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Strategies & Market Trends : Investment in Russia and Eastern Europe -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Real Man who wrote (511)8/24/1998 3:50:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 1301
 
Russia PM agrees debt restructure, terms on Tuesday
[Could be a nice rally with less uncertainty in the market...]

Monday August 24, 3:20 pm Eastern Time

MOSCOW, Aug 24 (Reuters) - Russian Prime Minister
Viktor Chernomyrdin has agreed to a proposed plan for a key
restructuring of the short-term debt market and precise terms
are to be announced Tuesday, a government source said on
Monday.

''Having heard the report of the members of the working group (on the debt restructuring),
Viktor Chernomyrdin approved the suggested plan,'' the government source told Reuters.

''The terms for repaying GKO (T-bills) and OFZ (bonds) will be announced on August 25,
1998 after the necessary regulatory documents have been signed,'' the source added.

MOSCOW, Aug 24 (Reuters) - Russian Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin has agreed to a
proposed plan for a key restructuring of the short-term debt market and precise terms are to be
announced Tuesday, a government source said on Monday.

''Having heard the report of the members of the working group (on the debt restructuring),
Viktor Chernomyrdin approved the suggested plan,'' the government source told Reuters.

''The terms for repaying GKO (T-bills) and OFZ (bonds) will be announced on August 25,
1998 after the necessary regulatory documents have been signed,'' the source added.

The source could give no further details on the exact timing of the announcement, or the terms of
the debt deal.

The plan involves swapping around $40 billion of short-term GKO T-bills and OFZ bonds with
maturities to the end of 1999 for longer-term government paper, which will be cheaper for the
cash-poor government to service.

The announcement of the debt restructuring was expected early on Monday morning, but the
sudden sacking of former prime minister Sergei Kiriyenko on Sunday and his replacement with
Chernomyrdin caused the delay.

The conversion of the short-term debt was part of a package of monetary measures announced
at the start of last week. These included a 90-day moratorium on some repayments of foreign
debt and a de facto devaluation of the rouble.

Related News Categories: international

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To: Real Man who wrote (511)8/24/1998 4:11:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 1301
 
thestreet.com article. Moscow Journal: Good Morning, President ... Lebed?

thestreet.com

Excerpt: "This contest is being fought out in Russia's stock market,
where stocks have been sold down to levels not seen since
before Yeltsin was re-elected in 1996. "It's a matter of
differentiating worthless assets from inexpensive ones" all
over again, wrote Renaissance Capital in a Friday research
note.

Still, hope springs eternal. A basket of the top five blue-chip
stocks in Russia bought at Friday's close "will more than
double in two years, probably much sooner," says Peter
Everington, a partner with Hong Kong-based Regent Asset
Management and frequent vulture investor. On Monday,
Russia is meant to announce the details of the restructuring,
"the point of maximum uncertainty and therefore probably
the lowest asset prices," the firm wrote.

"In hindsight, people will pinch themselves and ask why they
did not think to take advantage of the situation," he adds.


By Erin Arvedlund
Staff Reporter
8/24/98 3:43 PM ET

Forget default and devaluation. The outlook for Russia's
financial markets hinges on who succeeds President Boris
Yeltsin.

This weekend Yeltsin made what seemed like a last,
desperate wriggle out of taking the blame for Russia's
financial death spiral, tossing out his young prime minister
and resurrecting Viktor Chernomyrdin to take the post. A
longtime ally of Russia's robber barons, and Yeltsin's
handpicked heir, Chernomyrdin retakes the prime minister
position from Sergei Kiriyenko, who was in office for just
five months.

But more to the point, Yeltin looks like a madman
desperately clutching for power on the eve of a
make-or-break bond default and refinancing deal. And if he
loses power, it's worth considering how the markets would
function under a successor -- one who could come to office
before the next scheduled election, in 2000.

Russia's Communists smell blood. They know that Yeltsin's
decision last week to allow a 34% ruble devaluation under
the guise of a wider trading band may have mortally
wounded his administration. Who Chernomyrdin includes in
his new yet-to-be-named cabinet -- could it include reform
figures like tax czar Boris Fyodorv? -- will shed light on
whether Russia will stick with Western-style capitalism or
some other watered-down version of reform.

Meanwhile, "Yeltsin may continue formally in office until the
end of his term in July 2000, although even this cannot be
guaranteed," Fleming UCB's research department writes.
And if he doesn't, there are plenty of ambitious men ready to
dig his grave.

