Obbligazioni bancarie KAZAKISTAN e banche kazake (1 Viewer)

METHOS

Forumer storico
2. Kazakh bankers feel state's whip
( Kazakhstan , April 16, 2009-issue 560)

By Charles van der Leeuw
TCA contributor

ALMATY (TCA) -- Could Kazakhstan 's current banking and finance deadlock turn into a Shakespearian royal drama? If so, it started some time ago when the sky looked a lot clearer than it does today. And as with Shakespeare, it is far from clear who are the heroes and who the villains. It looks like a Kazakh-style New Millennium version of the historic struggle between Fouquet and Colbert. The real game, however, is much more than theatre: without state intervention, capital could still be flowing out of Kazakhstan in astronomical amounts.

It started with what looked like a "clean", technical operation. The Kazakh state took over a three-quarter-plus stake in Bank Turan Alem (BTA), the country's biggest bank by gross revenue and there was bound to be a change of the guard, brought about by the new majority shareholders. But the operation was already out of the ordinary. Instead of just taking a share of 25 percent plus one vote, which according to both Russian and Kazakh legislation means a blocking share through which the interested party can overrule a majority decision by veto, the state virtually overnight took an overwhelming majority.


Kazakh ‘new capitalists’

It started after last year's summer, when the Kazakh government decided to follow the US example and bail out the country's most troubled banks by injecting extra capital in exchange for blocking shares. This included the Halyk Savings Bank of Kazakhstan , the now fully private former Kazakh branch of the All-Union People's Savings Bank in Soviet times. It also included Kazkommertsbank and BTA. Alliance Bank, Kazakhstan 's fourth-ranking bank in terms of revenue, was on the brink of the abyss and saw a hundred percent takeover for a symbolic 100 tenge in exchange for a deposit of up to $200 million.
Shares in Alliance Bank are quoted and traded on the London Stock Exchange. The bank used to be controlled by a group of Kazakh "new capitalists" united in Seimar Holding. Its new head, pending the completion of the takeover, is Maksat Kabashev, a top official of the Samruk Kazyna holding, which acts on behalf of the state in managing state-owned assets.


Fears of asset-stripping

But while the effective takeover of Alliance and the state entry into Kazkommertsbank and Halyk Bank was still hanging in the air, in late January the country's financial plush was more than perturbed by the announcement that the state would increase its share in BTA to 78.14 percent - which it did on February 2 through a capital injection of 251 billion Kazakh tenge; Government officials for a while argued that claiming the state's share proportion was justified by the bank's need for cash. Fears of asset-stripping, however, now appear to have been the main motive for the drastic move by the Kazakh authorities.
Another motive may have been the interest displayed by Russia's Sberbank, which took over mid-size Texaco Bank two years ago and thereby obtained a niche market in Kazakhstan. A similar takeover of BTA would turn Sberbank into by far the biggest bank in Kazakhstan . Along with BTA, it would also inherit Temir Bank, bought out by BTA earlier with the aim of re-selling it to an Israeli banking consortium - a deal which appears to have fallen through.


Momentary asset-strengthening

BTA could still be considered a healthy enterprise - at least at a glance. The bank posted 12.7 billion tenge ($103 million) in net income over the past year, down 74 percent from the previous year. It held 2.9 trillion tenge in asset value as of December 31, 2008, up from 2.6 trillion at the end of the previous year, Bloomberg reported on February 3, quoting company statements. It suggests that profits have been used for the purpose of momentary asset-strengthening against liabilities, time for which is running out.
By comparison, Halyk Bank posted 9.7 billion tenge in net profit, down 70 percent from 2007, with its assets increasing from 1.57 trillion tenge to 1.62 trillion. As for the Alliance Bank, its profit dropped by 92 percent on-year to 2.6 billion tenge – but, in contrast to its peers, assets also fell from 1.2 trillion to around 1 trillion tenge. Second-ranking Kazkommertsbank posted a 99.5 percent drop in profit to a mere 229 million tenge over 2008, with assets declining by 14 percent on-year to 2.3 trillion tenge. According to Bloomberg, Kazkommertsbank, which is also traded on the LSE, wants 36 billion tenge for a state-held share of 25 pecent plus one vote.
It looks indeed as though Kazakh banks and their management teams have been frantically digging through their assets in order to mobilize cash in the face of bad loans, a substantial part of which will have to be written off.
"Profit across all of Kazakhstan 's 37 banks plunged 93 percent to 15.4 billion tenge in 2008 from a year earlier as they boosted reserves to protect against delinquent loans, while increasing assets 1.8 percent to 11.9 trillion tenge," Bloomberg's report quoted above read, citing numbers given by Samruk Kazyna. Looking at the banks' figures, the numbers fail to add up, but the mechanism seems clear.


