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Saturday, August 31, 2013

Asia World Company to provide electricity for Bago region

An area of Yangon city with power blackout seen this year (Photo:EMG/Myo Min Htet)
Myanmar's Asia World Company has recently been granted permission to distribute electricity to 37 townships in Eastern Bago Region.
Asia World Group is Myanmar’s largest and most diversified conglomerate, which interests in industrial development, construction, transportation, import-export, and a local supermarket chain.
About half of Singapore’s investment in Myanmar comes through Asia World affiliates.
The Asia World Company.
The company is one of 20 private enterprises recently granted permission by Myanmar's government and President Thein Sein to supply electricity to 84 townships in other states and regions.
The winner companies are Gold Energy Limited, which is a subsidiary of Asia World Company, Ruby Dragon Construction, Capital Development, Eden Energy and Natural Resources Development Company.
Private power distribution companies will generate and supply not only electricity to the national grid but also reserve electricity when electricity cut off and power voltage is low.
Moreover, the companies have submitted the proposals to generate reserve power from coal-powered plants or natural gas-powered plants.
While the government outsources power distribution to private companies, there is yet no law in place that sets a standard for electricity supply and costs. Neither was any official announcement made about the contracts.
Many recognise the urgent need to upscale electricity production in Myanmar to meet a growing domestic demand for both businesses and private consumption. But many fear that a lack of regulation will lead to lack of accountability and exorbitant prices.
"If the industrialists invest in private power distribution enterprise, the public can enjoy more electricity. But, they [public] can’t get the electricity charges at the current price," an official from Yangon Region Government Committee said at a recent seminar held at the Sedona Hotel in Yangon.

MoneyGram expands funds-transfer service to Myanmar via alliance

The Nation
MoneyGram, a leading global money-transfer company, has announced that its international service will be available in Myanmar and will be provided through an alliance with three banks: Asia Green Development (AGD) Bank, Myanmar Citizens Bank (MCB) and Tun Foundation Bank (TFB).
"We are happy to announce that we will be reaching consumers in Myanmar through our alliance with these exceptional bank agents," said Grant Lines, MoneyGram senior vice president for Asia-Pacific, South Asia and Middle East. 
Its money-transfer services will be offered in 10 of Myanmar's 14 states, giving consumers access to affordable remittances. 
It is an important step for MoneyGram as it increases its global footprint and makes services available to more customers worldwide, he said. 
MoneyGram's initial services in Myanmar allow consumers to receive money securely from friends and family through these three banks, which have locations across the country. 
Each bank was selected for its reliability and reputation: MCB is a public bank, TFB is almost 20 years old and privately owned, and the parent company of AGD Bank owns the largest chain of banking businesses in the region. 
According to the World Bank, there were more than 510,000 Myanmar emigrants living across the globe in 2010. It is also estimated that about 2 million former Myanmar residents now work in countries including Thailand, Singapore, Japan, Australia and the United States. The move strategically positions MoneyGram to provide services to previously underserved Myanmar customers, and aims to bring customers closer through money transfers that can be made to and from locations across the globe, it says. 
With the launch of money-transfer services at these three banks, Myanmar consumers can receive funds from nearly 80 countries including Thailand, Malaysia, Japan, Singapore, Canada, the United Arab Emirates and Britain.