At this point, Russia has had a taste of Western-style
reformers and found them sorely lacking. That means the
presidency will come down to a race among three powerful
contenders. The odds-on favorite is Aleksandr Lebed,
onetime presidential hopeful, former general and
governor-elect of the Kranoyarsk region. A close second is
Moscow's mayor, Yuri Luzhkov, a political don with
presidential ambitions as wide as his girth. And there's the
handsome lightweight, Boris Nemtsov, deputy prime
minister and one-time star of the Nizhny Novgorod regional
democratic experiment, who is largely thought of as a black
horse.

Nemtsov has reformist credentials, but the politics of either a
Luzkhov or a Lebed would be shaped by the circumstances
under which they come to power, Fleming UCB's chief
economist Christropher Granville argues. "Both Lebed and
Luzhkov will unnerve investors by campaigning on antireform
rhetoric; but once in office, and with much of the unpopular
dirty work done by their predecessors, they would have no
interest in tampering with a sound macroeconomic
framework."

But what does a "sound" Russian economy entail? If it
means allowing most of Soviet-era industrial sectors to go
bankrupt, producing mass unemployment and voter outrage,
we'll see who wants to take that bullet.

The choice for Lebed or Luzkhov is stark: Either take Russia
down the neo-conservative path -- back to a Soviet-era
planned economy, mapped out in all its horror by the
example of Belarus -- or remain open to the outside world.

In spite of their nationalistic leanings, however, both men
would probably choose the latter. Russia's regions are too
fiercely rebellious and mistrustful of Moscow to enforce
currency controls set by the capital, and the Russian people
too conditioned to economic chaos to welcome a return to
full-blown central planning.

Chernomyrdin himself poses no real threat to the
presidency, despite an endorsement by Yeltsin as his pick
for 2000. Chernomyrdin is widely viewed as uncharismatic,
stone-faced and popularly unelectable. It's more likely
Chernomyrdin will act as a caretaker for Yeltsin's
administration, then choose to ally with Luzhkov or Lebed for
2000 and line up Russia's oligarchs behind the lucky
front-runner.

Linked to budget goals for this year and through 2000,
Monday's debt swap terms will give a better picture of
Russia' overall financial health. But the bond swap itself has
turned into a political battlefield -- outlining the government's
preference over whom to pay back first: Russian banks,
foreign investors or workers and pensioners who haven't
been paid in months.

This contest is being fought out in Russia's stock market,
where stocks have been sold down to levels not seen since
before Yeltsin was re-elected in 1996. "It's a matter of
differentiating worthless assets from inexpensive ones" all
over again, wrote Renaissance Capital in a Friday research
note.

Still, hope springs eternal. A basket of the top five blue-chip
stocks in Russia bought at Friday's close "will more than
double in two years, probably much sooner," says Peter
Everington, a partner with Hong Kong-based Regent Asset
Management and frequent vulture investor. On Monday,
Russia is meant to announce the details of the restructuring,
"the point of maximum uncertainty and therefore probably
the lowest asset prices," the firm wrote.

"In hindsight, people will pinch themselves and ask why they
did not think to take advantage of the situation," he adds.

And the candidates themselves? Luzhkov so far has denied
any presidential aspirations. But both men are known for
their commanding leadership and are said to be
authoritarian.

Asked last week by a Russian newspaper about his
candidacy in 2000, Lebed replied: "Let's clear up this issue
once and forever. I do not deny the possibility of participation
in the elections. But I do not intend to speak about it at
every corner either. Russia's president will be the man
claimed by its people and a number of circumstances which
will not depend on him. So, why make a fuss?"



To: Real Man who wrote (511)8/24/1998 9:23:00 PM
From: Rob Shilling  Respond to of 1301
 
Vi I agree, the oligarchs now have some power again.
This may be a case of "if you can't beat them, join them". Sergei K. may have been on track with reforms but it looks like he alienated everybody, the oligachs, the Duma, Yeltsin. What is most important now is consistency, and hopefully improvement no matter how slow. Victor C. brings certainty into Russia because the West knows him and what he stands for. Markets hate uncertainty, so this is good. The press is blaming Victor C. for the financial crisis. But, I will give him the benefit of the doubt. 1997 had postive growth, and 1998 was sunk by oil prices. Financing the deficit with short term notes was a mistake, but he should of had a financial ministry that knew that. Also, he was stalled by the oligarchs and Yeltsin somewhat. Apparently he has more free decision making now.
It is do or die for both Yeltsin and Victor C. The economy has to turn around to be able to have Yeltsin's legacy be a good one. It also has to be good for Victor C. to become president. Hopefully the oligarchs will be less obtrusive knowing how serious the situation is. They may now believe they have the inside track to the government and might be willing to actually use their financial muscle to help the economy or markets as long as they think they will get something out of it.
I think people will follow Victor C. better than Sergei K. because Victor C. represents Russia and its culture, whereas Sergei K. looked too much like a western business man.