Hit by home-runs

There may though be more to the results presented by the banks, including BTA. Though the gross value of assets at the time of the latest operation stood in the order of $31 billion, the quality of those assets left much to be desired. The bank's board in its reports was thought to have overstated the assets posted on its balance sheet while understating its liabilities. This could explain the paradox surrounding its reserves and its shortage of liquidity in the face of its obligation to pay back its loans to international banking syndicates of up to $12 billion dollars, about one-third of which has to be returned before the end of the current calendar year. It could also be the key to prosecutors' suspicions that the owners through their positions on the board have been filling their own pockets by taking money out of the tube supposed to turn capital assets into liability coverage.
Understating liabilities and overstating assets does not make BTA particularly exceptional and fails to explain the action taken by the government to seize practically all of it. According to state officials, voicing their views in Bloomberg's report, BTA much more than other banks has been a key station for capital flight out of the country as domestic assets were hit by home-runs which left them with little more than historic value, while depriving them of more than half of their market value.
"BTA continues to lend money to non-resident borrowers registered in tax havens abroad without requiring them to reveal the loans' real beneficiaries," Bloomberg's February 3 report read. "About 47 per cent of BTA's loans are to non-residents, and most are for real estate projects in Russia ." If this is true, it not only clarifies why BTA was singled out but also the reason for the government's flirtation with Russia 's Sberbank.


Trumpeting protests

The state in which BTA was found by its new owner was enough not only to sack the President of the bank, Mr. Mukhtar Ablyazov, and his Deputy Roman Solodchenko, but also for prosecutors to open investigations against both men and over a dozen other top officials for alleged forgery, embezzlement and other abuses. The list of accusations bore a remarkable resemblance to those against Russia 's tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the one-time head of the country's largest oil company Yukos, now worth "only" a few hundred million US dollars and serving a long prison term in southern Siberia .
Khodorkovsky’s protestations that he had done nothing wrong and was the victim of plots forged by the state and loyalist business circles in Russia must have inspired Ablyazov and his associates to sing a similar tune in Kazakhstan . On February 1, Ablyazov was sacked and the board replaced by people on behalf of the Government. The former banker left the country the same day, but not without decrying the "abuse of power" and "corporate raiding" by the state.


‘A shift of power’

Ablyazov's opinion was echoed by that of Solodchenko who also escaped with his family some weeks later, and stated on leaving that he believed the takeover of BTA was meant to "destroy" it.
“It is clear that if negative tendencies continue, the search for culprits will begin,” Solodchenko was quoted by local media on March 25, following a wave of arrests among other former BTA executives including another Deputy President of the board Zhaksylyk Zharimbetov. Reuters had already stated in a comment dated February 2 that: "Ablyazov's departure heralds a shift of power in Kazakh business, a worrying trend for investors relying on continuity of policy and balance of power in the Kazakh economy."
To local observers in Kazakhstan , yet another comparison comes to mind. Two years ago, the head of Nurbank fled his home country with the law at his heels. His name was Rakhat Aliyev, and he was not only among the upper ranks of Kazakh business tycoons but also happened to be married to President Nazarbayev's eldest daughter Dariga. Now he is divorced and living in exile in Austria , and his claims resemble those of BTA's fallen angels, though in contrast to the latter, he is on the wanted list in Kazakhstan mainly for his Chicago-style way of doing business, including alleged kidnapping and murder.


