Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

**OGDCL ki privitization honi thi 18th October ko but PTI in its usual game of dirty politics have taken stay against it from Peshawar High Court

They want to financially paralyse Govt … just as they did in delaying in $34 Bn Investment from China …

Bs mein kisi trah PM bn jao … Pakistan aur Economy jae bhaar mein …

**

Pakistan seeks $2bn from Privatisations

By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad

http://im.ft-static.com/content/images/e71302e8-6144-4f42-9746-83c12129b55a.img

The loss making Pakistan International Airlines will be put up for sale

Pakistan expects to raise** at least $2bn by March next year **through the international sale of shares in Pakistani energy and banking companies, according to the man spearheading the privatisation drive.

Muhammad Zubair, chairman of the privatisation commission, signalled the country’s return to global equity markets following what the government says is the end of a political crisis marked by weeks of demonstrations in the capital, Islamabad.

“There was uncertainty that the prime minister will be forced to resign, the parliament will be packed up,” he said, referring to the protests led by Imran Khan, the cricketer-turned-politician, and Tahirul Qadri, a moderate Islamic leader.

“By mid-September, it was clear that the prime minister was staying and the parliament will remain intact.”
Demonstrators remain camped outside the parliament, but other political parties, including some opponents of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, have backed the government’s right to run the country until its five-year mandate expires in 2018.

Mr Zubair will share his message of returning political stability on Thursday when he meets potential investors at the start of a roadshow beginning in London to sell a 7.5 per cent stake in Oil and Gas Development Co. Analysts say the offer through global depositary receipts should raise more than $800m.

This will be followed by the offer of government shares in the privately run Habib Bank, which analysts said could fetch up to $1.2 bn in the first quarter of next year. HBL was privatised in 2003 when 51 per cent was sold to the Aga Khan Fund for Economic Development.

Mr Zubair said a successful outcome of the two deals would build investor confidence and help pave the way for privatising other public sector companies. He said at least nine electricity distribution companies and six generating companies would be privatised.
Pakistan International Airlines, the loss making state-owned carrier would also be offered for sale. In the past week, Pakistani officials have said the government was planning to split PIA into two, offering its international operations to a Middle Eastern airline while selling ageing aircraft and domestic routes to a local investor.

Mr Zubair said the privatisation programme had the support of every mainstream political party.** “We have met with 60 international equity funds. At least 90 per cent are convinced that political stability will remain in Pakistan . . . We now have to demonstrate we are back at work.”
**

Mr Sharif was elected prime minister for the third time in May 2013 and is seeking to revive confidence in an economy ravaged by corruption, poor management and attacks on official and civilian targets by Taliban Islamist extremists.
**
As the scion of a prominent business family in the populous Punjab province, Mr Sharif has advertised himself as a business-friendly leader eager to privatise lossmaking state groups.**

But some analysts are sceptical about the likely extent of privatisation, warning that even a successful sale of OGDCL and HBL shares will not necessarily lead to the sale of struggling electricity groups.

**
“Getting credible foreign investors has historically proven difficult, especially when it comes to taking charge of public sector companies,” **said Sakib Sherani, a former adviser to the finance ministry.

“These assets include those that are heavily overstaffed and have run in loss for a long time. The real test will come when these assets are put up for strategic sales along with transfer of management.”

Nor is political stability guaranteed, with Mr Khan and Mr Qadri repeating their demands for Mr Sharif to resign and trade unions likely to flex their muscles.

Mr Zubair assured a conference in New Delhi that the political crisis was “over”, that Taliban militants were on the run as the result of a “fantastic” military operation against them in North Waziristan and that Pakistan could grow at 8 or 10 per cent a year for the next decade.

Western economists are less certain. **“Islamabad has been locked in a state of paralysis for weeks,” **said one.

“The moment the government wants to move to the next stage of privatising companies will also be the stage when the [public sector] unions will block the plan . . . The danger is that the unions will join protesters on the streets of Islamabad.”

When Mr Zubair drives to his office every morning, he passes scores of tents put up by protesters across the road from the parliament. “For any investor looking at Pakistan, this unwieldy sight raises fears of the unknown,” says the head of a privately owned bank.

