A New Chapter in Egypt`s History
Transcription
A New Chapter in Egypt`s History
Economic and Social Reform A New Chapter in Egypt’s History A Popular Leader with an Entrepreneurial Vision A Technocrat Prime Minister to Execute the Vision Egypt, pre & post‐revolution … then what’s next! FY20 6% FY09 POVERTY INFLATION REAL GDP GROWTH FY20 FY09 8% 16.5% 4.7% UNEMPLOYMENT FY20 below 20% FY09 FY20 FY09 9% 9.2% 21.6% FY14 FY14 FY14 FY14 2.1% 10.7% 24% 13.3% FDI (USD BN) FISCAL DEFICIT/GDP FY20 FY09 14‐15 8.1 FY14 4.1 FY20 Below 10% FY09 NEWLY ESTABLISHED CO. FY20 FY09 Xxxx 6292 6.4% IMPLEMENTED INVS. (EGP BN) PS SHARE(%) FY14 FY14 12.2% 8246 FY09 197 58% FY20 Xxx 75% FY14 265 62% 2 Aggressive targets, yet achievable with Egypt’s new formula… SOLID FUNDAMENTALS “NEW EGYPT” CATALYST Location Moves towards stability Inherit sizable demand Structural adjustment High youth contribution Investment Stimulus plan Diversified economy Legislative reform Clear Governance Growing investor Confidence Rising Investment STRONG & SUSTAINABLE GROWTH 3 … especially as Egypt already kicked‐off with its checklist 9 Commitment to Political Roadmap 9 Constitution referendum 9 Presidential election 9 Parliamentary election kicking‐off March 2015 9 Consensus building, moves toward stability and improved security 9 Structural Adjustment 9 Taxation reform 9 Phasing out oil subsidies 9 Investment stimulus plan 9 Legislative reform 9 New regulations and amendments 9 settling investors disputes 9 Payment of dues to oil companies 9 Full coverage of FX backlog 9 Social welfare program 4 9 Commitment to political timeline with a more inclusive scene ‐ a conductive investment climate Commitment to political roadmap Long‐standing cabinet Parliamentary election Cabinet reshuffle President Elect El Sisi took office Presidential election PM Mehleb appointment May‐15 Apr‐15 Mar‐15 Jul‐14 Jun‐14 Jun‐14 May‐14 Constitution Referendum Feb‐14 • With recent announcement of running parliamentary election by March 2015, commitment to political roadmap is confirmed ensuring a full‐fledged political system by 1Q15. • With President‐elect Abdel Fatah El‐Sisi gaining 97% of votes with a considerably high turnout ratio of 47.1% suggests consensus building, a key factor in achieving stability – already evident in the reduced number of strikes. • A recent poll, conducted by Baseera, assessing President El‐Sisi 100‐day performance shows that 82% approves his performance which further confirms public consensus. Source: Official sources and Ministry of Investment database Source: Supreme committee for elections May‐14 Apr‐14 Mar‐14 Feb‐14 Jan‐14 Dec‐13 Presidential Elec 2014 Constitution Ref 2014 Constitution Ref 2012 Presidential Elec ‐1st round 2012 Presidential Elec ‐2nd round 2012 Parliamentary Elec 2011 Ref Mar‐11 0.0% Nov‐13 10.0% Oct‐13 20.0% Sep‐13 32.9% 30.0% Aug‐13 40.0% Jul‐13 47.1% 38.9% Jun‐13 41.2% 51.9% May‐13 46.4% Apr‐13 50.0% Mar‐13 58.7% 60.0% …which reduced strikes, helping reinstate stability Feb‐13 70.0% 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 Jan‐13 High turn out ratio confirms consensus building… Source: ECESR 5 9 Adoption of long‐standing policies to restore confidence… PHASING OUT OIL SUBSIDIES The massive increase in energy prices in July 2014 – a 73% increase in transport cost; a 26% hike in electricity prices; and a 59% rise in petroleum products extended to the industrial sector ‐ confirms the government commitment to reform. New oil prices A move that show serious steps