‘A little rebranding’

But the story does not end here. Witchhunting or scapegoating has always been part of the game whenever it would come to dealing with dramatic deadlocks. But the tragic end of Shakespeare’s Richard II and his equally hapless successor Richard III did not put an end to England 's national political crisis, even though it opened the door to the House of Tudor whose scions eventually did stabilize the country. A change of the guard is never a purpose in itself, if it does not bring along a change of vision: looking for culprits can be a relief, but is never a solution.
In a recent column in the Financial Times, Britain 's advertising tycoon Martin Sorell described the ongoing process as follows: "A fresh consensus emerges from the debris of the last great party. That new orthodoxy says that Anglo-Saxon liberal market economics is dead and globalization discredited. Even capitalism itself, it seems, is on life support under the watchful eye of the prison hospital staff. The former giants of finance are pariahs. Right now it would probably be more acceptable to confess at a dinner party to having stolen Christmas presents, than admit you dabble in investment banking." But the seller of illusions remains upbeat and probably sniffing opportunities for his own business, he concludes: "It is possible to imagine that one day investment bankers may again be welcome at dinner parties. It might take a little rebranding, though."
 

METHOS

Forumer storico
Kazakh bank BTA may seek to cut debt - report

Wed Apr 22, 2009 10:11am EDT

MOSCOW, April 22 (Reuters) - Kazakhstan's largest bank, BTA BTAS.KZ, may seek to cut its outstanding debt rather than just extend maturities as part of a debt restructuring plan it is considering, Medley Global Advisors (MGA) said on Wednesday.
The government took over BTA in February, saying it would have collapsed otherwise. BTA said last month it could restructure some of its $11 billion foreign debt. Goldman Sachs and UBS are advising it.
Earlier this month BTA registered a $4.3 billion domestic bond programme.
State welfare fund Samruk-Kazyna, the government's agent in bank bailouts, is likely to buy the bonds using a loan from the central bank, MGA analyst Kaan Nazli said in a note, citing sources close to the government.
"BTA Bank will then start to use the funds raised through the (bond placement) auction to negotiate a new repayment schedule with the bank's creditors, a process that would involve significant haircuts and a cash tender offer to buy back outstanding bonds at a slightly higher level than current market prices," Nazli said.
BTA eurobonds currently trade at around 20-30 percent of face value. Nazli said that the bank could look into replacing short-term bonds with long-term bonds, depending on the success of the first stage.
"Authorities have concluded that earlier plans to extend maturities alone with higher coupon rates would not be a viable solution due to problems with the asset portfolio of the bank," he wrote.
A spokeswoman for BTA said the bank was still in discussions with its advisors over debt management. (Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Greg Mahlich)
 

METHOS

Forumer storico
Kazakh bank BTA ceases principal payments on debt

  • Reuters, Friday April 24 2009
* Follows some creditor calls for accelerated redemption
* Move includes scheduled maturities
* To seek agreement on programme to manage debt position
* Has around $11 bln in foreign debt
(Adds details, background)
By Olzhas Auyezov
MOSCOW, April 24 (Reuters) - Kazakhstan's largest bank, BTA , has ceased principal payments on its debt from April 20 after some creditors demanded accelerated redemption, BTA said in a statement to investors late on Thursday.
The bank said, in order to treat its creditors equally, it would stop the payments, including scheduled maturities, until it agrees "a reasonable, transparent and efficient programme for managing its current debt position".
"BTA Bank intends to continue to service its financial obligations by paying interest as and when it falls due and such other payments as are strategically important to maintain the successful operation of the bank's business."
The bank said it had made the decision to stop principal payments due to early redemption demands from some of its creditors.
"Events of recent days have forced our hand in relation to our international creditors. Once one of them accelerated, that gives the others the right to accelerate and there is no way we could consider repaying all our foreign debt at once," it quoted Chief Executive Anvar Saidenov as saying.
"For that reason we have, as announced, imposed a standstill on principal payments of our financial debt."
The government nationalised BTA, which has about $11 bln in foreign debt, in February and said the bank would have collapsed if not for its $2 billion capital injection.
It said BTA's large exposure to real estate projects in Russia was one of its key weaknesses.
Former BTA Chairman Mukhtar Ablyazov, who criticised the takeover, has since fled Kazakhstan where he is now wanted for fraud, a charge he denies. (Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; editing by Simon Jessop)
 

Massimo S.