“People [investors] will be left asking if this is a good time to enter a country faced with the danger of political turmoil.”
*

Additional reporting by Victor Mallet in New Delhi*

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

IK doesn't want to benefit the country of the people. Thus the dharna's were timed when the Chinese Premier was coming, when the IMF was coming and when the SL Premier was coming.

It was all to ensure we do not benefit economically as a nation.

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

On what grounds, PTI was able to get Stay orders?

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

No logical reason according to the Dawn and from what I have read. There is no reason to oppose this. It benefits the country over all.

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

so Courts are now issuing stay orders on illogical reasons.

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

Nothing … only rangbazi … qanooni moo shagafia and create financial problems for the Federal Govt

Just remember when Supreme Court gave order against Pakistan Steel Mill privitisation in 2006 and still it is bleeding

http://www.dawn.com/news/1136162/high-court-stays-imminent-sale-of-ogdcl-shares

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

**

Pakistan Plans to Sell Stake in Oil & Gas Development**

Government Looks to Raise Some $800 Million Through Sale of Up to 10% Stake in Firm

By SAEED SHAH

Updated Sept. 23, 2014 4:35 p.m. ET

The tower of a gas drilling rig, operated by Oil & Gas Development Co., stands in Punjab, Pakistan. The government is planning to sell up to a 7.5% stake in the company and raise up to $816 million. Bloomberg News

ISLAMABAD—Pakistan said it plans to sell a stake in the country’s biggest oil-and-gas exploration business, mostly to foreign investors via the London Stock Exchange,LSE.LN -2.58% in a test of international financial appetite as the nation begins to emerge from a political crisis.

The planned sale of as much as 10% of the government’s share in Oil and Gas Development Company Limited, slated for early next month, will be the largest divestment since Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif came to power in June 2013 with promises of a large-scale privatization program and economic revival.

After initial enthusiasm from international investors for the new government last year, Pakistan’s economy has been hit by political protests in Islamabad that started in mid-August, paralyzing the leadership.

Demonstrators, led by politician Imran Khan and Muslim cleric Tahir ul Qadri, demanding Mr. Sharif’s resignation remain camped out in Islamabad, but with protesters’ momentum fizzling out after six weeks, the prospect of Mr. Sharif being forced from office has receded.

the recent crisis has been a reminder of the fragile state of democracy in Pakistan and its capacity for instability.

“For us, the crisis is over, the prime minister is going nowhere,” Privatization Minister Mohammad Zubair said in an interview. “But we have to convince investors that whatever has happened is in the past, and our focus as a government is now back on work.”

The protests particularly hindered the government’s efforts to build up foreign-exchange reserves. The political turmoil forced the postponement of a planned $1 billion Sukuk Islamic bond issue, delayed the disbursement of the latest $550 million tranche of a loan from the International Monetary Fund, and put off the OGDCL stake sale, originally scheduled for September, Mr. Zubair said.

**As a result, the government will fall short of its target of $16 billion in foreign-exchange reserves by the end of September, he said. The current figure is around $13.5 billion.
**

The sale of the OGDCL stake should raise between $800 million and $850 million, Mr. Zubair said, with most of the offering made through Global Depositary Shares traded on the London Stock Exchange. The company is focused primarily on natural gas and holds the largest portfolio of recoverable hydrocarbon reserves in Pakistan.

**OGDCL’s net profit for the year ended June 30 stood at $1.2 billion, up 36% on the year. The company holds 58% of Pakistan’s recoverable oil reserves and 41% of the country’s recoverable gas reserves as of Dec. 31, 2013. Apart from having oil and gas fields in various parts of Pakistan, the company is also involved in related engineering construction.
**

OGDCL said it would continue to raise production to meet domestic energy demand, one-third of which is currently met by imports. Pakistan suffers from a crippling electricity shortage caused partly by having to import oil to run power stations.

The sale of the stake will take the government’s holding of OGDCL down to 67.5%, while an employee trust owns a further 10%. The offering is being handled internationally by Citigroup C -1.38% and Merrill Lynch. In Pakistan, where shares will be sold on the Karachi Stock Exchange, the issue is led by KASB Bank.

**Earlier this year, the government raised $387 million by selling down its stake in United Bank Limited and a further $155 million by reducing its holding in Pakistan Petroleum Limited.
**

Coming up in December is the first stage of the planned $1.2 billion two-stage sale of part of the government share in HBL, a Pakistani bank, said Mr. Zubair.

