Mongolian Stock Exchange

Mongolian Stock Exchange
Mongolian Stock Exchange
Type Stock exchange
Founded 1991
Headquarters Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Key people B.Bold, Chairman
Kh.Altai, Acting CEO
Bill Gorman, President
Website www.mse.mn

The Mongolian Stock Exchange (MSE) (Mongolian: Монголын Хөрөнгийн Бирж/Mongolyn Khöröngiin Birj), located in Ulan Bator, is Mongolia's sole stock exchange.[1] It was established in January 1991 by the decree of the Mongolian Government to privatize state-owned assets[2], as of 2010 it was the world’s best-performing stock market after a run-up of 121 per cent in 12 months.[3] It is regulated by the Financial Regulatory Commission of Mongolia.[4]

Its main index is MSE Top-20 and has 336 companies listed in 2010. The total market capitalization of its listed companies was around US$2 billion on 2011 after quadrupling from 2008 when it was US$406 million[5].

Contents

Business history

Mongolian Stock Exchange

Role in privatisation of state assets

The Mongolian Stock Exchange was established in 1991 as a vehicle to implement the government's plan for privatisation of large state-owned enterprises. In an attempt to ensure an equitable distribution of assets, the Mongolian government chose to instantiate a voucher-based scheme; one blue voucher worth MNT7,000 was issued to every citizen born before 31 May 1991 for the purchase of shares in large enterprises, and a nation-wide network of 29 brokerage houses was established to take their orders.[6][7] Red vouchers worth MNT3,000 were also issued for the purchase of the assets of small enterprises which would not be listed on the exchange; unlike the blue vouchers, these could be traded in secondary markets.[8] Initially, stock exchange officials hoped to privatise 80% of state assets, but, on 7 June 1991, Government Resolution No. 170 announced that the state would retain a stake of 50% in some large enterprises; mining, energy, transportation, communications, and water supply companies were excluded from the privatisation scheme entirely.[9][10]

Auctions officially began on 7 February 1992; shares in three companies were auctioned off. The first day's turnover was 16,000 shares, valued at US$15,000; that grew by over twelve times to 200,000 shares in March. Auctions continued to be held weekly; regional brokers collected vouchers and share orders from individuals, and submitted bids through their floor traders in Ulan Bator. Communication was often accomplished by modem. Trading hours were restricted to two hours on one day per week, expanding to two five-hour days per week in July; the thirty exchange officials used the remainder of their working time to prepare infrastructure and legal recommendations for trading in the secondary market.[9][10] By October, 121 enterprises had been floated on the exchange.[11]

Mongolia soon boasted the world's highest rate of share ownership, as more and more people redeemed their vouchers for shares.[12] Family members were permitted to transfer their vouchers to each other, so not everyone became a stockholder, but the peak number of shareholders was estimated at one million, or 43% of the population at the time.[13] In the end, a total of 475 companies worth MNT17.33 billion were privatised by auctions and listed on the Mongolian Stock Exchange, including MNT5.04 billion worth of manufacturing companies, MNT4.09 billion of agricultural companies, MNT1.27 billion of construction companies, MNT1.25 billion of state farms, MNT580 million of trading companies, MNT520 million of transport companies, and MNT280 million of companies in other sectors.[8] Some sources suggest that illegal trading in vouchers occurred in advance of the privatisations; however, statistics from the exchange itself show that the number of shareholders each enterprise initially emerged with corresponded roughly to the number of shareholders one would expect if each shareholder had spent all his vouchers to purchase shares in a single enterprise. This initially led to a very equitable distribution of shares; individuals found themselves unable to buy more shares, or sell the ones they already had, until the government passed a new securities law.[6]

Secondary market

Secondary market volume indicators
Year Stocks Bonds
Ct Cap Val Vol Idx Gov Corp
1995 474 27.1 1.8 6.8 88.9 n/a n/a
1996 458 25.9 6.0 24.8 152.9 0.20 n/a
1997 436 53.2 15.0 33.7 360.1 n/a n/a
1998 430 39.8 11.9 33.1 235 n/a n/a
1999 418 32.1 3.1 21.4 469.9 n/a n/a
2000 410 36.9 2.7 35.1 469.9 10.15 n/a
2001 400 37.5 1.6 15.9 814.0 27.9 1.09
2002 403 31.9 1.2 9.8 933.9 37.1 2.62
2003 402 42.4 0.8 8.1 895.9 18.6 2.55
2004 395 24.7 0.5 9.1 585.7 10.3 22.9
Abbreviations: Ct: Number of listed companies; Cap: market capitalisation; Val: Traded consideration of shares; Vol: millions of shares traded; Idx: Stock index value; Gov: Traded consideration of government bonds; Corp: Traded value of corporate bonds. All considerations are in millions of USD. Source:[14]

Secondary trading finally began on 28 August 1995, open to both domestic and international investors. Bids were placed on 430 out of 475 listed stocks, and trading occurred in 16 stocks; total turnover was 12,776 shares worth MNT2.2 million tugriks (US$4,850). The largest gain was in Sor, which rose by 19% from MNT580 to MNT690.[15] However, the secondary market quickly exposed the weakness of many of the newly privatised companies; share prices remained depressed throughout 1996, and the number of MSE-listed companies contracted from 475 to 402. Market capitalisation stabilised around MNT15 billion in 1997, with a daily turnover of 80,000 to 300,000 from MNT16 - 80 million. Furthermore, many small shareholders sold their shares, allowing a few domestic and foreign investors to gain majority holdings in the remaining listed companies. The total number of shareholders had shrunk to a mere 135,000 by 1997. One public offering of additional shares from an already-listed enterprise was carried out in 1996, but the regulators refused to give approval for initial public offerings by new private companies, due to the lack of regulation and experience in underwriting.[16] In 1998, the exchange moved to electronic trading. In 2000, the exchange also began to offer trading facilities for Mongolian government bonds.[12] As of December 2003, market capitalisation in local terms had expanded to MNT52 billion, which was still a mere 5% of GDP. Only 30 of the companies listed on the exchange were actively traded.[17]

Government bonds, rather than stocks, came to be the Mongolian Stock Exchange's biggest business as soon as they began being auctioned through the exchange in November 2000; previously, they had been sold directly to banks. The following year, the Barilga Corporation, a construction company, became the first to sell corporate bonds through the MSE, with a USD4.4 million issue. In 2004, bond trading accounted for 96% of total securities turnover on the exchange.[14] By that same year, the stock market had recovered somewhat as well, but retail investors remained suspicious of trading due to volatility and lack of transparency; MSE officials estimated that 80% of listed companies were majority-owned by private individuals.[12] By February 2007, trading hours had expanded to one hour on each weekday. Weekly stock turnover at 7 September 2007 was 1.8 million shares valued at MNT1.7 billion, while 50,000 government bonds traded for a total consideration of MNT4.8 billion.[18][19] Furthermore, the number of registered shareholders bounced back to 483,100, three-and-a-half times the figure a decade earlier, and nearly half the peak number seen in 1995 after privatisations had completed.[16][20] Total market capitalisation as of September 2006 was MNT97 billion (US$83 million).[21]

Although, the Mongolian Stock Exchange used to be the world's smallest stock exchange by market capitalisation in 2006,[18][21] it has become the world's best performing stock market in 2010.[22] Its market capitalization quadrupled to $2 billion in end of 2011 from 2008 and is speculated that it can get to $45 billion in five years[23].

