Arab News

Libyan exchange to resume trading by end of February

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TRIPOLI: Libya’s Stock Exchange hopes to resume trading by the end of the month after being shut down during last year’s conflict, and five public share offerings are planned for 2012, General Manager Ahmed Karoud said.

In an interview at the exchange’s new offices in western Tripoli, Karoud said the bourse hoped to increase the number of its foreign investors from the 0.5 percent share they represente­d before the uprising that toppled Muammar Qaddafi.

“We are seeking to restart trading operations and hope to succeed by the end of February,” he said.

The bourse has 13 listed companies, including the exchange itself, with a combined market capitaliza­tion of about 3.9 billion Libyan dinars ($3 billion), Karoud said. The biggest companies include Jumhiriya Bank, Sahara Bank and Wahda Bank.

Karoud said some of the listed companies might not resume trading initially, as some have yet to approve their 2011 statements.

“It is not certain that they all will come back. Maybe seven, eight companies may only come back by the end of February. Maybe one more at the end of March,” he said.

“Some companies could not convene (board) meetings during the war, so their financial statements have not been approved by the company itself. I can’t allow (a company) to restart trading unless I have checked its financial statements.”

Karoud said five IPOS were in the pipeline for this year, including some for oil and constructi­on companies, but said it was still too early to give an exact timeframe.

“I expect to have five new companies this year,” he said.

He said pre-war plans to list Libya’s two mobile operators, Libyana and Al-madar, would go ahead, but there was no timeframe yet. He added two funds would also be listed, of which one would be an Islamic finance fund of no more than 250 million Libyan dinars.

“The Libya Reconstruc­tion Fund will be the first fund to be listed and will float in June. Its capital will be around 500 million Libyan dinars, and the fund will be for five years,” he said. “(The other) one will be listed according to the Shariah perspectiv­e.”

He said there were also plans to create a fund that would seek to buy back shares from Libyan investors struggling with a liquidity crisis in the country.

Karoud said he hoped the leadership change in the North African country would introduce new regulation­s to help attract foreign investors to the five-year-old exchange.

The bourse has 13 listed companies,

including the exchange itself, with a combined market capitaliza­tion of about 3.9 billion Libyan dinars.

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