago, private equity funds in the GCC had to get by on managing only a handful of billions in investments, but this volume has grown to $18 billion last year and is poised to increase by further leaps and bounds, said the Gulf Venture Capital Association in January.

In this part of the region, Byblos Ventures is the third recent private equity project announced in Lebanon and the second that is funded in part by the EIB.

The first launch party happened last spring when Capital Trust and EIB teamed up for the EuroMena Fund, aiming at investments in companies in the Levant and North Africa that are ready to make the step from national to regional players and require funding for expansion. EuroMena was promoted at the time as EuroMena 1, to be followed by EuroMena 2. However, the fund’s growth seems to have been more cautious in its early phase as its managers told Executive at the Byblos Ventures press conference that they have so far entered into two participations ranging in size “between $3 and $15 million.”

The third new private equity fund that just started approaching hopeful investors is the Building Block Fund, which centers on companies with a Lebanese angle and new enterprises with emphasis on technology and services companies. It is a brainchild of Bader Lebanon, an initiative of young business personalities, and aims at raising a capital of $20 million, half of that before the end of March.

Bullish on Lebanon

Speaking to media at the signing of the partnership agreement with Byblos, EIB vice president Philippe de Fontaine Vive was all praise and cheer for Lebanon. The work on creating the private equity project with Byblos Bank Group took 18 months but was “not at all” delayed by the conflict between Israel and Hizbullah last summer and recent internal political disputes between Lebanon’s cabinet and opposition groups, de Fontaine Vive told Executive. “Lebanon will recover with Paris III and we have full optimism that this is the time to invest in Lebanon,” he said.

Byblos Ventures is based on a two-year-old ongoing technical collaboration for which Byblos, according to de Fontaine Vive, volunteered as the only Lebanese bank at that time. An earlier fruit of the collaboration was a $60 million global loan agreement, signed in February 2006.

Under a complex structure for creation and management of Byblos Ventures, the Lebanese banking group will take responsibility for supplying 50% of the capital in the new firm while FEMIP is committed to a 25% stake. Both will adjust their actual dollar contributions in the equity of Byblos Ventures to reflect the percentage stakes agreed upon. This would set the practical ceiling for the project at closer to $40 million, based on a statement by de Fontaine Vive that the capital participation authorized by EIB is capped at 7.5 million euros.

According to Paul Chucrallah, assistant general manager for Byblos Invest Bank in charge of managing Byblos Ventures, the structure to establish and manage Byblos Ventures will entail the creation of another new subsidiary in Byblos Group, which will be named Byblos Management and run Byblos Ventures on the legal basis of minimal stake holding.

As a time-limited project, Byblos Ventures has an investment horizon of ten years, maximum twelve years, divided into two stages of activity. These stages—that can partly overlap—are an investment phase of three to five years and an exit phase for the remainder of the project’s lifespan.

Expanding Byblos Management’s mandate

Byblos Management, however, could pursue projects beyond this first private equity undertaking, Chucrallah told Executive. He characterized the transfer of knowledge and the development of advanced professional skills as benefits from the collaboration between the Lebanese bank and the EIB that are even more important than their financial cooperation.

Based on this knowledge transfer and skill development, Byblos Ventures will be able to participate in the equity of traditionally family-owned firms in the region on an unprecedented level and function as accelerator for the growth of invested companies, Chucrallah said.

In other practical manners, investments into individual companies will vary between $1-2 million in size and no single investment will exceed 10% of Byblos Ventures’ equity base. Per sector, investments will be limited to 40% of the investment company’s equity, and its private equity participations are intended to focus 50% on Lebanon but this rule is flexible.

Byblos Ventures is geared to help in the development of companies by contributing both funding and expertise and Chucrallah said the project team could start engineering equity participations even before the formal launch later this year. No one could have appeared happier about this than an exuberant Joseph Raidy, the chairman of Beirut-based Raidy Printing Group.

