From the second-floor balcony of his spacious hillside home in Almaty, Kazakhstan, Aidan Karibzhanov takes stock of his sprawling empire, which stretches over some of the world’s most resource-rich and politically challenging territory. He looks out at the high-rise headquarters his Visor Holding investment firm shares with the Ritz-Carlton hotel. To the southwest, beyond the snowcapped Trans-Ili Alatau mountains, Visor owns Kyrgyzstan’s top grocery chain, and Karibzhanov has invested more than $200 million in that country’s second-largest gold mine. Closer to home, Visor owns a cement plant and an oil company in Karibzhanov’s native Kazakhstan.
In the past decade, Karibzhanov, 43, has emerged as an investing power in a region ripe with both potential and peril. He’s focused his efforts on the five roughand-tumble former Soviet republics known collectively as the Stans: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. The Stans may be home to only 68 million people, but they sit on about 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves, 11 percent of its natural gas, and 14 percent of its uranium. And they grew at the China-like annual pace of 8.1 percent from 2001, when Karibzhanov founded Visor, through 2014, according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
“Visor Holding is absolutely a key player in the region,” says Ian McCall, a money manager at Geneva-based emerging-markets investor Quesnell Capital. “The firm showed the biggest breadth and number of deals to us, whether it was in mining or oil and gas.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 2015-Ausgabe von Bloomberg Markets.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 2015-Ausgabe von Bloomberg Markets.
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