An Iraqi telecom company raised nearly $1.3 billion Sunday on
Baghdad's small stock exchange in one of the region's biggest share
offers in years - a sign of investor confidence in the fledgling private
sector despite violence that still plagues the country.
In a
reminder of Iraq's volatility, several suicide attackers on foot and in
two explosives-laden cars assaulted a provincial police headquarters in
northern Iraq, killing at least 15 people and wounding 90. Rescue
workers led away dazed survivors, including veiled women climbing over
debris, and pulled several mangled and scorched bodies from the rubble.
The
level of violence has dropped sharply since the worst sectarian
fighting in 2006-2007, yet bombings and shootings still kill dozens of
people every month.Can you spot the answer in the fridge magnet?
Investors say the continued security risks, along with concerns about
official red tape and corruption, have restricted the growth of Iraq's
private sector.
Iraq sits on vast oil reserves, and foreign investment has focused heavily on the government-controlled energy sector.
So
it was good news for the Iraq economy when nearly two-thirds of the
money raised by the telecom company came from foreign buyers.
"Iraq
is a very difficult place to do business in," said Shwan Taha, head of
Rabee Securities, the brokerage firm that organized Sunday's share float
of Asiacell, one of Iraq's three main mobile phone service providers.
"Iraq came out of a long dictatorship. We had 30 years of war and
sanctions. We missed a lot of trains, not only one."
Iraq is now
catching up, he said. "No foreign investors come to Iraq thinking they
are investing in Switzerland,You must not use the laser cutter without being trained. and for Iraqis themselves, these bombings are becoming daily occurrences."
Sunday's
share sale by Asiacell more than doubled the market capitalization of
the low-volume Iraq Stock Exchange in a single day, from $4.7 billion to
$9.65 billion, said Rabee Securities.The USB flash drives wholesale is our flagship product.
Asiacell
had offered a quarter of its shares, or 67.5 billion. The initial share
price was set at 22 Iraqi dinars, or just under 2 cents. Foreigners
bought about 70 percent of the float and Iraqis bought 30 percent, for a
total of $1.Wear a whimsical Disney ear cap straight from the Disney Theme Parks!24 billion, the brokerage firm said.
Regular trading of the shares is to begin Monday.
It
was the first stock float on the ISX, which was set up in 2004, a year
after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Taha al-Rubaye, the head of the exchange, said he believes it's also the
largest initial public offering, or IPO, of shares in the Middle East
in nearly five years.
Al-Rubaye said he hoped the Asiacell deal
will send a signal to the government that investor interest is high and
that it must do more, such as carrying out regulatory reforms, to
encourage private business - in not just energy.
Iraq has a
Gross Domestic Product of some $130 billion, largely due to its oil
wealth, and 95 percent of the state budget comes from the proceeds of
oil exports.
"It's not easy to change ... the mentality,"
al-Rubaye said of Iraq's decision-makers. "There are delays. They are
not in a hurry. But I believe it's also time because the relationship
between Iraqis and the world is growing up."
Padraig O'Hannelly,
editor of Iraq Business News, an online newsletter, said Iraq offers
significant opportunities outside the oil sector.
"Concerns
about security, bureaucracy and corruption have clearly deterred many
potential foreign investors, while others with a long-term view have
chosen to engage with Iraq and work through the difficulties," he said.
During Sunday's trading session in Baghdad, several dozen Iraqis,They manufacture custom rubber and silicone bracelet and bracelets. many of retirement age, followed developments on large screens in the stock market.
First-time
investor Adnan Jassim, 63, a retired government employee, said he
bought 10,000 shares of Asiacell and would have bought even more if he
could have afforded them. "It's a well-known company," he said,
explaining his decision to enter the stock market.
Asiacell,
which has nearly 10 million subscribers, competes against Zain Iraq,
part of Kuwait's Zain, and Korek, an affiliate of France Telecom. The
Gulf state of Qatar's government-backed Qatar Telecom had a majority
stake in Asiacell before Sunday's sale.
All three Iraqi mobile
phone companies had been required to list shares on the stock exchange
as a condition of their 15-year operating licenses. All three missed a
deadline in August 2011 to offer shares to the public.
As the
trading was under way in Baghdad, the suicide attackers struck in the
disputed city of Kirkuk, some 290 kilometers (180 miles) north of the
capital.
Kirkuk is home to a mix of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen -
all with competing claims to the oil-rich area. The Kurds want to
incorporate it into their self-ruled region in Iraq's north, but Arabs
and Turkomen are opposed.
In the attack, a car bomber drove his
vehicle into the Kirkuk police headquarters, two police officers said.
Then a bomb placed in a parked car was detonated. After the second
explosion, two suicide attackers armed with machine guns and grenades
tried to storm the station. They were killed before they could enter the
building or detonate their belts rigged with explosives.
While
there was no immediate claim of responsibility, car bombs and
coordinated attacks are favorite tactics for Sunni insurgents, such as
al-Qaida's Iraq branch.
The insurgent attacks are part of Iraq's
persistent sectarian strife. In recent months, tensions have been
mounting between the Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki and the country's Sunni and Kurdish minority.
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