Nuovo forumer
Pare comunque, almeno stando a quanto dice Jyske, che per il momento continueranno ad onorare le cedole :rolleyes: (l'ultima frase è monca, manca della parte iniziale)

[FONT=JyskeSauna,Bold]BTA Bank heading towards suspension [/FONT][FONT=JyskeSauna,Bold]of payments[/FONT]
BTA has been met with demands for early repayment of debt. Previously, the bank has made it clear that it cannot meet such demands and has therefore announced suspension of repayment of all principal amounts until an agreement has been made with all creditors. Interest will still be paid as planned and repayment of strategic importance will be complied with (in that respect the bank is presumably thinking of trade finance in particular).
It is a surprise that BTA Bank is met with demands for early repayment. Previously, the bank has stated that it had entered agreements with all relevant creditors not to demand early repayment.
current levels, we expect that it will be more attractive to wait for a debt restructuring and the outcome of the negotiations between Sberbank and Samruk-Kazyna (owns 75.10% of BTA Bank).

 

METHOS

Forumer storico
Pare comunque, almeno stando a quanto dice Jyske, che per il momento continueranno ad onorare le cedole :rolleyes: (l'ultima frase è monca, manca della parte iniziale)

[FONT=JyskeSauna,Bold]BTA Bank heading towards suspension [/FONT][FONT=JyskeSauna,Bold]of payments[/FONT]
BTA has been met with demands for early repayment of debt. Previously, the bank has made it clear that it cannot meet such demands and has therefore announced suspension of repayment of all principal amounts until an agreement has been made with all creditors. Interest will still be paid as planned and repayment of strategic importance will be complied with (in that respect the bank is presumably thinking of trade finance in particular).
It is a surprise that BTA Bank is met with demands for early repayment. Previously, the bank has stated that it had entered agreements with all relevant creditors not to demand early repayment.
current levels, we expect that it will be more attractive to wait for a debt restructuring and the outcome of the negotiations between Sberbank and Samruk-Kazyna (owns 75.10% of BTA Bank).



Si al momento gli interessi sul debito saranno pagati. Vediamo poi la ristrutturazione.
Ciao
 

METHOS

Forumer storico
La banca continua nelle sue attività ordinarie. I debiti a scadenza sono temporaneamente congelati mentre le cedole vengono pagate. La seberbank russa è interessata all'acquisto del 53% della banca dipende però dall'esito della ristrutturazione del debito.

Kazakh bank BTA suspends foreign debt payments





One of the main banks in the Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan, BTA, said on Friday it had been forced to temporarily suspend paying debts to its foreign creditors.
The ratings agency Fitch immediately announced a downgrade of the bank's debt rating to RD, or Restricted Default.
In a statement, BTA said it had received notices from several creditors accelerating debt repayments due to the difficulties and was endeavouring to restructure its debts.
"The bank has decided (in order to treat all of its creditors equally) to cease all principal payments with effect from April 20 until it agrees and implements... a reasonable, transparent and efficient programme for managing its current debt position," the statement said.
The bank stressed it would continue paying interest on its obligations and servicing its customers.
The bank "continues to operate as normal and all transactions are being completed on a timely basis," it said.
BTA has been the subject of discussion about a possible buy-up by Russian retail banking giant Sberbank.
Kazakh authorities, facing a severe crisis in the country's banking sector, took control of BTA in February and made an initial injection into the bank of 251 billion tenge (2.15 billion dollars, 1.62 billion euros).
On Friday the Russian news agency RIA Novosti quoted an unnamed source close to the affair as saying Sberbank was considering taking a 53 percent stake in BTA.
"Everything depends on how the negotiations on restructuring BTA's external debt unfold," said the source.
 