Mr. Zubair said that the previously delayed sale of a strategic stake in Pakistan International Airlines, the troubled national carrier, would now take place in the summer of 2015.

A consortium led by Dubai Islamic Bank will start work next week on restructuring the airline, splitting assets and personnel between the core business, which will be offered for sale, and another entity which will house its liabilities and surplus workers.

Mr. Zubair said the government was seeking to interest a global airline, probably from the Middle East, in buying into the core PIA business.

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

Yup. Its not like its not happened before.

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

Sehrai Parinda lulz](http://www.paklinks.com/gs/usertag.php?do=list&action=hash&hash=Lulz)

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

where will all the money go (that comes from privatisation)

into the bank accounts of nawaz and family ??

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

**Upcoming

**

http://www.privatisation.gov.pk/Transactions/EOI/ABL.jpg

http://www.privatisation.gov.pk/Transactions/EOI/HBL.jpg

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

ah yes more money to be made by selling off everything.

keep inflating those bank accounts of the members of pml and ppp. Corruption at its highest

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

SC … :k:

SC gives government go-ahead with the bidding of OGDCL

By Hasnaat Malik
Published: October 10, 2014

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/773405-SupremeCourtAFP-1412954271-414-640x480.jpg

K-P government had challenged the federal government’s decision to put 10 per cent or 322 million ordinary shares of the government in OGDCL on sale for international and domestic investors. PHOTO: AFP


ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Friday allowed the federal government to proceed with the bidding process for Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) shares, but restrained the government from selling or transferring shares till conclusion of the case.

The two judge bench of the apex court, headed by Justice Ejaz Afzal Khan and Justice Gulzar Ahmad on Friday took up the federal government’s appeal against the Peshawar High Court’s October 3 interim order staying privatisation of OGDCL.

The bench has also issued notice to all respondents including Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) government and adjourned the matter until October 13.
During Friday’s hearing, Attorney General of Pakistan Salman Aslam Butt has contended that privatisation of OGDCL is in national interest.

The Cabinet Committee on Privatisation (CCOP) as well as the Privatisation Commission (PC) had decided to put 10 per cent, or 322 million ordinary shares of the government in OGDCL on sale for international and domestic investors on Oct 3, 2013 and Jan 8-9, 2014 respectively. The PC’s board had even approved the appointment of a **consortium consisting of Merrill Lynch International, Citigroup and KASB Bank **to act as financial advisers for the sale on April 22, 2014.

However, the government’s decision to privatise OGDCL was challenged by the K-P government before the Peshawar High Court (PHC), and a division bench of the high court stayed the federal government’s decision on Oct 3.
However, secretary petroleum, OGDCL and the PC jointly filed a petition in the Supreme Court, requesting the apex court to suspend the PHC’s interim order.

The appeal deplored that the K-P government, while challenging the privatisation process, had concealed important facts with mala fide intent and thus invoked the discretionary jurisdiction of the high court “with unclean hands”, especially when it was not an aggrieved party.

Therefore, the K-P government was not entitled to any discretionary relief, the appeal urged while highlighting that the provincial government was legally obliged to implead the federal government as a party, which it did not, in the first litigation before the high court. This was necessary since the original decision was made by the federal cabinet.

The appeal reminded the apex court that the constitutional change brought about by the 18th Amendment in Article 172 of the Constitution was prospective having no bearing upon the existing commitments and obligations. The constitutional provision suggests that any property without any rightful ownership of a property will vest in the government of the province where it is located as well as the federal government.
The federal government’s interest in exploration and production through OGDCL was created much earlier to the 18th Amendment and it is protected under the existing commitments and obligations as provided in Article 172(3) of the Constitution, the appeal explained.

It contended that Article 172 uses the expression “jointly vested” and explained that vesting of natural resources in the respective provinces and the federal government was in fact a public trust. Those resources belong to the people of entire Pakistan.

The K-P government’s challenge before the high court, the appeal argued, was totally misconceived and based on an incorrect interpretation of Article 172 of the Constitution, and the high court should not have ventured to enter into this political thicket by passing the stay order.
Likewise, the K-P government, in its challenge before the high court, levelled false allegations of corruption and malpractices against a large number of institutions, including the federal government, the appeal argued.