towards fundamental budget restructuring; which is reflected in the targeted EGP30.1bn slash in oil subsidies in FY15 budget, bringing down the fiscal deficit to 10% of GDP. It is worth highlighting that the drop in international oil prices should reflect favorably on the state budget. Octane 92 1.85 2.60 40.54% Octane 80 0.90 1.60 77.78% Diesel 1.1 1.8 64% NG for Vehicles 0.4 1.1 175% Av. gasoline Price increase, 41.7% Source: Official sources 17.9% 15.9% 15% 16% 300 13.7% 250 10% 100 5% 20 Source: Ministry of Finance FY15B FY14 FY13 FY12 FY11 FY10 0% FY09 0 12% 10.0% 9.8% 8.1% 10% 8% 6.4% 6% 4% 50 2% 0 0% FY09 40 14% 12.8% 10.8% 200 150 60 Fiscal Deficit % GDP FY15B 20% 80 Fiscal deficit FY14 20.4% 16.8% 6.84% FY13 18.2% 6.25 FY12 25% 17.8% 5.85 FY10 100 Octane 95 EGP bn 140 20.3% % increase FY11 Oil subsidies/expenditure EGP bn 120 New tariff (EGP/Liter) …and a narrowed fiscal deficit Targets a reduced oil subsidies bill… Oil subsidies Old tariff (EGP/Liter) Gasoline Source: Ministry of Finance 6 9 …more of long‐standing policies to restore confidence EXPANDING THE POOL OF REVENUES New tax reform With Egypt’s budget revenues/GDP 22.9% falling far below its regional peers average of 39%, expanding the country’s taxation pool (averaging 67% of total budget revenues over the past five years) remains key to reduce the high fiscal deficit. Imposing cash dividend and capital gain tax (CGT); the real estate tax law; and an additional 5% temporary tax on wealthy individuals with annual income above EGP1mn are vivid examples – which are expected to add EGP13.5bn to revenues. Low tax revenue/GDP Tax revenues EGPbn Tax Rate Details Capital gain & Dividends taxation 10% *10% capital gain tax on realized profit at the end of each year; while losses will be carried over for 3 years. * Investors with a minimum of 25% stake will be charged 5%. * Cash dividend tax of 10%; while those investors below EGP15k are exempted. * Foreign investors are charged 10% for the transaction with 6% to be taxed instantly. * CGT will be calculated based on the difference between exit price and the higher of either; historic buying price or price at time of law implementation. * Bonus shares are tax‐exempt. Additional Income tax Increment of 5% ‐ for 3 years *30% on individuals with annual income exceeding EGP1mn. *25% for corporate income below EGP10mn. *30% for corporate income at EGP10mn and above. Real Estate 10% * Residential units with market value up to EGP2mn will be exempted; while tax will be applicable above this threshold. * Non‐residential units will be tax‐exempt if net annual rental value is below EGP1.2k, after deducting 32% maintenance expense. Tax revenues/GDP 400 16% 15.1% 350 300 New tax 14.0% 13.9% 250 14.3% 13.4% 15% 14% 13% 13.0% Source: Ministry of Finance FY15B 10% FY14 100 FY13 11% FY12 150 FY11 12% FY10 200 Source: Official Sources 7 9 …more of long‐standing policies to restore confidence Legislative reform involves Investment Law; Bankruptcy Chapter 11; Labor Law; Title Registration; Industrial Law; Commercial Law; and removing red tape. It is worth noting that a law has been issued that prohibits a third party to file an appeal to contracts between the government and investors, as it restricts it to the parties involved only. Settling investor’s disputes; which increased 22% since last committee meeting – reaching 411 resolution. With the Egyptian Tax Authority’s (ETA) independent appeals committee ruling in favor of OCI N.V.’s subsidiary — Orascom Construction