Iran’s Serial Sanctions Stubbornness
The Tehran Stock exchange lost ground in October as the threat of new international commercial and financial punishment exacerbated currency and inflation fears, amid a big industrial group scandal involving allies of President Ahmadi-Nejad in the run-up to municipal elections next March. He and religious leader Khamenei have been in a power struggle since his disputed second term victory, and the split has played out in government in-fighting and embassy seizures where each camp jockeys for superiority. An updated International Atomic Energy Agency assessment suggests continued nuclear bomb preparations, and the UN will soon debate the prospect of stiffer sanctions. In the meantime the US publically hinted at including the central bank in its legal boycott, while the UK vowed to retaliate against attacks on diplomatic premises. The monetary authority has already been reeling from 20 percent-plus inflation and fragmentation of the exchange control regime, which has tried to limit formal depreciation against the dollar to 10 percent. The informal market premium is 30 percent, and to relieve pressure banks were given wider scope to sell foreign currency. The price rises have come from subsidy removal as officials were forced to backtrack on original cutbacks after poor and middle-class protests. The Economy Minister survived a no-confidence vote in parliament on these questions and the failure to detect earlier $3 billion in alleged fraudulent letters of credit by a prominent business executive who used them for company and privatization bid funding. State-run Bank Saderat, which has been on the overseas blacklist, issued the paper and financials fell broadly on the bourse as the p/e ratio touched 7. In contrast with the main floor, a successful housing firm IPO took place on the OTC tier as that sector is viewed as a defensive play. Most other industries have been hit by global shunning and Euro-crisis pressures including power where a major listing wrote off $2 billion in debt. Some money has moved into bonds as the benchmark 4-year rate was lifted to 17 percent and progress toward exchange-rate unification could accelerate to reverse sentiment by the end of the fiscal year, according to analysts.
The possibility of an Israeli military strike against suspect facilities has again factored into the calculus following the IAEA report and statements by the Netanyahu administration after resumed skirmishes with Iran’s ally Hamas. With GDP growth slowing and exports forecast to be flat in 2012 the central bank has cut interest rates. With popular outrage and a crackdown on large financial-industrial conglomerates housing prices have started to come down, although a steep fall could batter bank balance sheets whose shares have been spurned on that exchange as well.