Refuting vehemently allegations of corruption levelled by the K-P government, the federal government’s appeal pleaded that those allegations were pure questions of fact and could not be decided by the high court in the exercise of its constitutional jurisdiction under Article 199 of the Constitution.
**

OGDCL has stakes in blocks located in K-P**

Earlier, the K-P government had stated before the PHC that recent discoveries of oil and gas in the province have made it one of the richest petroleum regions in the country producing almost 50 per cent of the entire indigenous oil production and 10 per cent of the total natural gas supplies.

The provincial government further stated that Exploration and Production (E&P) in up-stream oil and gas sector is carried out in different geographical regions that are called ”blocks”. Territories comprising K-P are divided into 22 blocks, where-against petroleum rights and concessions are awarded to different E&P Companies. He argued that OGDCL has a significant footprint in and hold on oil and gas resources in the Province with 100 per cent ownership in Latambar, Wali, Pezu, Hetu, Dhakni, Baratai and Orakzai Blocks, whereas a sizable interest is owned in other blocks as well as Tal (30%), Gurgalot (75%), Nashpa (65%), Kohat (30%) and Bannu West (40%).

The OGDCL owns up to 27.76 per cent stakes in major producing fields such as Makori, Makori East, Manzalai, Mamikhel, and Maramzai, besides having non-operating interests in numerous other interests.

“All these irrefutable facts and figures make OGDCL one of the biggest players in the oil and gas sector for the Province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa as well,”

The provincial government had urged the court to restrain all the respondents from transferring, alienating or diminishing existing shareholding or giving effect to impugned sale, adding that the entire process of impugned sale may also be declared void ab-initio and ultra vires.
Accepting the plea of the provincial government, the PHC on October 3 had directed the OGDCL, SECP and Privatisation Commission to file comments in response to the petition and adjourned hearing of the case till October 20.

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

OGDCL shares: Investor appetite will not be affected, say analysts

                                         By [Saad Hasan](http://tribune.com.pk/author/2504/saad-hasan/)
               Published: October 11, 2014

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/773559-OGDCLcopy-1412962826-243-640x480.jpg

OGDCL plans to spend Rs105 billion in the ongoing fiscal year with nearly half of it earmarked for drilling over 30 wells. STOCK IMAGE

                **KARACHI: ** **The book-building process to be held for the secondary public  offering of Oil and Gas Development Company Limited’s (OGDCL) shares  will begin sometime next week as the Supreme Court of Pakistan has  allowed the transaction to go ahead, officials said on Friday. **

“Even though we have been allowed to proceed, the process can only start after October 13 (Monday) when the court has asked all parties to show up so that the matter could be settled,” said an official involved in the deal.

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Saad-Khan.jpg

OGDCL’s book building, which helps the share underwriters to determine market appetite for the securities, was supposed to take place between October 9 and 15.

But that did not happen after the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf-led government of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa asked the Peshawar High Court to stop the sale of the government’s 10% stake in the company.

The government hopes to raise around $800 million from selling 322 million shares or 7.5% of the paid-up capital in the country’s largest petroleum firm to local and international investors.

Despite the delay, fund managers and analysts say that smart investors will not be giving much weight to political issues when it comes to determining the worth of OGDCL.

“The [court] case has no impact on the company at all,” said Nihal Cassim, CEO at Safeway Fund. “As far as international investors are concerned, they are smarter to realise the real worth of this company.”

OGDCL posted a net profit of Rs123.914 billion in fiscal 2014, up 35.77% over the previous year. It boasts total assets of Rs496 billion and contributes 29% and 50% to Pakistan’s gas and oil production, respectively.

Saad Khan of Arif Habib Limited said that he also sees the transaction going through without major hindrance. “I don’t see political concerns weighing down book building. Rather, it would be the oil prices that might affect valuation of shares.”

KASB Securities is the lead manager for secondary public offering in local capital markets while Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Citigroup will handle sale of global depository shares.

Previously, the government sold OGDCL shares to foreign investors in November 2006. It raised $772 million against the sale of 408.6 million shares.

Senior company officials along with Privatisation Commission Chairman Mohammad Zubair are already on a tour for road shows in a bid to woo foreign investors.

Speaking to potential investors last month in Karachi, Zubair had said that selling shares was not easy especially since such a large transaction was taking place after eight years.

More importantly, he said, this will help improve the country’s image, raising the stakes for the transaction after which the government is to sell stake in strategic assets like Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) as well.