“Byblos Ventures will help industrialists in two ways, through bringing money and through improving the structure of companies, because these are very professional people,” Raidy told Executive, adding that his company will be perhaps the first to benefit from the equity participation. He called the arrival of Byblos Ventures, “a great step for Lebanon.”

February 1, 2007 0 comments
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Retrospective

Saddam Hussein: 1937-2006

by Executive Staff February 1, 2007
written by Executive Staff

In February 1991, former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, visited Tehran and met with Iran’s president, Ali Akhbar Rafsanjani. Neighboring Iraq figured high in the conversation. The US and its allies had just launched the ground war to liberate Kuwait from Iraqi occupation forces, this coming three years after the end of the disastrous Iran-Iraq war which cost over a million lives and devastated the economies of both countries.

During the meeting, Gandhi asked Rafsanjani whom he thought should and could rule neighboring Iraq. Rafsanjani thought for a moment and then replied, “Saddam Hussein.”

What a depressing assessment it was that, in the mind of Rafsanjani, only a pitiless despot like Saddam could hold Iraq together and prevent its sectarian and ethnic divisions from plunging the country into a Hobbesian bloodbath.

Doubtless, that was one of Saddam’s final thoughts as he meekly accepted the noose around his neck and scoffed at the jeers and taunts of his Shi’ite executioners, telling them that Iraq today was like hell without his iron grip.

An apposite finale

Still, his execution—for all its sordidness—was perhaps an apposite finale for a man whose brutal role over Iraq and reckless foreign entanglements shaped the course of history in the Middle East for over a quarter century.

“He was a catalyst, he made things happen and usually they were not positive and constructive but he constantly kept the Middle East in a state of turmoil,” says Gary Sick, professor of International Affairs at Columbia University.

Saddam was perhaps the last of the ‘great’ Arab nationalist dictators, his rule being founded in an ideology of left-leaning secular and militaristic nationalism; he became little more than a vicious sectarian mafia boss, plundering the wealth of his country and murdering its people to maintain his grip on power.

Iraq was always fated to play a key role in the Middle East due to its massive oil wealth, geographical proximity to non-Arab, mainly Shi’ite Iran, and potential financial and military weight in the Arab-Israeli conflict. But it was the potent mix of Saddam’s over-arching ambition and sense of destiny combined with an impulsive and vengeful nature that propelled Iraq into a series of disasters that has left an indelible mark on the region.

Saddam’s rise to absolute power began in 1968 when he participated in a bloodless coup that saw his cousin Ahmad al-Hassan al-Baqr become president. In the 1970s, Saddam, who gradually came to overshadow the president, helmed an economic modernization program, funded by the proceeds of the 1973 oil boom. Iraqis were granted free education and hospitalization and campaigns were launched to eradicate illiteracy. Saddam also helped forge a sense of national unity rooted in Baath Party ideology, smothering Iraq’s diverse ethnic and sectarian composition.

Despite his later tendency to make colossally bad foreign policy decisions, he had some success during the mid-1970s in outflanking Israel and US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. In the wake of the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Kissinger conspired with the Shah of Iran and Israel to foment a Kurdish uprising in northern Iraq. The goal was to tie down the Iraqi army and prevent it from coming to the assistance of Syria if another war with Israel were to break out. But Saddam made a separate deal with the Shah, offering to share the Shatt al-Arab waterway between their two countries if Iran dropped its support for the Kurds. Iran closed its border to the Kurds, allowing Saddam’s army to crush the rebellion.

However, Saddam continued to resent the deal he struck with the Shah and it was one of the reasons why he went to war with Iran five years later.

“He was able to bring to Iraq a sense of development for a period … Then it was all destroyed year after year with adventurous decisions,” says Shafeeq Ghabra, a Kuwaiti professor of politics.

Saddam pushed aside the ailing al-Baqr and became president in 1979, the same year that the Shah was toppled by the Islamic revolution that brought Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to power. The rise of a militant Shi’ite theocracy in Iran alarmed the Sunni Arab Gulf. Saddam, fearing Khomeini’s influence over Iraq’s restless Shi’ites and tacitly backed by his Sunni Gulf neighbors, invaded Iran in 1980, setting in motion the devastating eight-year war.