Industries (OCI S.A.E.) — in the tax dispute dating back to 2012 (EGP7.1bn paid on installments until 2017), this confirms the government positive stance to support investments. It is worth highlighting that following that statement, Sawiris announced a commitment to maintain the company's presence in Egypt through construction services and large‐scale investments in infrastructure. Settling dues to international oil and gas companies to boost investors’ confidence – as already Egypt settled USD2.1bn (40% of its dues to oil companies). Likewise, settling dues with contractors. CBE covered the backlog of FX owed to foreign investors seeking to repatriate funds through the repatriation scheme which started in March 2013. Contracts reconciliation committee Contracts 25 No of disputes Ministerial dispute settlement committee solved 23 20 15 3 1 3 4 3 3 1 1 0 2 3 0 0 others 5 Mining & Fert 10 10 9 Source: Ministry of Investment Total logistics Oil, Gas & Petrochemcials Agriculture Tourism Real‐estate & const 0 Authority Resolution Governorates and affiliates 198 Ministry of Finance and affiliates 126 New Urban Communities Authority 56 General Authority for Reconstruction Projects and Agricultural Development 17 Tourism Development Authority 8 Others 6 Total Settlement 411 Source: Ministry of Investment 8 9 Investment stimulus plan to support growth The government already allocated EGP50bn in Investments – 47% YoY increase. The government allocated an investment stimulus of EGP29.7bn in 2013, mainly targeting the labor‐intensive infrastructure projects (c56%). An off‐balance sheet spending should help alleviate high unemployment and achieve the targeted GDP growth of 2% in FY13/14. Another stimulus of EGP34bn was introduced in early 2014. This is beside the huge flow of Mega projects. First stimulus package ‐ EGP29.7bn Projects Upgrading roads and transportation network Supporting and developing national industry program Upgrading water, sanitation, and natural gas networks Social housing program Supporting power networks Settling contractors’ arrears with the government Upgrading health services network National land reclamation program Investment stimulus Social justice stimulus Total Source: Ministry of Planning & Ministry of Finance Second stimulus package – EGP34bn EGP bn Projects 6.74 Construction of 50 k housing units 4.35 Government investments Government contribution in Suez Canal corridor project 4.06 3.05 2.92 2.2 0.63 0.52 24.48 5.26 29.74 EGP bn 10.40 5.60 2.00 Others Investment stimulus 4.60 22.60 Minimum wage implementation 10.00 Allocation to subsidies and social grants Social justice stimulus Total Mega Projects– EGP401bn Projects EGP bn 1 million housing unit 280 New Suez Canal 60 3600 KM of roads infrastructure 36 1 million Feddan project Total 25 401 Source: Ministry of Planning & Ministry of Finance 1.40 11.40 34.00 Source: Ministry of Planning & Ministry of Finance 9 9 Social welfare program to ensure sustainable growth The government embarked upon several social measures including: High unemployment rate High poverty rate 30% 14.0% 25% 13.5% 13.0% 20% 12.5% 12.0% 15% 11.5% 10% 11.0% 10.5% 5% Source: Ministry of Investment 3Q14 2Q14 1Q14 4Q13 3Q13 2Q13 1Q13 4Q12 3Q12 2Q12 1Q12 4Q11 10.0% 3Q11 2Q11 A one‐time hike in the minimum wage for public sector workers starting January 2014; the launch of labor‐intensive projects to address unemployment ushering for stability; the government plans to allocate cash transfers to the needy – which was raised from EGP450/month/household to EGP300/individual with around 2‐3 mn families benefiting from such distribution; expanding the contribution of health, education and social support spending to an aggregate of 35% of total budget expenditure in FY15 up from 32% a year earlier; and a housing program to fill the supply gap of 2.5mn apartments, costing EGP250bn over 10 years. 