Imark

Forumer storico
Posto la rating action di S&P sul selective default di BTA... ero in dubbio anche se farlo, visto la modesta utilità del commento, dal quale si capisce soltanto come anche loro brancolino nel buio sulle modalità con cui BTA vorrà ristrutturare...

BTA Bank J.S.C. Downgraded To 'D' On Standstill In Principal Payments; Off CreditWatch Negative

FRANKFURT (Standard & Poor's) April 24, 2009--Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said today that it had lowered its long- and short-term counterparty credit ratings on Kazakhstan-based BTA Bank J.S.C. (BTA) to 'D' (default) from 'CC' and 'C' respectively after BTA announced a standstill in the scheduled and accelerated principal components of its debt. The ratings were removed from CreditWatch, where they were placed with negative implications on March 20, 2009.

At the same time the ratings on BTA's subsidiaries, Temirbank JSC and BTA Ipoteka Mortgage Co. (BTAI), were affirmed at 'CC/Watch Neg/C'.

"We understand that BTA imposed a standstill on principal payments, including scheduled maturities, on its foreign and domestic wholesale debt with effect from April 20, 2009 until it implements a group-wide debt
restructuring plan," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Annette Ess.

According to our definition, a 'D' rating is assigned when we believe that any default will be a general default and that the obligor will fail to pay all or substantially all of its obligations as they come due. Our default
definition includes payment defaults on both rated and unrated financial obligations. In addition, under our criteria, we treat distressed exchange offers to restructure debt obligations as equivalent to a default on the part of the issuer, even though, technically, investors may accept such an offer voluntarily and no legal default occurs.

BTA's total foreign debt outstanding is about $12 billion, with about $4 billion maturing in 2009. The bank announced that it is not in a position to repay the $12 billion sum if it were accelerated. It also announced that it intends to pay due interest on foreign and domestic debt. We understand that BTA is so far continuing to service its retail depositors.

We understand that the Samruk Kazyna National Welfare Fund, the main shareholder in the bank with a 78% stake, is not willing to assist BTA.

We have affirmed the ratings on BTAI and Temirbank because they are not included in BTA's standstill on principal payments and they continue to service their obligations. However, BTA announced that these subsidiaries will be included in the restructuring of the BTA group. Accordingly, we see an increased likelihood that the ratings on BTAI and Temirbank will be lowered to 'D' in the near term.

We will lower the ratings on BTAI and Temirbank to 'D' in the event that they default on all or substantially all of their debt, initiate a wide-ranging distressed restructuring of their debt obligations, or declare bankruptcy or insolvency.

We would consider revising the ratings on BTA, BTAI, and Temirbank if the entities were to restore and sustain their repayment capacity and were to service all their debt obligations on a timely basis and avoid distressed debt restructuring, either through government support or improvements in their stand-alone credit profiles
 

INVESTOR

Nuovo forumer
Riporto poche altre notizie nell'incertezza generale sulla sorte della TuranAlem, l'informazione è in stile kazako e in questa crisi finanziaria emerge il decisionismo autoritario del presidente.

KAZAKISTAN - CINA
La principale banca kazaka non può restituire i prestiti esteri
La Bta potrà pagare solo gli interessi. Nel Paese in crisi per il crollo del prezzo dell’energia e per investimenti non oculati, lo Stato cerca di ottenere finanziamenti. Se ne avvantaggia la Cina, che concede finanziamenti per miliardi di dollari in cambio del petrolio.