Myanmar real-estate summit to highlight infrastructure

The Nation
The second Myanmar Real Estate Summit (MRES), to be held in Yangon from September 30 to October 1, will hone in on pivotal issues, critical for investing in that country's real-estate development and property sector.
The sector is booming as investors respond positively to the country's economic and political reforms. Burgeoning demand and new opportunities are attracting investments from around the world. 
The extent of this can be judged by the fact that Yangon enjoys the highest property prices in Southeast Asia. The explosion in tourism is also leading to an acute shortage of hotels, residential buildings and mixed-use projects. 
Apart from new projects, old and existing properties are being refurbished and repositioned for generating incremental revenue.
New at this year's MRES is the spotlight on infrastructure developments, incentives for investments in special economic zones like Thilawa and Myothar Industrial Zone Park, the landscape of hotels and resorts in key tourist attractions such as Mandalay, plus discussions on financing and commercial terms including guidelines on land ownership and structuring joint ventures.
The summit will open with a welcoming address by the chairman of the Htoo Group of Companies, to be followed by a presentation on "Urbanisation of Yangon City: Master Plan and Outlook" by a senior official of the Yangon City Development Committee. 
Then there will be another address on "Mandalay as a Tourism and Industrial Hub" by a senior official from the Mandalay City Development Committee.
Among expert speakers from the real-estate industry will be Richard Leech, executive director for retail services at CB Richard Ellis (Vietnam) Co. He is slated to speak on "Retail Sector - Futurescape in Myanmar". 
Also on the speaker panel are Masaki Takahara, executive managing director of the Japan External Trade Organisation, with a presentation on "Infrastructure and Industrial Development: Thilawa Special Economic Zone", and Colliers International Myanmar managing director Tony Picon addressing the "Serviced Apartment Landscape in Myanmar".
The summit expects to draw regional and foreign property investors and developers, real-estate analysts, construction and engineering firms, consultants and brokerage firms, hoteliers, financiers and lenders, banks and financial institutions, asset managers and fund managers, real-estate funds, REITs, hedge funds and private equity, insurance firms, law firms, tax consultants, industry regulators and many more.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Myanmar housing development bank to open next month

The opening ceremony of Construction and Housing Development Bank ( Photo - EMG)
The Construction and Housing Development Bank Limited (CHDB) will open its first branch within a month, according to their managing director.
The bank was licensed on July 15 and aims to provide cheap housing through installment plans for low-income families, pensioners and government workers.
"We are planning to open a bank branch in one month. After opening, we are planning to buy shares concerning banks. We are arranging in detail for opening a bank branch,” said Win Zaw, Managing Director Win Zaw of CHDB.
The company aims sell up to 10 million shares at K 10,000 a unit. The CHDB will allow government employees, staff from private companies and international investors to invest in shares, according to the Ministry of Construction.
"For the low income public, we assume that a financial system which allows a 20 to 30 years long term settlement may be suitable for them. Only then can the low income public own an apartment. That’s why we are establishing CHDB,” said Minister for Construction, Kyaw Lwin on July 15.

Land Prices Soar in Muse As New Zone Attracts Chinese, Burmese Investors

RANGOON — Chinese and Burmese businessmen have been rushing to buy up land in a new economic zone in the border town of Muse, northern Shan State, causing local land prices to skyrocket, according to residents, who claim that prices have topped US$200,000 per acre.
“This is a big project and Chinese people really like it. Every day, many people from PRC [People’s Republic of China] come to purchase lands from that project zone. Generally, the buyers give two hundred million Kyats [about $205,000] for a one-acre plot,” resident Sai Aye said.
Such land prices are roughly on par with the market rate for land located on favorable locations, such as near roads, on the outskirts of Rangoon.
Earlier this year, Muse District authorities approved plans for the 288-acre (115-hectare) Central Economic Zone located on the banks of the Shweli River, which demarcates the Burma-China border. Burmese firms Great Hawkham Public Co Ltd and New Star Light Co Ltd were granted rights to develop the zone, government newspaper The New Light of Myanmar reported in June.
New Star Light Company has so far claimed about 200 acres (80 hectare) of land in the project area and offered $25,000 per acre in compensation to affected farmers, said Sai Kyaw, a Muse District farmer who sold his land.
Although this compensation sum is far above the rates that farmers in for instance the Thiliwa Special Economic Zone near Rangoon can expect, Muse residents were still disgruntled because Chinese investors were now offering even higher prices, according to Sai Kyaw.
“New Star Light Company started the project by giving 25 million kyat [$25,600] for each acre of farmland. But now, Chinese people buy the land that is not yet confiscated for the project for 100 million kyats [$105,000],” the farmer complained. “So, the owners of the confiscated farmlands feel really sorry. However, the companies are partly supported by the government. We cannot object to the project.”
Real estate development in Muse Central Economic Zone is said to include hotels, jade trading shops, supermarkets, recreation centers and business towers. A conceptual illustration of the completed project depicts a mix of futuristic high-rise buildings, malls and modern residential areas in the town.
Muse is located on the opposite riverbank of the Chinese border town Ruili, Yunnan Province. It is the country’s most important border trading post and functions as a conduit for the growing trade between Burma and Yunnan Province, which was valued at about $2.7 billion in 2011, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua.
Sai Aik Maung, another local farmer, said he feared he would be forced to part with his farmland because Burmese firms and Chinese businessmen seeking to buy land had the support of local authorities.
He said wanted more than $25,000 per acre as he would be without a livelihood after he sells his land. “We have been farmers ever since the days of our grandparents. Now, even if we cannot continue as farmers, we want to get good prices for our farmlands,” Sai Aik Maung said.
Additional reporting by Paul Vrieze.

