The Phnom Penh Post

China, Russia tighten Iran ties

Growth steady for Kindgom’s MFI loans

- Dana Rysmukhame­dova, Cedric Simon and Julien Girault Hor Kimsay

RUSSIA and China moved on Thursday to extend their economic influence in Iran, while Europeans are finding it harder to ignore efforts by Washington to isolate Tehran economical­ly.

In one of the most concrete moves yet against renewed US efforts to choke off Iran economical­ly, a Russian-led trade bloc signed an interim trade deal with Iran and signalled plans to negotiate a free trade zone.

Meanwhile, Iran’s oil minister said that Chinese state-owned oil company CNPC was ready to replace Total on a major gas field project in Iran if the French energy giant pulls out.

The fate of Total’s participat­ion in the gas project demonstrat­es the difficulty the European Union faces in resisting Washington’s move as European firms stand to lose much more from busting US sanctions.

Earlier this month US President Donald Trump controvers­ially pulled Washington out of an internatio­nal deal with Iran that placed limits on its nuclear program in return for easing economic sanctions.

China, Russia and EU members Britain, France and Germany, which were also signatorie­s of the 2015 pact, opposed Washington’s abandonmen­t of the deal, which Iran had respected.

But companies around the world now face a difficult choice as Washington has previously slapped huge fines on firms which bust US sanctions.

This week the EU launched work on a plan to keep the nuclear deal alive and French President Emmanuel Macron said Thursday that one reason is “so that our businesses can remain” in Iran.

However Total has indicated it will go forward with the investment only if it wins an exemption from Washington on the sanctions.

Other European firms are likely to make a similar calculatio­n that the US market is worth much more to them than Iran.

Danish shipping giant Maersk Tankers said on Thursday it would cease its activities in Iran, while German insurer Allianz has also announced it plans to wind down its business deals there.

Less to lose

Meanwhile Russia, one of the strongest defenders of the Iran nuclear deal, tightened its trade ties with Tehran.

In the Kazakh capital Astana, the Russialed Eurasian Economic Union trade bloc signed an interim trade deal with Iran that lowers tariffs on hundreds of goods.

The bloc that also comprises Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, also plans to begin three years of talks with Iran that aim to create a free trade zone.

Russian firms have less to lose from bucking US sanctions. Many major Rus- sian companies are already operating under tightening US sanctions over Moscow’s seizure of Crimea and its role in the Ukraine crisis.

Russian companies also traded with Iran when US sanctions were in place before the deal.

“They are used to working within legal and economic constraint­s,” Igor Delanoe, an analyst at the Franco-Russian Observator­y group, said recently. “The US has systematic­ally forced Iran to turn more towards Russia and China.”

Beijing also signalled that it intends to continue trading with Iran.

“Under the prerequisi­te of not violating its internatio­nal obligation­s, the Chinese side will continue to carry out normal and transparen­t practical cooperatio­n with Iran,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang.

He added that “the Chinese government always opposes the unilateral sanctions and the so-called long-arm jurisdic- tion that any country takes according to its domestic laws”.

The US says its sanctions apply to any transactio­ns that are conducted in dollars, which are used in most internatio­nal transactio­ns, in particular in trading of crude oil.

But China has for years been working to increase trade using its currency and in March a yuan-denominate­d oil contract was launched in Shanghai.

“With trade skirmishes between the US and China and all kinds of political issues, I see resistance from Chinese crude buyers to comply” with US sanctions, said Victor Shum, vice president of the Energy group at IHS Markit, on CNBC TV.

Chinese firms were involved in at least $33 billion of infrastruc­ture projects in China as of June last year, with Chinese government-linked institutio­ns providing much of the financing using euros and yuan to avoid US sanctions. THE loan portfolio and deposit amount in Cambodia’s microfinan­ce sector has seen noticeable growth this year, while the number of borrowers has stayed constant and bad loan ratio has been declining slightly, according to data from the Cambodia Microfinan­ce Associatio­n (CMA).

CMA’s data showed that the total amount for outstandin­g loans of the associatio­n’s members was $4.62 billion at the end of March. That total is up from $3.32 billion at the same time last year. Deposits in the industry were at $2.2 billion up from $1.62 billion in March of 2017.

Despite noticeable growth of outstandin­g loans in the industry, the number of borrowers remains almost the same. According to CMA’s data, the number of borrowers from MFIs that are CMA members reached a total of 1.85 million clients by the end of March this year, which is the same number as at the end of March 2017. Depositors in the industry reached 2 million clients in March.

Importantl­y, CMA data showed that portfolio at risk (PAR), the indicator for nonperform­ing loans, was slightly down this year – from 1.67 percent at the end of March 2017 to 1.37 percent at the end of March this year.

 ?? ATTA KENARE/AFP ?? An oil facility is shown on Khark Island, on the shore of the Gulf. China, an avid oil consumer, is likely to ignore the US sanctions against Tehran: it might expand its investment­s in Iran’s energy industry while promoting oil trade in yuan currency,...
ATTA KENARE/AFP An oil facility is shown on Khark Island, on the shore of the Gulf. China, an avid oil consumer, is likely to ignore the US sanctions against Tehran: it might expand its investment­s in Iran’s energy industry while promoting oil trade in yuan currency,...
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