1Q11 0% FY05 FY07 FY09 FY11 FY13 FY14e Source: CAPMAS & Ministry of Planning 10 Signs of improved investment indicators started to show FDI inflows recorded USD4.1bn in FY14 up from USD3.8bn a year earlier, driven by the rise in the net inflow for oil sector investments from USD1bn to USD1.6bn. 1QFY15 saw 138%YoY increase driven by the rise in the net inflow for oil sector investments from USD377.6mn to USD948.1mn. Net inflow for greenfield investments also picked up to USD734.9mn (from USD339.5mn). Recent figures show monthly average number of established companies picking up to 808 companies over August and September compared to 2014 monthly average of 730 companies . Loans continued to increase – growing at an average of 8.4% since July compared to 5.2% since the beginning of 2014. Net portfolio investment and FDIs Newly established companies Loans growth YoY USD mn 15,000 FDI Net Portfolio investments 1000 12% 900 12,500 800 10,000 10% 700 7,500 8% 600 5,000 500 2,500 6% 400 Source: Central Bank of Egypt 4% 2% Jul‐12 Sep‐12 Nov‐12 Jan‐13 Mar‐13 May‐13 Jul‐13 Sep‐13 Nov‐13 Jan‐14 Mar‐14 May‐14 Jul‐14 Sep‐14 Nov‐14 1QFY15 1QFY14 FY14 FY13 0 FY12 ‐10,000 FY11 100 FY10 ‐7,500 FY09 200 FY08 ‐5,000 FY07 300 FY06 ‐2,500 Source: GAFI 0% Jul‐12 Aug‐12 Sep‐12 Oct‐12 Nov‐12 Dec‐12 Jan‐13 Feb‐13 Mar‐13 Apr‐13 May‐13 Jun‐13 Jul‐13 Aug‐13 Sep‐13 Oct‐13 Nov‐13 Dec‐13 Jan‐14 Feb‐14 Mar‐14 Apr‐14 May‐14 Jun‐14 Jul‐14 Aug‐14 Sep‐14 Oct‐14 0 Source: Central Bank of Egypt 11 Announced FDI include, Sector Food/Infrastructure/financial services Company Country of Origin Project Targeted Investment (USD) EBRD EU Development projects EUR1.25bn Almarai KSA Beverage Facilities 345mn Aujan KSA Beverage Facilities 100mn Beyti KSA Beverage Facilities 4bn Pepsi Co USA Beverage Facilities 34mn Coca Cola USA Beverage Facilities 500mn Trans Energy Corp Canada Oil and Gas 115.5mn Snopec China Exploration 8bn Gaz de France France Exploration 300mn Dana Gas UAE Exploration 270mn Oil & Gas British Petroluem UK Gas Fields 10bn Real Estate Arabtec Holding UAE Housing Projects 39.83bn Retail Al Futtaim UAE Carrefour 2.3bn Shipping DP World UAE Logisitics Zone 500mn Food & Beverages Source: Official sources 12 External sector showed some improvement, stabilizing FX International tourist arrivals Net international reserves stabilized USDbn Imports coverage Months 4.0 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 Source: Central Bank of Egypt A stable NIR supports FX market k arrivals 1,800 1,600 1,400 1,200 1,000 800 600 400 200 ‐ NIR NIR EGP/USD USDbn 8.0 35 7.5 30 EGP Thanks to GCC support (USD10.6bn in FY14), which managed to maintain net international reserves at above the 3M imports coverage. With the recent USD1bn grant from Kuwait and the pledged USD5bn from UAE should further support reserves – especially with USD2.5bn payment of Qatari deposit this month. Improved security resulted in 28 countries lifting their travel ban; which raised monthly ITA to cross 1mn in October, a level that was not reached since May 2013. ITR increased more than 2x over 1QFY15 to USD2.1bn compared to USD0.9bn in 1QFY14. A