Golden Return: Serge Pun Constructs A Real-Estate Empire In Myanmar

This story appears in the September 2, 2013 issue of Forbes Asia.
    
The road to Star City is a rutted two-lane highway that threads past the ragtag outskirts of Yangon, crosses two rusted bridges and ends, almost an hour later, at a slick showroom on a grassy riverbank. A roadside billboard welcomes me to “A Model City of Tomorrow.” After a bumpy ride in monsoon rains the real estate showroom comes as a relief and something of a mystery. As a salesman clicks on interactive screens showing condominium designs and floor plans, I wonder who would choose to live out here in the boondocks.
Later I step outside and, as the rains pause, look upriver toward the city. And there, shimmering above the grimy streets, is the golden spire of Shwedagon, the Buddhist temple that is a symbol both of a nation’s ancient riches and popular resistance to five decades of military rule that ended in 2011.
Only then do I grasp the shiny promise of Star City and why local buyers are snapping up units aimed at middle-income families. The 400-acre site will eventually be linked by ferry to downtown and by road to a Japanese-backed port farther downriver. With a planned community of 25,000, it’s a self-contained commuter belt for a city with a population of 5 million that may double in the next 20 years, driving up land prices and pinching public services. It’s a bet on a promise of peace and prosperity.
The man behind Star City is Serge Pun, a former exile who returned to Myanmar in the 1990s to build a property-to-banking empire that came close to collapse a decade later. Reinvigorated by the political thaw, Pun is now tapping foreign capital and talent to double down on holdings like Star City that lay fallow during the dictatorship. Other Burmese tycoons are sitting on prize assets but could struggle to unlock their value compared with Pun, who is Myanmar’s top residential developer and among its richest men.
An ethnic Chinese, Pun is both an insider and a curious outlier in an opaque political economy geared to crony capitalism. He styles himself as a principled businessman who says no to corruption and isn’t afraid to make enemies. This dualism, the insider and outsider, is reflected in his penchant for gated suburban communities that circle the city. That said, his next big project, running in parallel with Star City, is a mixed-use redevelopment of 9.6 acres of prime downtown land that he’s sat on for two decades and is conservatively valued at $100 million.
His ambitions don’t end with real estate: First Myanmar Investments (FMI), his flagship, has interests in agribusiness, auto distribution, tourism, civil aviation and retail. Barely a month goes by without a new venture or spinoff. Pun’s impeccable image and overseas exposure have made him a go-to guy for Asian and Western firms seeking partners in Myanmar, a bridge between worlds. He has permanent residency both in Hong Kong, where he founded his first venture, and in Singapore, where he has a listed company, Yoma Strategic Holdings. “International companies consider us as foreign. Burma’s government consider us as a Burmese company,” he tells me.
Pun isn’t in Yangon when I visit Star City, so we meet instead in a hotel lobby in Beijing. With a shock of silver hair over an unlined forehead and rimless glasses the 60-year-old has a modest, avuncular air. During breaks he pops outside to smoke Al Capone-branded cigarillos. His reputation, though, is that of a shrewd and dogged bargainer. “He’s a great closer,” says a party to a recent transaction. When he pays for our drinks, he chides the Chinese waitress at length over an unwarranted charge on our $34 bill and vows to talk to the hotel manager. I’m left unsure if he’s putting on a show of frugality for me or is truly ticked off.
To his family and friends he’s Serge, an affable workaholic. “There’s no difference between personal life and work life; it’s always the same thing,” says Melvyn Pun, his eldest son and chief executive of FMI. Ken Mandel, an American who worked for Pun in the 1990s, says: “He loves what he does. It’s obvious.” Inside the company he’s known as S.P., perhaps to avoid confusion with the other Puns. His Burmese name is Theim Wai. But he’s proudest of being called Burma’s Mr. Clean, the man who dared to say no to the grasping generals. “I’ve never paid a cent. But I’ve never been short of opportunities,” Pun avers.