Around 90% of the proceeds from the OGDCL sale will go towards debt servicing with the remaining amount to be used for programmes related to poverty alleviation.

OGDCL plans to spend Rs105 billion in the ongoing fiscal year with nearly half of it earmarked for drilling over 30 wells.
*

Published in The Express Tribune, October 11[SUP]th[/SUP], 2014.*

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

**SC … ** :k:

SC gives green light to OGDCL privatisation

By Web Desk
Published: October 20, 2014

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/778256-SupremeCourtAFP-1413800973-459-640x480.jpg

****ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Monday allowed the government to privatise Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDCL), Radio Pakistan](http://www.radio.gov.pk/newsdetail/71658/1) reported.

Hearing the OGDCL case, the apex court in an interim order directed that OGDCL shares be sold out to companies with higher bids.
Notices in this regard have also been issued to the concerned parties by the court and the hearing of the case has been adjourned for three weeks.

In a concise statement submitted before the Supreme Court on Saturday, the federal government said that if the privatisation of 10% shares of the OGDCL was not completed, Pakistan would be exposed to ‘great financial loss’.

The government requested the top court to dismiss the petition of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government against the privatisation of OGDCL. “It would be an irretrievable loss which would affect future prospects of foreign investments,” said the statement by Additional Attorney General Waqar Rana.
The federal government has alleged that the K-P government is attempting to create the impression of a national economic crisis, which simply doesn’t exist.

Since the PHC passed the restraining order, the value of OGDCL’s share has depreciated by about Rs20, it added. “If this uncertainty continues there is great likelihood that the share value will further depreciate. The loss already suffered on this account runs into 100s of millions of rupees.”

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

Privatisation programme: Slim chances of getting $4b in proceeds this year

By Shahbaz Rana
Published: October 23, 2014

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/779653-Privatisationpicturecopy-1414002042-975-640x480.JPG

PC Chairman Zubair said the privatisation programme was on track and the government would give equal importance to the power companies and share float in the capital market. STOCK IMAGE

**

ISLAMABAD: **The government’s hopes of receiving about $4 billion in privatisation proceeds in the current fiscal year have dimmed as shares of all the shortlisted companies are unlikely to be sold because of the reluctance to take politically difficult decisions and an uncertain political scenario.

According to sources in the Ministry of Finance and Privatisation, the privatisation programme finalised for the current fiscal year 2014-15 may not be fully implemented by the deadline of June next year.

Most of the share offers of power companies are not likely to be completed before the deadline. The privatisation of Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM) and Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) would also depend on political stability despite both of them being part of the current year’s programme, said the officials.

To review the progress, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif chaired a meeting on Wednesday and discussed the possibility of making changes to the plan with an increasing focus on completing comparatively easy capital market share offers than selling off power distribution companies. This will help raise money to minimise the budget deficit.

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/800m.jpg

For the current fiscal year, the Privatisation Commission (PC) had picked 27 state-owned enterprises for reducing the government’s shareholding. Of that, shares of four companies are supposed to be offered in the first half of the year. These are Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL), Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL), Heavy Electrical Complex (HEC) and National Power Construction Corporation.

PC Chairman Mohammad Zubair estimated that the country would receive $4 billion in privatisation proceeds this year, although the Ministry of Finance put the figure at $2 billion or Rs198 billion.

The PC has so far successfully sold 5% shares of PPL on a premium. However, it missed the October deadline to offload a 10% stake in OGDCL, initially due to procedural delays and later because of a stay order granted by the Peshawar High Court (PHC).

The Supreme Court set aside the PHC stay order, allowing the federal government to float the shares. The PC has set November 5 to 7 for book building, according to the officials.

But before that, OGDCL will announce its quarterly results to portray the latest financial health of the company to the investors. The government expects to receive around $800 million from the sale of OGDCL shares on the London Stock Exchange.

“The 10% government stake comprises 322.8 million shares, of which 311 million will be offered to international investors, domestic institutional investors and high net worth individuals during the November 5-7 book-building process,” said PC Chairman Zubair. The remaining 11 million shares will be offered to retail investors after a month.

Replying to a question about the privatisation plan, Zubair said the privatisation of state units had political implications and the government had to take all stakeholders into confidence.

