Kenya Says Election Jitters Pose Risks to Growth Prospects

Kenya Says Election Jitters Pose Risks to Growth Prospects

NAIROBI (Capital Markets in Africa) – Political uncertainty surrounding Kenyan elections next month and a dry-up in banks’ lending to businesses and individuals could hurt the short-term growth prospects of East Africa’s biggest economy, according to the Treasury. The Aug. 8 elections may create uncertainty that could weaken foreign and local investor confidence, Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge said in a statement on the ministry’s website on Thursday. “The economy remains vulnerable to the shocks emanating from the…

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Nigeria Taps Microsoft to Oracle to Recover From Recession

Nigeria Taps Microsoft to Oracle to Recover From Recession

LAGOS (Capital Markets in Africa) – Nigeria is hiring U.S. technology giants such as Oracle Corporation and Microsoft Corp. as the government invests more to save costs and fight corruption. An initiative led by Redwood, California-based Oracle has enabled Nigerian authorities to remove 50,000 so-called ghost workers, or fake entries, from the payroll, according to a presidency statement June 29. That followed Oracle’s decision to open an office in Abuja, the capital, in May. Other companies interested in taking…

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Moody’s downgrades Gabon’s rating to B3, outlook negative

Moody’s downgrades Gabon’s rating to B3, outlook negative

LIBREVILLE (Capital Markets in Africa) – Moody’s Investors Service has today downgraded the long-term issuer and senior unsecured debt ratings of the government of Gabon to B3 from B1 and maintained the negative outlook. Concurrently, Moody’s has lowered the government of Gabon’s local currency as well as foreign currency bond and deposit ceilings to Ba3 from Ba1. The rating downgrade drove the change in ceilings. Rating Rationale The key drivers behind the downgrade to B3…

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Ghana’s Economy Expands Most Since 2014 in First Quarter

Ghana’s Economy Expands Most Since 2014 in First Quarter

ACCRA (Capital Markets in Africa) – The economy of Ghana, West Africa’s biggest after Nigeria’s, expanded the most in almost three years in the first quarter, boosted by gains in the oil industry. Gross domestic product rose 6.6 percent in the three months through March from a year earlier, Anthony Amuzu, deputy government statistician for operations at the Ghana Statistical Service, told reporters Wednesday in the capital, Accra. That’s the fastest expansion since the third quarter…

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South Africa Must Have Inflation-Target Talk, Buthelezi Says

South Africa Must Have Inflation-Target Talk, Buthelezi Says

JOHANNESBURGH (Capital Markets in Africa) – South Africa should have talks on the appropriateness of the central bank’s inflation target, Deputy Finance Minister Sfiso Buthelezi said, adding to concern that the institution’s mandate may be altered. “We set this 3 percent to 6 percent then, under different economic conditions,”  Buthelezi said at a conference Monday in Johannesburg. “Is it still relevant now? Is it a policy for all seasons?” Buthelezi’s remarks come a week after Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane recommended…

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The Leader Who Caused a Slump: Zuma Blamed for South Africa Mess

The Leader Who Caused a Slump: Zuma Blamed for South Africa Mess

JOHANNESBURG (Capital Markets in Africa) – The last time South Africa fell into recession, in 2009, it was because of the global financial crisis. This time around, economists and business executives agree, the cause is a person: the president. Jacob Zuma’s erratic political moves are breeding policy uncertainty and reluctance to invest, helping explain why the economy of the continent’s most industrialized nation contracted for a second straight quarter in the three months through March. Finance,…

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Ghana to Tap Stabilization Fund for Cocoa Pay Next Season

Ghana to Tap Stabilization Fund for Cocoa Pay Next Season

ACCRA (Capital Markets in Africa) – Ghana will probably start drawing from its stabilization fund to cover cocoa farmers’ pay during the season that starts in October as the second-biggest grower props up local prices in the face of a global slump. While Ivory Coast, the largest producer, has already slashed the price it pays farmers for the smaller of two annual crops by 36 percent, Ghana’s Cocoa Board so far kept it unchanged and…

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