This reputation set him apart from tainted tycoons like Tay Za, one of dozens of individuals subject to U.S. financial sanctions. Most analysts agree that Pun is scrupulous in his governance and didn’t consort with the hated junta that stepped down in 2011. But “you don’t get where Serge is today without having some friends in high places,” says a foreign consultant, who discussed Pun on the condition of anonymity.
Analysts point to Pun’s extensive land holdings and a banking license acquired in the 1990s, when Myanmar’s corruption was rife. Yoma Bank would later have a near collapse during a run on private lenders. In 1997 FMI acquired a minority stake in a now-defunct joint venture between the regime and Suzuki Motors to assemble cars and motorbikes for a near-captive market.
Pun says that he works with pragmatists in government and that land and other concessions were awarded on the basis of performance, not favoritism. “We do things properly. We don’t cut corners,” he says. By refusing to compromise, Pun says he lost out on crony deals. “We paid a high price during the dark years, at the brink of elimination. We stood firmly to our principles,” he insists.
Pun is upbeat on Myanmar’s economic prospects after decades of stagnation and misrule. In the last 18 months he’s hired dozens of expat managers and returning Burmese, including three of his four foreign-born sons. This investment in foreign talent, and their willingness to relocate, is another aspect that sets him apart from local entrepreneurs and gives him credibility with multinationals.
However, it also jacks up his costs. Yoma Strategic reported an 81% drop in profits in the three months to June 30 on a doubling in administrative costs and a modest 12% year-on-year rise in revenues. A small net profit for the full year is forecast, but investors seem undeterred: Yoma’s stock is trading at over 80 times future earnings.
Myanmar doesn’t have a stock market, so shares in FMI, which Pun founded in 1991 and owns 70% of, are traded over-the-counter in Yangon. Both FMI and Yoma, which reverse-listed in Singapore in 2006, have issued new stock as investors dive into Asia’s newest frontier. These include George Soros, whose fund invested in Yoma and later teamed up with Pun and Jamaica’s Digicel to bid unsuccessfully for a wireless telecom license in Myanmar.
Yoma’s main revenue comes from property sales in Yangon, where prices have soared since 2010. “The demand is there. And the supply continues to fall short,” says Tan Ai Teng, vice president of DBS Vickers Research in Singapore. That makes Yoma, as Singapore’s only Burmese stock, a proxyplay on the market.

Japanese firm to invest in Myanmar agribusiness

                                        Fruits displayed at a Megumi No Sato store (Photo - Megumi No Sato)

 
Japan-based Megumi No Sato will join hands with Myanmar's City Mart Holding Company, to produce and sell vegetables and fruits, according to a company announcement.
Megumi No Sato is a popular company back in Japan and is part of the G-7 Group which specialises in selling quality vegetables from select farmers. The Myanmar Investment Commission (MIC) has granted a joint-venture permission to City Mart Holding according to the Citizen Investment Law.
The company will carry out cultivation of vegetables and fruits in Pyin Oo Lwin Township of Mandalay region, central Myanmar.
Megumi No Sato Company is now cultivating and selling agricultural products in Japan and it also provides support to farmers to create stable incomes for supplying fresh vegetable at a reasonable prices.
The Japanese government is eyeing to invest in production and selling of vegetables and fruits in Myanmar. This is the first Japanese private joint-partnership with a Myanmar company.
The MIC granted permissions to five other foreign investment enterprises and one citizen investment during a meeting held on August 21 this year.