He, however, insisted that the programme was on track and they would give equal importance to the power companies and share float in the capital market. “The $4 billion target is still achievable.”

The government is also expected to complete the strategic sale of Heavy Electrical Complex on November 1 against the original deadline of September.

However, according to sources, the chances to privatise PIA, PSM and power distribution companies were not so bright. These offers required difficult decisions, which the government may not be able to take in the face of protests and sit-ins by the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf and Pakistan Awami Tehreek to topple the administration in Islamabad.

However, it would try to sell the Faisalabad Electric Supply Company (Fesco) in the current fiscal year, they added.

Earlier, the prime minister had given directives for the sale of stakes in the energy sector on a fast track. In its original plan, the PC had targeted to sell Fesco by May next year and **Islamabad, Gujranwala, Hyderabad, Multan, Sukkur, Quetta and Peshawar electricity supply companies by June 2015.


Northern Power Generation Company is planned to be sold by April next year, followed by Jamshoro Power Company, Central Power Generation Company and Lakhra Power Plant.**
*
Published in The Express Tribune, October 23[SUP]rd[/SUP], 2014.*

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

Book building: Floor price set at Rs216 for OGDC shares

By Our Correspondent / Creative: Jamal Khurshid
Published: November 7, 2014

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/786975-cabinetcommittee_meetingogdclcabinetcommitteeprivatisationprivatizationphotopid-1415308308-924-640x480.jpg

Cabinet Committee on Privatization discussing OGDC divestment. Govt will offer 311.1m shares in OGDC. PHOTO: PID

**

KARACHI: **The board of the Privatisation Commission (PC) and the Cabinet Committee on Privatisation have approved the floor price of Rs216 per share with respect to the offer for sale of 311.1 million shares in Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDC), a notice to the Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) said on Thursday.

OGDC informed members of the stock exchange that the final price for the OGDC shares will likely be announced on November 10 after the completion of the ongoing book-building process.

The government is offering 10% of its stake in OGDC to secure the next $1.1 billion tranche of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan. The offer for sale of shares represents 7.5% of the total paid-up capital of the company.

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/275.jpg

Currently, the government and OGDC Employee Empowerment Trust hold 75% and 10% shareholding, respectively. The rest of the 15% shareholding constitutes the company’s free-float on the KSE.

The government will still own 67.5% shares in OGDC in the proposed post-offer scenario. The company’s free-float will increase to 22.5% post-offer while the shareholding of OGDC Employee Empowerment Trust will remain 10%.
Speaking to The Express Tribune on Thursday, Topline Securities CEO Mohammed Sohail said the government expects to raise as much as $700 million from this transaction.

Ahead of the expected increase in the company’s free-float, the share price of OGDC has declined 11.5% since October 1. Its share price closed at Rs221.60 after losing Rs8 on Thursday.

The transaction is meant for meeting the government’s budget financing needs and supporting the country’s foreign currency reserves position. Foreign exchange reserves held by the State Bank of Pakistan stood at $8.6 billion at the end of October.

According to PC Chairman Muhammad Zubair, the share price of OGDC has gone down recently because of a reduction in crude oil prices in the international market.

The offer for sale of shares consists of two stages, namely book-building and general public portions. The ongoing book-building process following the announcement of the floor price represents 96.5% of the offer. Only institutional investors and high net worth individuals, who are able to place a bid of at least Rs1 million, can participate in the book-building process.

The book-building process will result in the strike price that will be determined through available demand for shares at different price levels. A public offer of 11.2 million ordinary shares will follow the book-building process at the offer price that will be equal or less than the strike price.
OGDC posted a profit of Rs28.3 billion for the July-September quarter, which was down 15.7% from the same quarter of the preceding fiscal year.
*
Published in The Express Tribune, November 7[SUP]th[/SUP], 2014.*

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

@desert bird. Why Thug Nawaz need $2 billion from privatization?

Is all what he is stealing through various ways less for him or is this another way of stealing Pakistan?

Re: Pakistan seeks $2bn from privatisations :FT

yeh sathaya howa khan tou bilkul pagal ho gia hey aor is sey ziyda is k blind follower jo peer sahib ney kah dia bilkul theek hey govt ager ghalti sey kuch +ve karna bhi chahay to yeh iss ko foran ghalat rang day daita hay aor baqi ankhin band ker k iss key pechay peechay :cobra: