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Shen is cashing in on Armenia's property boom |

There is huge demand for construction materials in Armenia |

From left to right: VP of Shen-Concern - Ara Hasratyan, Nikolay Hadjiyski, Michael Weinstein |
Shenk means "building" in Armenian, and Shen Concern, a construction materials
company, is energetically living up to its name as Armenia enjoys a property
boom.
"The property boom has sent flat prices up threefold in a couple of years, and
there's lots of apartment-block building going on everywhere you look,"
Vice-President Ara Hasratyan says proudly. Shen's projected growth for the
first quarter of 2005 is 30 per cent up on the same period last year. "True,
the market won't carry on growing at this rate. But (politicians permitting)
there'll be steadier growth for another decade."
Success is bringing new opportunities. In December, Shen signed a deal with
the EBRD – the first Direct Investment Facility for Armenia to be agreed under
the Early Transition Countries initiative. Most of the Bank's equity
investment is being spent on a new production facilities which will turn out
concrete blocks of different colours for use in both house and road building.
The new factory is still a building-site when we visit - with great trenches
of earth thrown up at its sides, and metal pillars just going up. But, by
June, it will house five new staff and a spanking new €750,000 production line
from Spain.
It's clear today that the Shen Concern factory, a few miles outside Yerevan,
next to a railway siding and with an enchanting view of Ararat, has grown out
of a Soviet behemoth. The site measures a vast five hectares. Echoing
warehouses the size of railway stations stretch back from the office – one
still containing the giant racks used to store the metals processed here in
Soviet times (which are now half-full of brightly packaged paint pots and bags
of cement, sand and plaster). But neater, newer buildings have started going
up too. Beglaryan and Hasratyan have proved adept at sourcing funding for new
production lines from sources as diverse as the World Bank and the wealthy
diaspora Armenian Kirk Kerkorian's Lincy Foundation.
Shen - an Armenian pioneer for the ETC initiative
Now two years of talks with the EBRD have borne more fruit – allowing Shen to
become an Armenian pioneer for the ETC initiative, launched in 2004, which
aims to stimulate market activity in the Bank's seven poorest countries of
operations. (As well as Armenia, these are Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Kyrgyz
Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan). The ETC initiative uses a
streamlined approach and more financing alternatives to find more and smaller
projects, while also mobilising more grants for technical assistance and
encouraging economic reform. The Bank will accept higher risk in the ETC
projects it finances, while still respecting the principles of sound banking.
Sniffing out the best new opportunities is old hat to Hasratyan and Shen's
President, Samvel Beglaryan, long-standing friends and colleagues who got to
know each other 15 years ago when they were both working at Gossnab, the
Soviet supplies agency.
Take their approach to banking, for instance. They're not just waiting to see
what shape the government's promised moves to expand Armenia's rudimentary
mortgage market – which will give their business another big boost – will
take. They're taking action. They've worked out the cost of the average
redecorating project in Armenia – about $1,500 – and are already trying to
persuade commercial banks to provide loans of this size, on reasonable terms,
to Shen clients.
The two entrepreneurs have years of experience at spotting niches in the
market. Their first business success was to seize the opportunity offered by
the Soviet collapse and the privatisation of state enterprises. By 1995,
they'd scraped together every kopek, rouble, dram and privatisation voucher
they could lay hands on to buy the closed metal-processing plant. "We knew a
bargain when we saw one," says Ara Hasratyan.
At first they traded, importing paints and building supplies from Europe. "But
after three or four years we realised trade wasn't as good as production," Ara
adds. "So we set about teaching the market to use new kinds of paint."
Shen has 15 per cent of the Armenian paint market
Today, the Bank's figures show that Shen has 15 per cent of the Armenian paint
market and sells 65 per cent of all plasters, fillers and adhesives in the
country. And it wants more. This year, for the first time, Shen began
exporting to neighbouring Georgia. Ara Hasratyan has his eyes on doing more
business there.
The company works hard to attract customers' interest. You can look at the
materials on offer on the snappy company website. You can virtually "try out"
different paint colours online on a model house. The company will deliver your
order in vans decked out with its logo – red green and blue stripes – to one
of the 50 or more shops that stock their goods nationwide, or even, if
necessary, to your home. "We cut out the middle man wherever possible to cut
our costs," Ara Hasratyan says. "It's a small country, and it's best to do
everything directly."
"The important thing is that people like our products," he adds. "A flat
that's smart enough to be decorated with Shen paint is one that people will
want to boast about."
Contact: Yerevan Resident Office
10 May 2005
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