stable NIR supports FX market. Jul‐12 Aug‐12 Sep‐12 Oct‐12 Nov‐12 Dec‐12 Jan‐13 Feb‐13 Mar‐13 Apr‐13 May‐13 Jun‐13 Jul‐13 Aug‐13 Sep‐13 Oct‐13 Nov‐13 Dec‐13 Jan‐14 Feb‐14 Mar‐14 Apr‐14 May‐14 Jun‐14 Jul‐14 Aug‐14 Sep‐14 Oct‐14 Nov‐14 Dec‐14 7.0 25 20 6.5 15 6.0 10 5.5 Source: Central Bank of Egypt and CAPMAS 0 5.0 Jul-12 Aug-12 Sep-12 Oct-12 Nov-12 Dec-12 Jan-13 Feb-13 Mar-13 Apr-13 May-13 Jun-13 Jul-13 Aug-13 Sep-13 Oct-13 Nov-13 Dec-13 Jan-14 Feb-14 Mar-14 Apr-14 May-14 Jun-14 Jul-14 Aug-14 Sep-14 Oct-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Jan‐10 Mar‐10 May‐10 Jul‐10 Sep‐10 Nov‐10 Jan‐11 Mar‐11 May‐11 Jul‐11 Sep‐11 Nov‐11 Jan‐12 Mar‐12 May‐12 Jul‐12 Sep‐12 Nov‐12 Jan‐13 Mar‐13 May‐13 Jul‐13 Sep‐13 Nov‐13 Jan‐14 Mar‐14 May‐14 Jul‐14 Sep‐14 5 Source: Bloomberg and Central Bank of Egypt 13 …and default risk subsided USD 5‐year CDS has reached its 46‐month low of 266.4 on 29 October 2014 and relatively stabilized around that level since then. Fitch upgraded Egypt’s credit rating one rank to “B” with a “stable” outlook; which supports a positive fiscal and macro outlook. With Moody’s seeing a better credit prospects for Egypt as parliamentary elections approach following its upgrade of Egypt’s outlook to stable from negative, affirming Caa1 rating, reflects Moody's expectations of an improving fiscal and economic environment. USD 5‐year CDS 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 7‐Jan‐15 18‐Dec‐14 8‐Nov‐14 28‐Nov‐14 19‐Oct‐14 9‐Sep‐14 29‐Sep‐14 31‐Jul‐14 20‐Aug‐14 11‐Jul‐14 1‐Jun‐14 21‐Jun‐14 12‐May‐14 2‐Apr‐14 22‐Apr‐14 13‐Mar‐14 1‐Feb‐14 21‐Feb‐14 12‐Jan‐14 3‐Dec‐13 23‐Dec‐13 13‐Nov‐13 4‐Oct‐13 24‐Oct‐13 14‐Sep‐13 5‐Aug‐13 25‐Aug‐13 16‐Jul‐13 26‐Jun‐13 6‐Jun‐13 17‐May‐13 7‐Apr‐13 27‐Apr‐13 18‐Mar‐13 6‐Feb‐13 26‐Feb‐13 17‐Jan‐13 28‐Dec‐12 8‐Dec‐12 18‐Nov‐12 9‐Oct‐12 29‐Oct‐12 19‐Sep‐12 30‐Aug‐12 10‐Aug‐12 1‐Jul‐12 21‐Jul‐12 11‐Jun‐12 0 Source: Bloomberg 14 Yet, stagflation remains a major risk – however subsiding Over 2H14, monthly CPI reading reached an aggregate of 5.9%; which is 74% of the total increase in FY14. This comes on the back of the first and second round effects of energy hikes that took place in July 2014. Since the beginning of FY15 annual headline CPI registered an average of 10.8% compared to 10.9% over the same period last year. Unless FDI starts to flow into the country, given the low saving to GDP ratio, the risk of stagflation will escalate. Energy is a key target sector to invest in, especially with aggravated power cuts during the summer season. It is worth mentioning that power cuts, risks a smooth business operation further adding to inflationary pressure ‐ given disrupted production ‐ and restricting potential investment from being materialized. A risk that is subsiding given the recent agreement signed with Algeria for six LNG cargoes in late December in addition to the UAE announcement of extending petroleum support to Egypt for 12 months, in addition to the energy mix strategy and the new 4.3 GW that was announced by the government in renewable energy. Stagflation risk subsides Annual headline CPI Unemployment 6.8% 13.0% 5.8% 12.5% 13.3% 13.2% 13.4% 8.7% 1.5% 1.0% 4QFY13 3QFY13 2QFY13 1QFY13 5.2% 13.0% 11.0% 10.0% 3.7% 2.4% 6.4% 14.0% 12.0% 9.0% 8.4% 8.0% 1.4% 7.0% 6.0% 3QFY14 2.2% 7.4% 2QFY14 2.2% 1QFY14 2.6% 6.8% 13.1% 11.20% 10.3% 10.1% 1.8% -0.2% 13.3% 4QFY14 3.8% 0.8% 13.4% 11.7% 4.8% 2.8% 13.4% 1QFY15 GDP YoY growth 5.0% Source: Ministry of Investment, Central Bank of Egypt and CAPMAS 15 16