Iran’s post-sanction economy is on the mend

A jump in oil exports, business deals signed with global companies and inflation tamed: One year since Iranian negotiators gathered with the world’s top diplomats to unveil their nuclear accord and Iran’s economy is on the mend. That’s the good news for President Hassan Rouhani in the final year of his first term.
Six months after oil sanctions were lifted, Iran’s producing 3.8 million barrels a day, 2 million of which are exported. Holding out against efforts by some OPEC members to freeze bloc output and lift prices, it has regained 80 percent of market share held before the U.S. and European Union tightened crude sanctions in 2012, says Mohsen Ghamsari, National Iranian Oil Co.’s director of international affairs.
Helped by greater monetary and fiscal discipline, prices are rising slower than at any point in the past quarter-century. Inflation slowed into single digits in June, meeting the central bank’s stated goal and delivering on a Rouhani commitment.
While authorities expect Iran’s economy to expand as much as 4.5 percent in the year to March, Rouhani’s target of 8-percent annual expansion would require major changes, according to Robert Powell, Middle East and Africa regional manager at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
Executive air miles
Iran’s 80 million people are a mouth-watering prospect for major companies battling sluggish growth at home. So following the July accord, dozens of chief executives booked flights to Tehran. The deals have built up: a $27 billion order for 118 Airbus Group SE planes and a contract with Boeing Co. worth $17.6 billion. Siemens AG in March signed a preliminary rail accord worth as much as $2.3 billion.
Foreign direct investment rose to $4.5 billion in the first quarter of this year, with 26 projects, the highest uptick in over a decade in Iran, according to fDi Intelligence, a division of the Financial Times Ltd. That’s still way below the government’s hopes of drawing $30 billion to $50 billion in foreign financial resources a year.
“Real inflows will happen when sentiment toward investing into the Iranian economy improves among global banks and institutional investors,” says Payam Afzali, head of investment banking at Kian Capital in Tehran. “When Iran’s risk is efficiently priced in international debt markets, we can expect a more fluid movement of capital.”
Stocks get real
The value of the Tehran Stock Exchange has jumped as investment deals favoring local manufacturers such as car company Iran Khodro were announced. But the mood has since turned more subdued.
“There was euphoria all the way to March and then a reality check. What’s happening today is in line with the fundamentals of the economy,” says Reza Soltanzadeh, chief executive of Iran Industries Investment Co.
The benchmark TEDPIX index slipped 2.8 percent in June. Commodities represent more than 50 percent of market capitalization, so falling oil and metal prices have hit stocks, says Florence Eid-Oakden, chief economist of Arabia Monitor.
(Source: Bloomberg)