Ghana to issue first domestic dollar bond next month – Finance Minister

Ghana to issue first domestic dollar bond next month – Finance Minister

ACCRA, Capital Markets in Africa: Ghana plans to issue its first domestic investor only dollar bond next month in efforts to deepen the government’s financing streams and bolster the local bond market, Finance Minister Seth Terkper said on Friday. The two-year bond with a target of about $50 million, would be issued through a book-building system to be arranged by Barclays Bank, Stanbic Bank and brokerage firm Strategic African Securities, Terkper told reporters in Accra….

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Ghana Said to Meet Investors Ahead of First Domestic Dollar Bond

Ghana Said to Meet Investors Ahead of First Domestic Dollar Bond

ACCRA, Capital Markets in Africa: Ghana is meeting investors as the nation prepares to sell bonds for as much as $100 million in its first issuance of foreign-currency debt to domestic buyers, according to a person familiar with the matter. The country will offer the bonds at a rate of 5 percent to 7 percent, the person said, who asked not to be identified as the information isn’t public. The bond will be issued in the…

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Emerging Assets Retreat Second Day as Fed Rate Concern Deepens

Emerging Assets Retreat Second Day as Fed Rate Concern Deepens

LAGOS, Nigeria, Capital Markets in Africa: Emerging-market currencies and stocks fell for a second day as commodities declined and comments from a Federal Reserve official fuelled speculation that there will be a U.S. interest-rate increase this year. Russia’s ruble and other currencies of oil-exporting nations declined as Brent crude fell below $50 a barrel and Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer indicated that a 2016 rate move is still under consideration. Raw-material producers including Vale SA dragged the IBOVESPA…

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Emerging Markets Head for Weekly Decline on Fed Rate Concern

Emerging Markets Head for Weekly Decline on Fed Rate Concern

LAGOS, Capital Markets in Africa: Emerging-market stocks were poised for the first weekly decline in more than a month and currencies dropped as caution prevailed among investors struggling to assess the outlook for higher U.S. interest rates. Consumer stocks led declines among all 10 industry groups in the MSCI benchmark as the gauge dropped from a one-year high. The South African rand and South Korean won posted the biggest losses among currencies, weakening at least 0.9 percent. Turkish bonds…

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Emerging Assets Resume Rally on Fed as Samsung Surges to Record

Emerging Assets Resume Rally on Fed as Samsung Surges to Record

LAGOS, Capital Markets in Africa: Emerging-market currencies rebounded and a gauge of stocks rose to a one-year high as Federal Reserve minutes tempered speculation U.S. interest rates will rise this year, spurring demand for riskier assets. South Africa’s rand led currencies higher as Russia’s ruble and Malaysia’s ringgit gained with crude oil. South Korea’s won rose after its worst one-day loss in almost two months. Equities from Indonesia, Thailand to Turkey and India gained. Tencent Holdings Ltd….

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Emerging Stocks Extend Rally as Earnings Buttress Stimulus Bets

Emerging Stocks Extend Rally as Earnings Buttress Stimulus Bets

LAGOS, Nigeria, Capital Markets in Africa: Emerging-market stocks headed for the longest streak of weekly gains since Russia’s Crimean invasion ended a similar run in March 2014, on signs corporate earnings are recovering even as central banks extend measures to nurture economic growth. Chinese shares rallied the most in a month as property companies advanced on speculation merger deals will accelerate. Hungary led gains in eastern European equities as the nation’s economy grew more than forecast….

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Emerging Assets Halt Five-Day Gain as Oil Falls, Ringgit Weakens

Emerging Assets Halt Five-Day Gain as Oil Falls, Ringgit Weakens

LAGOS, Nigeria, Capital Markets in Africa: Emerging-market assets halted a five-day gain as a slide in oil prices sapped demand for higher-yielding assets. A gauge of developing-nation shares dropped from the highest level in a year, led by losses in Slovenia, Estonia and the Philippines. Malaysia’s ringgit fell the most among emerging-nation currencies as the country derives 20 percent of its revenue from energy-related sources. The Korean won weakened as the central bank governor said there was still room to…

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