Relationship-building and modernization

The Mongolian Stock Exchange have been praised for their approach to customer relationship management. To commemorate their 16th anniversary, they organised a sports day, in which broker-dealers and the exchange fielded teams and competed against each other. They were also described as "punching above its weight" in its international knowledge-sharing efforts. It joined the Federation of Euro-Asian Stock Exchanges in 1998, and in June 2006 formed a partnership with the Korea Exchange.[18] The chief executive officer of the Mongolian Stock Exchange visited the Korea Stock Exchange in July 2007; officials from the Korea Stock Exchange paid a return visit the following month.[24][25]

Mongolian Stock Exchange sealed a deal with London Stock Exchange Group to modernize the MSE under an agreement to make it in level of world standard. LSE will manage and provide expertise and someone from LSE might lead the MSE[26]. This comes as there is a mining boom happening in Mongolia and need for robust, private and attractive stock exchange.

Physical location

The Mongolian Stock Exchange is located in the former Children's Cinema building near Sukhbaatar Square, next to the headquarters of Mongolia Telecom and across from the Mongolian parliament's buildings. It was refurbished at a cost of US$4.5 million prior to the official start of trading; seats and screens were removed, a trading floor was created and equipped with computers, and automatic sinks were installed in the bathrooms.[7][9] The building itself is a pink-and-white neo-classical-style structure.[12] One corner of the building has been partitioned off to serve as an internet cafe.[27] Due to the color of its building, the Financial Times correspondent, Leslie Hook, defined it the pink house of equities.[28]

Staff

Naidansurengiin Zolzhargal, one of the founders of the Mongolian Stock Exchange, was educated in Hungary and later studied finance at the Harvard University in the United States, and founded the Mongolian Stock Exchange when he was only 27 years old. His young age prompted American magazine Asia, Inc. to dub him "the Boy Wonder of the Mongolian Stock Exchange"; he acknowledged that his rapid career progress "could only happen in a place like Mongolia". His older brother, Naidansurengiin Zhargalsaikhan, was formerly head of the Bank of Mongolia, but was ousted from his job after the loss of US$100 million of foreign reserves, which had been invested in futures and foreign currency.[9]

The current chairman, B.Bold, is the CEO of Newcom Corporation and former head of J.P.Morgan's department of Russia and commonwealth nations.