To: Real Man who wrote (511)8/25/1998 3:09:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1301
 
Vi, you made Money Daily (see below)

pathfinder.com@@qjMIMgUALiIjFqSI/money/moneydaily/latest/

Tuesday, August 25, 1998

Boardwatch

More bears than bulls in the Internet chat rooms
these days

By Chris Marti and Tripp Reynolds

moneydaily.com

Editor's note: This is the first in an occasional series of
columns based on the buzz in the Internet stock chat
rooms.

The stock market may be bouncing off lows, as it did
modestly on Monday, but that doesn't mean investors are
optimistic about a quick return to happier days. In fact, the
sentiment among individual investors remains positively
bearish, at least according to a survey of comments on the
major financial bulletin boards.

Most postings indicate people remain very nervous about
the market, though they're enthusiastic about individual
stocks, including Dell and Cisco. Apple was getting good
reviews for its new iMac. And a few investors even saw
hope in the perilous situation in Russia.

Our survey covered the stock chat boards at America
Online, Motley Fool, Silicon Investor and Yahoo Finance,
among others.

On a day when the Dow and S&P 500 had small gains
(the Dow Industrials were up 32.96 to 8566.61), postings
to the Fool's "Bears Communion" still outnumbered those
to the "Bulls Communion" by more than 5-to-1.

Typical was this comment from AngryCandy in a message
slugged Yuck: "The market had every reason to rally
today, and it still stinks. I've lost count of how many
short-term buy signals haven't panned out in this
correction." Added Donv on the same board, "What is it
they say, 'Pigs get slaughtered?' I've done very well this
year. No need to get greedy." And those were both Bulls
Communion postings!

The negative sentiment doesn't extend to every stock,
naturally. Among those held up as possible safe havens:
Cisco Systems (NASDAQ: CSCO) and Dell (NASDAQ:
DELL), which reported earnings well above estimates last
week. "Don't bogart that DELL, my friend. Pass it on over
to me," Steven Call told other posters on Silicon Investor.
"Unlike a certain Willy, I will admit to inhaling all the DELL
I can get." Granted, Dell could be an expensive hit: it's
trading at 58 times trailing earnings.

The new iMac from Apple Computer (NASDAQ: AAPL)
was also getting favorable comment. "This appears to be
the beginning of a 'new roll' for Apple," said Gary FM on
AOL's Personal Finance boards, who said he had once
worked for an Apple education dealer. "I'm buying in at
every chance with every dollar I can. ... I think we'll see
$50 within 3-6 months, and possibly better than that
beyond." The stock closed off 1.8125 at 41.1875 on
Monday.

Others were more skeptical. "Apple might not be Safeway
brand cola trying to beat out Coke, but it's in the same
ballpark ... Apple hasn't convinced me, and I'm rooting for
them," said Bdavids1 on Motley Fool.

Of course, some investors see a bright lining in even the
darkest news -- like the financial chaos in Russia, where
President Boris Yeltsin fired his cabinet and re-appointed
Victor Chernomyrdin as prime minister. "If you'd rather
invest in Dell or Intel, go ahead," said Finance_guy on the
Yahoo message board. "But ... Russia is the most
unbelievable opportunity to come along since the USA in
the middle of the Great Depression."

Other Russian bulls pointed out that the last time
Chernomyrdin was prime minister the Russian actually
grew -- albeit by only 0.7%. Others argued the situation
looks bleak. "While there was hope Kiriyenko and Co [the
former Russian government] would reform the corrupt
system Russia had, there is no hope now (for the nearest
future)," said Vi on the SI boards.

One poster even saw opportunity of a different sort: "Just
interviewing with Yeltsin," asserted Treetopflier on SI. "I
hear there are a few openings, and he throws great
parties."