**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 …
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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.”
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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.
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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.
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“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.”
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Additional reporting by Victor Mallet in New Delhi*