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NEWS HIGHLIGHTS:
Business: Trade and Development Bank puts off bond sale; India’s Jindal Steel buys Mongolian uranium sites;
Tiger Beer roars on first anniversary; Petro Matad’s 2007 financial results;
Workers protest and get bread price raised again
Economy: Fitch revises Khan Bank outlook; Seize every opportunity, exhorts Chinese leader;
Forum to attract Chinese investment; Swiss firm to develop bank payment system in Mongolia
Politics: Leaders explain their stand on “wealth sharing”; 66 women among 401 final candidates;
Canada to open embassy in Mongolia; Russian ambitions in Mongolia and possible U.S. antidotes;
Mongolian judicial officials training in Texas
LEADERS
EXPLAIN THEIR STAND ON “WEALTH SHARING”
Mongolia
elects a new Parliament on June 29. Popular expectations are running high
with both principal parties promising all Mongolians a share in the
country’s natural resources. This might well be the deciding factor in the
election and the chairmen of both parties spoke to media to explain why
theirs is a viable plan, and just what it offered to the individual
citizen. Excerpts follow from two interviews. First, Prime Minister S.
Bayar, also head of the Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party (MPRP),
talks to TV5 channel, and then Ts. Elbegdorj, opposition leader and
Chairman of the Democratic Party, tells the daily newspaper, Ardiin Erkh,
what it is all about.
DP
promises Tg one million as “Treasure share”, MPRP counters with Tg 1.5
million as “Wealth share” - people wonder if either party, when it forms
the new Government, will really give them the share. How do you convince
them? Did you actually think of “Wealth share” earlier? Is your figure a
result of research and calculation?
Actually there is nothing sudden
about the proposal. Both MPRP and DP have had such plans for long. In 1998
I traveled to Kuwait with President N. Bagabandi. That country has a
Kuwait Foundation, run on lines similar to what we propose in “Wealth
share”. The Government there distributes among the people the huge income
the country makes from selling oil.
In the last 3-4 years we have realized how rich
Mongolia is in its mining wealth. We started thinking big, exploring
deposits in areas like Oyu Tolgoi and Tavan Tolgoi.
When I was appointed Prime Minister I settled on 5
absolute principles of State policy. One of them related to sharing the
mining income. We could not pinpoint the exact figure that would be every
Mongolian’s share. Estimates varied from Tg 500,000 to Tg 3 million.
Then last March Mr. Elbegdorj and I made a joint
announcement that our parties would together approve a new law on mining
that would see 51 percent Mongolian ownership of all natural resources, no
matter who the partner was. We discussed the matter and agreed not to
announce any specific figure to represent the possible share of every
Mongolian citizen.
The DP platform surprised us by suddenly talking
about Tg one million for every citizen. We did not think it was fair to
make an arbitrary promise not supported by calculation. So we sat down
with all the figures, and found that each Mongolian citizen would be
entitled to Tg 1.5 million worth shares in the country’s mineral
resources.
There is
widespread suspicion that the promise and the counter-promise are nothing
but election propaganda. As Prime Minister, do you think the next
government will actually be able to give such shares?
Why not? But nothing will or can
be done by issuing an order. First, we have to adopt the new law on
mining. After that, on the basis of the provisions of the new law, we
shall begin talks with foreign investors and these negotiations will
decide the Mongolian share of the profits or income.
Say, for example, the law is adopted and a fresh
agreement is signed on Oyu Tolgoi. Mongolia then could earn Tg 4 billion
per day. This means Mongolia will have Tg 1.4 trillion for investment per
year. Our present state budget is for Tg 2.4
trillion.
How do
you evaluate the election campaign so far?
People from both the city and the
countryside have watched with dismay how dirty the present campaign is
turning out to be. They are concerned that money power will badly
influence the poll results. The real danger however is in the source of
the money that is being used. Are foreigners using money to help people of
their choice get elected, so that they can then dictate policy making?
This is a serious threat to our independence. We have to be careful. I
really hope this is our last dirty election and things change next
time
.....
TRADE
AND DEVELOPMENT BANK PUTS OFF BOND SALE
Trade
and Development Bank of Mongolia has indefinitely postponed its
planned sale of $100 million in three-year bonds due to adverse market
conditions, a source with direct knowledge of the decision said on June
25. That marks the second time this year a high-yield issuer in Asia has
failed to complete a bond sale, following Indonesia's Truba Alama
Manunggal Engineering decision to pull its deal last month.
"We were
trying to price with expectations to do so at a certain level about the
Treasury, but now that Treasuries have widened so much, we've decided to
hold off. It's more of an unfortunate timing," said the source, who
declined to be identified talking about the
transaction.
TDBM,
the only issuer from Mongolia to ever issue offshore debt, had met global
bond investors in Asia and Europe, and last week had set guidance for its
bond sale at a yield of 11.5-11.75 percent.
The
Mongolia lender's debt is rated Ba2 by Moody's, or two notches below
investment grade.
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