EmergingMarketWatch
Middle East and Africa Morning Review | Jan 2, 2025
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Large EMs
Egypt
KEY STAT
Budget deficit falls by 14% y/y to EGP 561bn in Jul-Nov, equals -3.3% of GDP
Jan 02, 12:17
HIGH
Foreign funds buy USD 2.3bn worth of bonds/T-bills on EGX in December (net)
Jan 02, 11:29
Government repays USD 38.7bn in debts in 2024 – PM Madbouly
Jan 02, 07:43
Remittances jump 71% y/y to USD 2.9bn in October, sharp increase due to low base
Jan 02, 07:00
HIGH
MPC keeps interest rates as subsidy cuts, global trade risks call for caution
Jan 02, 06:38
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 06:36
United Arab Emirates
Abu Dhabi’s economy grows 4.5% y/y in Q3 2024
Jan 02, 13:31
UAE to expand CEPAs in 2025, foreign minister says
Jan 02, 13:30
KEY STAT
GDP grows 3.6% y/y in H1 2024
Jan 02, 13:29
Foreign investors buy shares worth USD 173mn on DFM Dec 23 – 27
Jan 02, 12:28
Nigeria
HIGH
Stanbic Bank PMI rises to 52.7 in December
Jan 02, 10:11
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 06:47
CBN sells NGN 281.5bn one-year T-bills
Jan 02, 06:38
NGX broad index up 4.7% m/m in December on oil and gas
Jan 02, 06:37
Oil production rises 11.5% m/m to 1.49mn bpd in Nov – NUPRC
Jan 02, 06:37
Government sells NGN 211.1bn FGN bonds in December
Jan 02, 06:37
Net portfolio flows into equity remain positive in November
Jan 02, 06:37
Middle East & N. Africa
Bahrain
Government sells debt worth BHD 96mn
Jan 02, 08:37
KEY STAT
CPI inflation speeds up to 0.4% y/y in November
Jan 02, 07:00
Israel
Start-ups’ fundraising increases by 38% in 2024 – IVC-LeumiTech report
Jan 02, 07:48
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 06:58
HIGH
Knesset plenum endorses tax on undistributed profits
Jan 02, 06:47
Gasoline price rises by 1.1% as of Jan 1
Jan 02, 06:30
Hotel revenues drop by real 6.0% y/y in Q3
Jan 02, 06:14
Credit card purchases rise by 20.1% y/y in November
Jan 02, 06:12
KEY STAT
Services exports rise by 9.1% y/y sa in October
Jan 02, 06:09
Public’s financial asset portfolio rises by 3.9% in Q3
Jan 02, 06:06
KEY STAT
State of economy index stabilizes m/m in November
Jan 02, 06:03
Jordan
Energy ministry hikes diesel and 90-octane gasoline prices
Jan 02, 08:50
Kuwait
Government imposes 15% tax on multinational entities
Jan 02, 06:38
Lebanon
Total assets of commercial banks fall by 7.9% y/y to USD 103.4bn at end-Oct
Jan 02, 08:59
Morocco
KEY STAT
Trade deficit widens by 6.5% y/y to MAD 275.7bn in Jan-Nov
Jan 02, 07:54
KEY STAT
Private sector lending increases by stable 2.4% y/y in November
Jan 02, 06:37
KEY STAT
GDP growth accelerates to 4.3% y/y in Q3
Jan 02, 06:19
Oman
HIGH
Government expects OMR 620mn fiscal deficit in 2025 – news agency
Jan 02, 10:33
Qatar
Qatar welcomes 5mn international visitors in 2024
Jan 02, 13:30
KEY STAT
GDP rises 2.0% y/y in Q3 2024
Jan 02, 13:29
Saudi Arabia
Govt raises SAR 11.6bn via domestic sukuk sale in December, yields keep rising
Jan 02, 13:59
HIGH
Saudi Aramco hikes diesel prices by 44% to USD 0.44 per litre
Jan 02, 09:24
KEY STAT
Trade surplus drops 28.6% y/y to USD 5.5bn in Oct on lower oil prices
Jan 02, 08:39
Tunisia
Net foreign currency reserves rise to TND 27.1bn at end-2024
Jan 02, 05:57
Central bank keeps main policy rate unchanged at 8.0%
Jan 02, 05:56
Sub-Saharan Africa
Angola
KEY STAT
Industrial output increases by 3.4% y/y in Q3
Jan 02, 07:10
Ethiopia
HIGH
Central bank keeps policy rate at 15%, raises credit growth ceiling to 18%
Jan 02, 08:00
Gabon
KEY STAT
Oil production rises 3.8% q/q in Q3
