Business: Eurasia hedge fund bets on Mongolia; Water supply, drainage charges go up; Rio Tinto earnings up 113% over last year; Private hospitals under the scanner; Ivanhoe makes ecological survey; Mon Fresh to sell shares to public; German President visits with strong trade team; Seminar on environmental protection in open pit mining.
Economy:
Harvest estimates raise hopes of self-sufficiency in food; Labor plans
nationwide protests; 75 of 700 enterprises to be privatized; $4.6
million more in US grant to help policy liberalization; Same punch,
another arena; New power plant to be built; With coal and firewood so
expensive, how will the ger districts cope?
Politics:
Bayar to be PM again, favors DP in government; “We have to work hard to
get back our honor,” says Bayar; Leaders pledge to work together;
Speaker elected by 63-3 votes; DP chooses new chairman; Mongolia
neutral on Georgia; IMF to close Ulaanbaatar office after March.
The
Business Council of Mongolia had a meeting with Minister for Trade and
Industry Kh. Narankhuu. He began by giving an overview of the current
economic situation in Mongolia, mentioning that trade deficit had grown
along with the volume of foreign trade, and that runaway inflation
rates were the major concern.
He expressed the inadvisability
of making any specific commitments about policies and programs before a
new Government took over, at most in two weeks’ time. New members of
Parliament will also most likely have fresh ideas to offer about the
proposed amendments to the Mining Law, and these have to be considered
carefully. However, the Minister assured the assembly – with 94
attendees, this was the most well-attended BCM meeting to date -- that
“a practical and business-like approach” would be taken as “we don’t
have much time and the disputes cannot be prolonged”.
Thanking
foreign investors for their contribution to Mongolia’s economic growth,
Mr. Narankhuu made it clear that serious investors, particularly those
in mining, who were committed to developing the sector while observing
the laws of the land, would face no problems in the coming days, as the
Government was determined to “improve the business environment”. It
would however prefer the emphasis to shift from simple extraction of
ores to processing of mineral products.
BAYAR TO BE PM AGAIN, FAVORS DP IN GOVERNMENT
The
MPRP plenum on Wednesday chose incumbent S.Bayar to continue as Prime
Minister, after deciding to support his proposal to include the
Democratic Party in the next Government. His choice was without a
contest and his idea of a joint Government was favored by 213 of the
members present, with only 15 against.
Earlier,
reporting on the current political situation, Bayar said that the MPRP
had an absolute majority in Parliament and needed no support to form a
government but he would still favor some DP representation as the need
of the hour was for a national consensus. N.Altankhuyag, who was
elected leader of the Democratic Party on Saturday, also favors joining
an MPRP-led Government as it would be more effective in tackling
national problems and would be able to take quicker decisions.
WE HAVE TO WORK HARD TO GET BACK OUR HONOR’ SAYS BAYAR
The
MPRP plenum that yesterday nominated S.Bayar to continue as Prime
Minister began with Bayar, in his capacity as the party chairman,
presenting a report on recent events. On the July 1 incidents, he said
these raised some fundamental questions that were not easy to answer.
Some politicians were keen on misrepresenting the real situation to
serve their own interests and to mislead society. The media had to be
controlled, he said, as they had lent themselves to be used for
partisan politician ends.
He said the events of a few days
had destroyed the good name Mongolia had earned after 18 years of
peaceful democracy. “We have to work hard to get back our honor,” he
said, adding that the international community was carefully watching
how Mongolia proceeded.
On the current
economic situation, he said the growth in the last three years was the
result of revenues from mining going up when international commodity
prices were high. “Too much of politics did not allow us to fully
utilize the economic opportunities made available to us.”
He
said the country stood at a historical crossroads, and Mongolians
needed to show maturity and a sense of responsibility to make sure the
country made the right choice of way. “We have to decide whether we
will develop or not. We have to adopt a foreign policy that furthers
our national interests. Our attitude towards the development of mining
has to be pragmatic. Big countries and rich investors are interested in
our mines but our failure to make up our mind meant that in the last
four years no large-scale new mining exploration was begun, nor did any
big factory come up.”
EURASIA HEDGE FUND BETS ON MONGOLIA
Eurasia
Capital Management plans to increase the world's first Mongolia-focused
fund fivefold to $100 million to tap economic growth fueled by the
nation's mining industry. Eurasia's hedge funds, which have about $200
million of investments across Central Asia, also expect to sell shares
on London's Alternative Investment Market or Deutsche Boerse AG by next
June, said Alisher Djumanov, managing partner of the Singapore-based
firm. Proceeds would be used to start private-equity and property
funds, and expand in Central Asia. Mining in Mongolia will spur
“double-digit” economic growth rates over the next 10 years as
commodity prices remain high, Djumanov said in an interview. Mining
accounted for about two-thirds of Mongolia's exports last year, and
foreign direct investment in the country rose more than 33 percent.
“The spillover effect from the mining sector will be significant,”
Djumanov said. “We're investing in companies that are expected to grow
significantly on the back of this strong economic growth.”
Eurasia's
Mongolia Discovery Fund rose 12 percent this year, compared with the 16
percent drop in the MSCI World Index. The fund invests in coal mines,
water utilities as well as oil and gas companies. Eurasia Capital is
not alone in seeking ventures in Mongolia. Almost 70 percent of
investments there came from China, according to the Asian Development
Bank. Frontier Investment & Development Partners, manager of a
private-equity fund, plans to raise $100 million next year to invest in
mining, infrastructure, real-estate and tourism projects in Mongolia,
said Marvin Yeo, Frontier's Phnom Penh-based co-founder.
08-09-2008 13:45 Sakura Property
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Огноо 08-09-2008 13:45. Эндсэтгэгдэл үлдээнэ үү.
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