The Star Late Edition

Sprawling Mall of Egypt a test of confidence

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WEAVING through the packed parking lot toward the Mall of Egypt, a new $700 million (R8.7 billion) retail palace complete with a Dubai-style indoor ski slope, it’s easy to think that the country’s economy is well and truly on the mend after years of crisis.

In fact, Egypt’s biggest shopping centre is opening its doors after household spending power was hit by a 50 percent drop in the pound’s value following a decision to lift currency controls to ease a crippling dollar shortage. Instead of sounding the retreat, companies like the mall’s developer, Majid Al Futaim, are doubling down on their commitment­s to the Arab world’s most populous nation as they bet on its most resilient asset: consumers.

“I’m not worried about falling disposable income because for a number of years Egypt has had an official economy that was sustained by a gray one,” the Dubai-based developer’s chief executive, Alain Bejjani, said in Cairo. “The current situation is beginning to look positive compared to where things were.”

Majid Al Futaim, whose Mall of the Emirates in Dubai also features indoor skiing, will invest $600m to build another mega-mall in Cairo and make another shopping centre five times bigger, the chief executive said.

And he’s not alone: retailers and producers including Nestlé, Mars and Turkey’s BIM are expanding their business. Saudi developer Fawaz Alhokair Group, whose Mall of Arabia stands just a few kilometres away from the Mall of Egypt, plans to spend 8bn Egyptian pounds (R5.5bn) to build three shopping centres over the next three years.

“As far as I can see, Egypt will continue to be considered a high growth engine for multi- nationals and local companies,” said Yasser Abdul Malak, chief executive of Nestlé’s Northeast Africa unit. Nestlé plans to invest 1bn Egyptian pounds in expansion as the country’s large but under-served population creates the opportunit­y for companies to achieve “exponentia­l growth,” he said.

There’s still plenty of risk. More than four months after Egypt floated the currency to clinch a $12bn IMF loan, inflation is at its highest level in three decades, fuelling concerns that further economic reforms could trigger social unrest in a country where two presidents have been toppled since 2011.

“The biggest risk for the country over the past few years was the potential flotation of the currency and that is no longer a risk,” Mohamed Zein, Mena analyst at Renaissanc­e Capital, said. “This should bring foreign investment­s back.”

In an early sign of recovery, 37 percent of total output and employs at least 48 percent of the country’s non-agricultur­al workers in the private sector, according to an African Developmen­t Bank study.

“The official numbers about Egypt sometimes don’t match the reality,” Bejjani said. “The Egyptian market is deep. We have seen a lot of conversion into the official economy and this has helped the market to sustain itself.”

Demand is also supported by the approximat­ely 8 million Egyptians who live abroad, many of them in oil-rich Persian Gulf countries.

The expatriate­s transferre­d about $4.6bn to their families at home from July to December last year, according to central bank data.

“The increasing purchasing power of Egyptians abroad, whose incomes have doubled in value since the pound float, offset the plunge in local pur- chasing power,” said Ahmed El Hitamy, chief executive of real estate developer Medinet Nasr Housing. His company targets a 46 percent increase in sales this year.

The sprawling Mall of Egypt, with Africa’s first indoor ski slope and more than 400 stores, offers the latest test of consumer confidence and it doesn’t come cheap. A family of four visiting its Ski Egypt can easily spend more than 1 000 pounds, compared with a monthly minimum wage of 1 200 pounds for government and public sector workers.

“The first two months sales figures of our retailers are better than last year; this is positive because you could potentiall­y expect sales to fall to the ground,” said Ahmed Badrawi, chief executive of Fawaz Alhokair’s Egyptian unit, Marakez. “This is a period of adjustment and people are adapting.” – Bloomberg

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