Jan 02, 06:13
Transitional govt takes control of timber industry
Jan 02, 06:13
Ghana
Court to rule on disputed parliamentary vote in four constituencies on Jan 4
Jan 02, 08:56
College teacher union launches indefinite strike
Jan 02, 08:40
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 07:15
Government sells GHS 4.6bn T-bills exceeding target
Jan 02, 07:00
Ivory Coast
Cocoa arrivals up by 27.4% y/y by Dec 29– exporter estimates
Jan 02, 08:18
Eni launches second phase of Baleine oil and gas project
Jan 02, 08:11
President Ouattara announces exit of French troops
Jan 02, 06:54
Kenya
University lecturers again threaten to strike over delayed pay
Jan 02, 07:35
Govt to pay bonuses to sugarcane farmers this January
Jan 02, 07:26
Ruto admits security excesses but warns against protests in New Year address
Jan 02, 06:18
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 04:41
KEY STAT
CPI inflation edges marginally up to 3.0% y/y in December
Jan 02, 02:33
Senegal
Government sells XOF 165bn in T-bills, bonds in last 2024 auction
Jan 02, 11:28
Customs revenue increases by 13% in 2024 amid anti-fraud success
Jan 02, 08:40
Extractive sector revenues increase by 38% y/y to EUR 581mn in 2023 - EITI
Jan 02, 08:21
GTA project starts gas production
Jan 02, 02:33
President Faye re-iterates commitment to governance reforms in New Year address
Jan 02, 02:33
KEY STAT
GDP expands by record 11.5% y/y in Q3 2024
Jan 02, 02:33
National Assembly adopts 2025 budget
Jan 02, 02:33
PM Sonko outlines fiscal and economic reforms in policy declaration
Jan 02, 02:33
Audit reveals discrepancies in 2022 extractive industry revenue management
Jan 02, 02:33
Court of Auditors refutes claims on public finance report publication
Jan 02, 02:33
National Assembly approves revised 2024 budget
Jan 02, 02:33
South Africa
KEY STAT
Domestic private sector credit growth slows to 4.16% y/y in November
Jan 02, 11:30
KEY STAT
Foreign trade surplus widens to ZAR 34.7bn in November
Jan 02, 10:06
Regulator hikes petrol and diesel prices as of January
Jan 02, 07:38
KEY STAT
Substantial increase in November revenues drives down budget deficit
Jan 02, 06:58
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 06:08
Uganda
Coffee export volume drops by 6.0% y/y in November
Jan 02, 08:33
KEY STAT
Inflation picks up to 3.3% y/y in December
Jan 02, 06:46
Zambia
KEY STAT
GDP growth slows to 2.5% y/y in Q3 amid drought-driven setbacks
Jan 02, 13:31
Energy regulator hikes petrol price as kwacha weakens
Jan 02, 08:46
PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Jan 02, 08:34
HIGH
Saudi Arabia, Zambia agree on USD 130mn debt restructuring
Jan 02, 08:19
KEY STAT
Foreign trade balance turns to surplus of ZMW 1.1bn in November
Jan 02, 07:43
KEY STAT
December inflation hits 3-year high of 16.7% amid drought
Jan 02, 06:54
Egypt
KEY STAT
Budget deficit falls by 14% y/y to EGP 561bn in Jul-Nov, equals -3.3% of GDP
Egypt | Jan 02, 12:17
  • Government capped infrastructure spending, used UAE financing to lower debt upfront in order to reduce fiscal deficit
  • Tax revenues rise strong 38% y/y mostly due to higher Income and VAT revenues, outlook has improved recently
  • Interest payments rise 2% y/y, but government has taken measures to ease debt burden
  • Interest payments account for 102% of tax revenues in review pediod and remain major credit weakness
  • Spending on subsidies jumps 55% y/y; government hikes fuel and electricity prices ahead of IMF review
  • Egypt wants to extend maturity of debt notes, wants to lower public debt/GDP to 80% by 2027

