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Bloomberg - Eurasia Capital Management plans to increase the world’s first Mongolia-focused fund fivefold to $100 million to tap economic growth fueled by the nation’s mining industry.
Eurasia’s hedge funds, which have about $200 million of investments across Central Asia, also expect to sell shares on London’s Alternative Investment Market or Deutsche Boerse AG by next June, said Alisher Djumanov, managing partner of the Singapore-based firm. Proceeds would be used to start private- equity and property funds, and expand in Central Asia, he said.
Mining in Mongolia, which has reserves of coal, copper, gold and uranium, will spur "double-digit” economic growth rates over the next 10 years as commodity prices remain high, Djumanov said in an interview. Mining accounted for about two- thirds of Mongolia’s exports last year, and foreign direct investment in the country rose more than 33 percent.
"The spillover effect from the mining sector will be significant,” Djumanov, 35, said. "We’re investing in companies that are expected to grow significantly on the back of this strong economic growth.”
Eurasia’s Mongolia Discovery Fund rose 12 percent this year, compared with the 16 percent drop in the MSCI World Index. The fund invests in coal mines, water utility as well as oil and gas companies, Djumanov said.
Times Online - The fashionable investment tactic of the past month - buying bank stocks while selling energy companies - could already have gone too far, Merrill Lynch, the financial management group, warned clients yesterday.
In mid-July, hedge funds, pension funds and other institutional investors dramatically reversed their enthusiasm for energy stocks and loathing for financials in an abrupt about-turn that sent bank shares soaring and oil and gas companies sinking.
But Merrill said yesterday that the unwinding of the classic bet of the credit crunch may already have been overdone, giving warning that banks across Europe could still be forced to raise between $70 billion (£37 billion) and $120 billion in new equity on top of the $120 billion already raised. Barclays and HBOS looked most vulnerable among UK banks to having to go back to their shareholders for more equity on top of the £4.5 billion and £4 billion, respectively, already raised.
Seattle Times- The House on Wednesday approved a plan to protect more than 20 million families from an expensive levy called the alternative minimum tax (AMT) while raising taxes on hedge-fund managers and oil companies. But the measure has little hope of Senate passage, Senate leaders said.
The House voted 233-189 to prevent the AMT from expanding next April to ensnare millions of middle-class taxpayers, adding thousands of dollars to their tax bills.
To replace the lost revenue, more than $61.5 billion, the House agreed to more than double the tax rate on income from investment-services partnerships such as hedge funds, to deny oil and gas companies a lucrative deduction for domestic production, and to require credit-card companies to report their transactions with retailers to the Internal Revenue Service, among other provisions.