Astana (AsiaNews/Agenzie) – La Bta, maggiore banca del Kazakistan, ha annunciato il 24 aprile che non potrà restituire 11 miliardi di dollari di debiti con l'estero. Si aggrava la crisi del Paese, molto colpito dal crollo del prezzo del petrolio e in gravissime difficoltà di liquidità. Se ne avvantaggia la Cina, forte della sua liquidità e sempre in cerca di fonti di energia.
La Bta potrà pagare solo gli interessi ai molti creditori esteri, accorsi a effettuare finanziamenti durante la forte crescita economica del Paese negli scorsi anni. Le agenzie internazionali come la Fitch hanno subito declassato le obbligazioni della Bta qualificandole a rischio di “default”. La Bta è stata nazionalizzata dal governo a febbraio, cosa che potrebbe indicare la volontà di garantire la restituzione del debito per evitare una disastrosa perdita di fiducia internazionale.
La rapida crescita economica, spinta soprattutto dagli aumenti del costo di petrolio e gas, ha portato ditte e banche del Paese ad attingere soprattutto da finanziatori esteri, piuttosto che basarsi sul risparmio interno. Ora è considerato rischioso investire nel Paese, in forte recessione, e mancano nuovi flussi finanziari che sostengano il forte indebitamento verso l’estero.
Per accrescere la liquidità la Halyk Savings Bank, terza maggiore del Paese e direttamente controllata dalla figlia e dal genero del presidente Nursultan Nazarbayev, oggi ha annunciato una massiccia offerta di quote privilegiate, dalla quale spera di ricavare nuovo capitale per 643 milioni di dollari.
Per sostenere l’economia in forte difficoltà Astana ha erogato finanziamenti per circa 15 miliardi di dollari, pari al 14% del Prodotto interno lordo, e ora cerca di reperire fondi tramite accordi petroliferi. A metà aprile, durante una visita di 5 giorni di Nazarbayev in Cina (nella foto con il premier Wen Jiabao), la statale KazMunaiGas (Kmg) ha concordato con la China National Petroleum Corporation (Cnpc), maggiore ditta petrolifera cinese, la cessione del 49% delle azioni della MangistauMunaiGas. La Mmg già sfrutta giacimenti stimati pari a 1,32 miliardi di barili e ha il 58% della raffineria Pavlodar. Il Paese possiede il 3% del petrolio mondiale. In cambio la cinese Eximbank presterà 5 miliardi di dollari alla statale Development Bank of Kazakhstan e la Cnpc finanzierà la Kmg per 5 miliardi.
Con la crisi mondiale la Cina, che ha le maggiori riserve finanziarie del mondo, può trarre vantaggio dalla sua grande liquidità, portando denaro fresco ad aziende in difficoltà produttrici di materie prime. Pechino in Kazakistan già ha la Aktobemunagais, che produce 120mila barili di greggio al giorno, e il 67% della PetroKazakhstan che ne produce 150mila. Con la Kmg è partner alla pari per l’oleodotto da 200mila barili al giorno che corre dal Mar Caspio al cinese Xinjiang.
 

METHOS

Forumer storico
Riporto poche altre notizie nell'incertezza generale sulla sorte della TuranAlem, l'informazione è in stile kazako e in questa crisi finanziaria emerge il decisionismo autoritario del presidente.

KAZAKISTAN - CINA
La principale banca kazaka non può restituire i prestiti esteri
La Bta potrà pagare solo gli interessi. Nel Paese in crisi per il crollo del prezzo dell’energia e per investimenti non oculati, lo Stato cerca di ottenere finanziamenti. Se ne avvantaggia la Cina, che concede finanziamenti per miliardi di dollari in cambio del petrolio.
.

Diciamo comunque grazie al presidente se siamo arrivati almeno fino a oggi evitando un collasso stile islandese. Con l'aiuto finanziario deciso qualche mese fa è riuscito a tenere in piedi il sistema bancario. Il problema della bta è capire cosa ha in pancia, sembra che metà dei suoi crediti siano prestiti fatti in russia, prestiti fatto diciamo con molta faciloneria (e chi vuol capire capisca)...

L'interuzzione dei rimborsi è dovuto secondo a fonti ufficiali al fatto che qualche creditore abbia richiesto alla bta indietro i soldi in quanto c'è stato il cambio di proprietà a marzo.
Adesso si gioca la partita più dura, se la bta comunque è sana o salvabile in qulache modo se ne esce con la rinegoziazione dei debiti etc. se invece e marcia non c'è più niente da fare.

Apsettiamo cosa diranno a breve gli advisor ubs e goldman (che per ironia della sorte sono due banche salvate con i soldi pubblici).
 