Egypt's overall fiscal deficit fell by 14.1% y/y to EGP 561bn (USD 11.0bn) in the first five months of FY 2024/25 (Jul-Nov), as the government recorded strong increases in tax and non-tax revenues, while cutting down capital spending, according to the finance ministry's monthly report. The narrowing of the deficit reflects the efforts of the government to improve public debt management by using some of the UAE USD 35bn proceeds to reduce public debt upfront, extending the maturity profile of its domestic debt, and by imposing an EGP 1tn ceiling on total public investment spending (budget plus off-budget). Egypt, however, needs to push forward with structural reforms and need to reduce the size of the public sector further in order to achieve a more sustainable debt profile. The fiscal gap-to-GDP ratio eased to 3.3% in Jul-Nov from 4.7% recorded over the same period of the previous FY, which is slightly above the proportionate target for the period. The government targets a fiscal deficit of 7.3% of GDP this FY, after recording 3.6% deficit in FY 2023/24. Last year, however, the government used EGP 510bn (USD 11bn) of the Ras Al Hekma deal to cover its financing needs.

The government recorded a primary surplus of EGP 170bn (1.0% of GDP) in Jul-Nov, compared to a primary surplus of 0.4% of GDP a year ago. While using proceeds from the UAE deal has helped reducing government debt upfront, Egypt needs to enhance revenue mobilization to lower its high public debt and large gross financing needs. While the pressure on public financing has eased recently, the weaker pound and high interest rates still pose challenges. The average maturity of local currency debt remains low at around 0.6 years, according to IMF estimates. The government told the IMF it remains committed to extending the maturity to 0.9 years by end-December through auctions of more bonds and less reliance on T-bills. Further, the government and the IMF have just agreed to recalibrate the fiscal consolidation path to create fiscal space for critical social programs benefiting vulnerable groups and the middle class, while ensuring debt sustainability. Under the new guidelines, Egypt the primary balance surplus (excluding divestment proceeds) is expected to reach 4% of GDP in FY 2025/26 - which is 0.5pps of GDP less than earlier program commitments - and then increase to 5% of GDP in FY 2026/27 (in line with earlier commitments).

The government hiked the budget for subsidy and social protection by 20% to EGP 636bn in FY 2024/25 as Egyptians struggle with surging living costs, imported inflation, and weaker economic growth. The government has revealed a series of new social measures aimed at easing the financial pressures on the most vulnerable and public sector employees. These measures include raising public sector wages, pensions, and grants. The government has also revealed new tax measures to ease the pressure on small businesses and support private non-oil economic activity. Meanwhile, the government promised the IMF to completely phase out the fuel subsidy by the end of 2025 and remove the electricity subsidy over the next four years.

Identified Tax Measures for 2024/25
Potential yield (EGP bn)In % of GDP
Rolling out of automated payroll system9.20.05
E-invoice and risk management system15.80.09
VAT on electronic trade for services17.30.10
Implementation of tax dispute settlement law17.10.10
Streamling of VAT exemptions34.20.19
Widening tax brackets for Tobacco excise tax14.70.08
Strengthening trade facilitation10.00.06
Total118.30.67
Source: IMF

Budget implementation during Jul-Nov

Revenue

Fiscal revenue rose by strong 36.0% y/y to EGP 828bn in the period, accounting for 4.8% of full-year GDP, on the back of recovering economic activity and improved FX liquidity, as well as further progress in the digitalisation of the tax system and widening of the tax base. Tax revenues jumped by 38% y/y to EGP 714bn driven by Income (up 8% y/y), Property (up 70% y/y), and VAT (up 41% y/y) tax revenues. Egypt had imposed a new tax bracket of 27.5% on individuals, whose annual income exceeds EGP 800,000, although the tax exemption allowance on annual income was raised to EGP 45,000. Interestingly, the finance ministry did not report the tax revenues from the Suez Canal. We remind traffic volumes have plummeted since the start of the year because of the insecurity in the Red Sea. We estimate Egypt has lost USD 4.8bn revenue due to the traffic disruptions in Jan-Nov 2024, but the weaker pound should have blunted part of the sharp decline in USD receipts.

