'OGDCL sale postponed after IMF nod'

Finance ministry official says IMF indicated it would overlook postponement as long as privatisation remains on track


Reuters November 12, 2014

ISLAMABAD: The last minute halt in the much-anticipated sale of state shares in the Oil and Gas Development Co Ltd (OGDCL) was prompted by an unlikely source - the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

The IMF has been encouraging Pakistan to reform the energy sector, expand the tax base and privatise loss-making state industries by making those conditions for a $6.7 billion bailout of the economy.

Those terms led the government to put up for sale a 7.5% stake in OGDCL in September, seeking to raise about $815 million in what would have been the largest offering from a local company in almost eight years.

Last week, however, the IMF indicated that a $1.1 billion loan was no longer contingent on the stake sale, five Pakistani officials told Reuters, giving the government a get-out clause from a deal that had failed to pique significant investor interest.

"The IMF indicated it would overlook the postponement of the deal as long as the overall privatisation process remained on track," said a senior finance ministry official who declined to be named as the cancellation details remained confidential.

The IMF could not be immediately reached for comment.

Pakistan's top privatisation official this week said the sale had been postponed indefinitely due to weak investor interest triggered by falling oil prices.

Pakistan wants to find buyers for 68 public companies, most of which are loss-making, and sees the sell-offs as a life saver for a $225 billion economy crippled by power shortages, corruption and militant violence. In total, the country wants to raise $5 billion from stake sales by the end of 2015.

But just one hour after the board of the Privatisation Commission approved the OGDCL stake sale last Saturday, Finance Minister Ishaq Dar told the cabinet the transaction was cancelled, several officials said. They all declined to be named as the details of the cancellation remained confidential.

"Dar gave the Privatisation Commission board his nod and even gave recommendations on what to do next," a central bank official privy to Saturday's meeting told Reuters. "But an hour or so later, he signed into the cabinet meeting on Skype from Dubai and said the deal was off."

Dar was in Dubai at the time for negotiations with the IMF on a three-year Extended Fund Facility (EFF).

The source also said Dar had told the IMF he would make up for the lost revenue through other means, such as a planned issue of Islamic bonds worth $1.5 billion by December and fast-tracking the sale of other state companies including State Life Insurance Corporation of Pakistan Insurance and Murree Gas.

Unanimous decision?

The OGDCL deal was due to close on Friday. By that deadline, investors had only bid for just over half of the shares on offer, the sources said. Despite the weak showing, the Privatisation Commission board unanimously agreed on Saturday to go ahead with the sale, the sources added.

"Not going ahead was not even an option, it was just not on the table," a member of the board said. "Most people sitting at the table were in shock when Dar announced the cancellation."

Asked if the finance minister had overruled the board, Privatisation Commission Chairman Mohammad Zubair said the decision to scrap the deal was unanimous. He also denied the IMF had any bearing on the process.

"We take our decisions based on our national interests," he said. "We decide what will be privatised and on what timeline. The IMF doesn't tell us what to do."

COMMENTS (3)

Gp65 | 9 years ago | Reply

@Shahid Ahmed: You are clearly not understanding. By the,way I am an Indian and not a PML-N supporter.

The shares could not be sold when they were initially supposed to. This was due to the dharna.

During the delay, oil prices crashed around the world and as a result

A)inVestor interest in these shares dropped significantly

B) market price of the share also dropped significantly.

It would not have been beneficial to Pakistan to sell at such a low price, so they asked IMF to waive the privatization condition which it did.

IMF simply gave Pakistan a waiver upon Pakistan's request and after receiing assurance that the budget deficit would be plugged by other means.

IMF had no reason to stop the privatisation, nor did it do so.

Shahid Ahmed | 9 years ago | Reply

Now the NS government is trying to cover up saying that because the shares fell due to dharna so it could not be sold. Again they are bieng deceptive, as it was IMF who stopped them. Shame on you Nawaz and his deciples. This corrupt system has to go.

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