Saddam intended to smash the disorganized fledgling Islamic regime in Iran, an act that would confirm his leadership of the Arab world and earn the gratitude of his neighbors in the Gulf. But the war had the unintended consequence of strengthening Khomeini’s rule.

“It forced the Islamic revolution to get out of its zealous craziness and begin to organize itself and pull itself together,” says Professor Sick, an Iran specialist. “In a way, Saddam stabilized the Iranian revolution and kept the mullahs in power.”

Bringing Iran and Syria together

The conflict also triggered an alliance between Iran and Iraq’s arch enemy, Syria, which was ruled by a rival branch of the Baath Party. The Iranian-Syrian relationship has proved enduring: in the past year, it has further strengthened to become one of the region’s most significant geo-strategic alignments.

When the Gulf war ended in 1988, the Iraqi economy was in ruins with some $75 billion owed to Iraq’s Gulf backers. Relations between Iraq and Kuwait steadily deteriorated over the next two years with the latter’s refusal to forgive the war debt and cut oil production to raise revenues for Iraq. A bitter Saddam sent his war-weary army into Kuwait in August 1990, triggering a fresh convulsion in the Middle East.

The US assembled an unprecedented coalition of Arab and European allies to remove Iraqi forces from Kuwait. The second Gulf war also marked the beginning of a prolonged US military deployment in Saudi Arabia, which would later be used by Osama bin Laden to partly justify his anti-American actions, culminating in the attacks of September 11, 2001.

The crippling UN sanctions on Iraq during the 1990s, the most severe against any country in UN history, devastated an already weakened economy, but failed to bring down Saddam’s regime.

Although the 2003 US-Anglo invasion of Iraq finally ended his long tyrannical rule, its aftermath has turned Iraq into a byword of sectarian violence and bloodshed with no end in sight.

Although Saddam is dismissed by most Arabs as a tyrant who ran a regime of unmitigated brutality and greed, some regard him as a champion of Arab steadfastness against American “imperialism” and Israeli aggression. Indeed, it is a telling indicator of how badly the Americans have messed up in Iraq that the cruel, corrupt despot they removed in the name of democracy and freedom ended his days akin to a folk hero for many embittered and nervous Arab Sunnis, who resent the empowerment of Shi’ites in Iraq and fear Iran’s hegemonic designs on the Middle East. The poor, crushed and abused Palestinians have long looked up to Saddam, gratefully receiving his millions of dollars and words of support while overlooking the fact that his actions were little more than a cynical manipulation of their plight to curry popularity and burnish his Arabist credentials.

Although the main pretext for toppling Saddam was his alleged arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, the American architects of the invasion also hoped that the Iraqi dictator’s demise would trigger a domino-effect in the Middle East, with other Arab autocracies falling to be replaced with Western-friendly democracies.

Saddam’s downfall empowered the despots of the region

But US mismanagement of occupied Iraq, the tenacity of the Iraqi insurgency and the rise of Shi’ite-Sunni hostilities has had the opposite effect, dealing a blow to the democratization project in the Middle East. Indeed, the violence has grown so bad that recent polls suggest that most Iraqis believe life was better under Saddam. The implicit message has reassured to the region’s autocrats, who can point to the chaos in Iraq to justify their own iron-fisted rule and clamp down on calls for democratic reforms.

“The downfall of Saddam and its aftershocks only empowered the regimes of the Middle East,” says Sami Moubayed, a Syrian political analyst. “Leaders can now say, ‘Look to Iraq. This is what the Americans will bring.’”

Truly, Saddam was a monster, but given America’s failure in Iraq and the sectarian disaster it has spawned, Iraqis and other Arabs could be forgiven for thinking that perhaps there was something after all to Rafsanjani’s discouraging recognition of Saddam’s qualities as ruler.

February 1, 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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