METHOS

Forumer storico
Kazakhstan’s BTA Starts Talks to Renegotiate $15 Billion Debt


Share | Email | Print | A A A



By Laura Cochrane and Emma O’Brien
April 28 (Bloomberg) -- BTA Bank, Kazakhstan’s largest lender, began talks with creditors to renegotiate payments on as much as $15 billion of debt in a bid to avert bankruptcy, Chief Executive Officer Anvar Saidenov said.
“The viability of the institution will depend on how successful we are in negotiating with our creditors,” Saidenov, who is also chairman of BTA’s management board, said today in an interview in London. “We can handle the situation with a plan that will be in the interest of both parties.”
The Almaty-based lender joins United Co. Rusal, Russia’s biggest aluminum producer, and smaller companies from Poland to Brazil in seeking to restructure obligations after credit seized up and the global economy slipped into recession. BTA said April 23 it stopped making principal payments on its debt because some creditors were demanding immediate repayment.
Saidenov said the bank will continue to make interest payments on $1.5 billion of debt due this year using cash generated from its activities as well as funds from Samruk- Kazyna, Kazakhstan’s National Wellbeing Fund, which bought a controlling 75.1 percent stake in February. Samruk-Kazyna said today it may start buying distressed assets from banks in the second half, according to the state-run Kazinform news service.
Kazakhstan, a former Soviet republic that holds 3.2 percent of the world’s oil reserves according to BP Plc, is facing its first economic contraction in a decade as the government pledges to spend as much as $4 billion bailing out banks and the price of crude trades 66 percent below its July record.
“There was too much dependence on external borrowing in our banking sector and when the global financial crisis started, these risks, as well as the exposure to the real-estate sector, materialized,” Saidenov said.
Unveil Plan
BTA will unveil its debt restructuring plan when it releases 2008 full-year results next month, Saidenov said. The bank held a conference call with investors to start talks, he said.
BTA’s $600 million of 7.875 percent dollar bonds due next year have more than halved in price to 21.155 cents in the past six months, according to ING Groep NV prices compiled by Bloomberg. The bank’s $350 million worth of 8.5 percent bonds maturing 2015 currently trade at 20.023 cents, down 40 percent since October. BTA shares have slumped 88 percent in the past six months.
The bank, which was taken over by the government in February after failing to bolster reserves and is now in talks to sell a stake to Russia’s OAO Sberbank, is rated “default” by Standard & Poor’s and “restricted default” by Fitch Ratings.
Debt Default
The bank’s debt default was triggered after the company didn’t repay two bilateral loans that were accelerated, one with New York-based Morgan Stanley, according to Andrey Markov, a banking and credit analyst at Moscow investment bank Renaissance Capital, who listened to BTA’s investor conference call.
“They said if creditors tried to disrupt the normal BTA operating processes, the Financial Services Authority regulator will immediately take measures to put the bank into conservation mode,” Markov said after the call. “There were lots of questions from creditors asking if their loans will be repaid or not. They told people to refer to their advisers Goldman Sachs and UBS.”
BTA has total debts of $15 billion, of which $9 billion is foreign-denominated obligations, Markov said, citing the bank.
The bank has hired KPMG International to undertake due diligence before “more concrete” discussions start next month regarding plans to sell a stake to Moscow-based Sberbank, Russia’s largest bank, Saidenov said.
Interest Payments
Fitch downgraded BTA’s long-term issuer rating to “restricted default,” putting the rating four steps below its previous rating of CC. The ranking will remain in place until the bank has completed restructuring its outstanding debt and is able to comply with the new terms demanded by its creditors, Fitch said. Moody’s Investors Service said yesterday its Ca credit rating, the second-lowest non-investment grade ranking, already factors in the default of the bank and substantial losses to holders of the debt.
BTA’s $1.5 billion of repayments this year is more than double the $810 million owed by Kazkommertsbank, Kazakhstan’s second-largest lender, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
To contact the reporters on this story: Emma O’Brien in Moscow at [email protected]; Laura Cochrane in London at [email protected]
Last Updated: April 28, 2009 12:32 EDT
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Alto