See Also

References

  1. ^ "Монголын Хєрєнгийн Бирж: Бидний тухайБидний: Танилцуулга" (in Mongolian). Mongolian Stock Exchange. http://www.mse.mn/. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  2. ^ http://mse.mn/index.php?module=static&com=6
  3. ^ http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2011/01/27/mongolia-the-pink-house-of-rising-equities/#axzz1ZORpngxv
  4. ^ http://www.frc.mn/engnew/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2&Itemid=18
  5. ^ http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-27/mongolia-delays-dollar-bond-sale-as-economy-set-for-20-growth.html
  6. ^ a b Anderson, James H.; Georges Korsun; Peter Murrell (2003). "Glamour and value in the land of Chingis Khan" (PDF). Journal of Comparative Economics (31): 34–57. ISSN 0147-5967. http://www.econ.umd.edu/~murrell/articles/Glamour%20and%20Value.pdf. 
  7. ^ a b Griffiths, Sian (2000-07-11). "How to start a stock exchange". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/821685.stm. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  8. ^ a b Nixson, Frederick (1998). "The Economic Development Experience of Mongolia". In Kuotsai Liou. Handbook of Economic Development. CRC Press. pp. 675–696. ISBN 082470181X. 
  9. ^ a b c d Gluckman, Ron (1992). "Yakking Up Mongolian Finance". Asia, Inc.. http://www.gluckman.com/MongoStock.html. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  10. ^ a b Boone, Peter; Baavaa Tarvaa, Adiya Tsend, Enkhbold Tsendjav, Narantsetseg Unenburen. "Mongolia's Transition to a Democratic Market System". In Wing Thye Woo, Stephen Parker, Jeffrey D. Sachs. Economies in Transition: Comparing Asia and Europe. Boston, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 103–130. ISBN 0262731207. 
  11. ^ Jeffries, Ian (1993). Socialist Economies and the Transition to the Market: A Guide. Routledge. pp. 495. ISBN 0415075807. 
  12. ^ a b c d Gregson, Jonathan (December 2004). "Coming in from the cold". Global Finance. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3715/is_200412/ai_n9466792. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  13. ^ Melloan, George (1997-07-07). "A Landlocked Asian Nation Struggles to Breathe Free". The Wall Street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB868207627211990500.html. Retrieved 2007-09-12. 
  14. ^ a b D., Dorligsuren; J. Bolormaa (2005). "Securities Market Development in Mongolia". In Shigehiro Shinozaki. Securities Markets in Eurasia. OECD Online Bookshop. pp. 101–104. ISBN 9264012222. 
  15. ^ "Opening Bell in Mongolia". The New York Times. 1995-08-29. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CEED71139F93AA1575BC0A963958260. Retrieved 2007-09-12. 
  16. ^ a b "Rebuilding the Financial Sector" (PDF). Mongolia Country Economic Memorandum: Policies for Faster Growth. The World Bank. 1997-08-17. pp. 14–27. http://www-wds.worldbank.org/servlet/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/1997/08/18/000009265_3980217140033/Rendered/PDF/multi0page.pdf. Retrieved 2007-09-12. 
  17. ^ Taylor, Paul (2002-09-06). "Global Investing: Web offers window on to exchanges emerging in the east". Financial Times. http://search.ft.com/iab?queryText=mongolian%20stock%20exchange&aje=true&id=020906000506&ct=0&location=http%3A%2F%2Fsearch.ft.com%2FftArticle%3FqueryText%3Dmongolian+stock+exchange%26aje%3Dtrue%26id%3D020906000506%26ct%3D0&referer=http%3A%2F%2Fsearch.ft.com%2Fsearch%3FqueryText%3Dmongolian+stock+exchange. Retrieved 2007-09-12. 
  18. ^ a b c Jeffs, Luke (2007-02-12). "Mongolia earns a sporting chance with fledgling operation". Dow Jones Financial News Online. http://www.efinancialnews.com/content/1047180747. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  19. ^ "Weekly Review". Mongolian Stock Exchange. 2007-09-07. Archived from the original on 17 May 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20070517103912/http://www.mse.mn/en/index.php?page=newsdet&id=59. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  20. ^ "News in brief". The Mongol Messenger. 2007-01-04. http://www.mse.mn/en/index.php?page=com_list&start=19. Retrieved 2007-09-12. [dead link]
  21. ^ a b Cheng, Patricia (2006-09-19). "Mongolian bourse seeks foreign investment". International Herald-Tribune. http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/09/19/bloomberg/bxmongol.php. Retrieved 2007-09-11. 
  22. ^ http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2011/01/27/mongolia-the-pink-house-of-rising-equities/#axzz1X2R19tgT
  23. ^ http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-27/mongolia-delays-dollar-bond-sale-as-economy-set-for-20-growth.html
  24. ^ "Korea Exchange (KRX) delegates visiting Mongolia". Mongolian Stock Exchange. 2007-08-21. http://www.mse.mn/en/index.php?page=newsdet&id=214. Retrieved 2007-09-11. [dead link]
  25. ^ "Mr. Sodkhuu's visit to Korea". Mongolian Stock Exchange. 2007-08-02. http://www.mse.mn/en/index.php?page=newsdet&id=207. Retrieved 2007-09-11. [dead link]
  26. ^ http://www.business-mongolia.com/mongolia/2011/04/08/lse-seals-deal-to-develop-mongolian-stock-exchange/
  27. ^ Kohn, Michael (2005). Mongolia. Lonely Planet. pp. 67. ISBN 1740593596. 
  28. ^ http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2011/01/27/mongolia-the-pink-house-of-rising-equities/#axzz1X2R19tgT

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