Government budget execution, Revenues (EGP mn)
Jul - Nov 2023Jul - Nov 2024y/y (%)Budget 2024/25
Tax Revenues 516,063 714,338 38 2,021,991
Income tax 168,217 181,536 8 782,188
o/w Suez Canal - - - 157,220
Property Taxes 84,567 143,750 70 232,731
VAT 237,207 335,678 42 828,077
Taxes on International Trade 26,072 53,374 105 99,245
Non-Tax Revenue 92,897 113,751 22 603,177
o/w Other than grants* 92,797 111,344 20 599,593
Total Revenues608,960828,090362,625,168
Source: Ministry of Finance

Expenditure

The total expenditure rose by 9.9% y/y to EGP 1,383bn in the period, which accounts for 8.1% of full-year GDP. Meanwhile, capital spending fell on the year, as part of the government's measures to rationalize spending. Interest payments rose by 2% y/y to EGP 731bn, accounting for 53% of total spending and for 102% of tax revenues in the period. Debt service costs are the single largest category in spending and constitute a major credit weakness. The central bank has raised interest rates by cumulative 19pps since March 2022, which has made domestic debt more expensive, because the relatively short maturity profile of Egypt's domestic debt has made the public finances vulnerable to interest rate movements. Interest payments on domestic debt, which account for about 85% of total costs, fell by 2% y/y to EGP 631bn in Jul-Nov. Conversely, interest payments on foreign debt rose by sharp 51% y/y to EGP 98bn, reflecting the weaker FX rate. The major FX reform from March saw foreign investors rushing to buy local T-bills, which drove T-bill rates lower, but they remain elevated at around 28%. The finance ministry expects debt-to-GDP to reach around 90% as of end-June 2024 and wants to cut the ratio below 80% by 2026/27.

Public investments fell by 11% y/y to EGP 68bn as the government froze some of the non-essential projects and spending that requires USD. The government also said it would focus on infrastructure projects that are near completion in the current FY. The IMF warned that Egypt would need to enforce the strict implementation of the public investment ceiling, which includes capital expenditures associated with public entities that operate outside the general government budget.

The wage bill rose by 19% y/y to EGP 241bn, while the expenditure on social benefits rose by 19% y/y to EGP 96bn, reflecting expanded coverage of some of the social security programs. Egypt had said it would support the most vulnerable amidst rising living costs as more and more families struggle with surging consumer inflation. The IMF supported the expansion of the social programs that should provide some assistance to the most vulnerable.

Fuel price approved for corresponding quarter (EGP/litre)
Q4 23Q1 24Q2 24Q3 24Q4 24
80 Octane 10.00 11.00 11.00 12.25 13.75
92 Octane 11.50 12.50 12.50 13.75 15.25
95 Octane 12.50 13.50 13.50 15.00 17.00
Diesel 8.25 10.00 10.00 11.50 13.50
Natural Gas for Vehicles 4.50 6.50 6.50 6.50 7.00
LPG (12.5 kg) 75 100 100 150 150
Source: Automatic Pricing Committee

Meanwhile, subsidy payments rose by 55% y/y to EGP 110bn, on the back of increased subsidy payments to the state-run grain supplier and the state petroleum company. The government hiked the electricity and fuel prices (twice) ahead of the 4th IMF review that was concluded in late December. The government had pledged to phase out electricity subsidies over the next four years and fuel subsidies by the end of 2025. Egypt plans to replace the commodity subsidies with cash payments from FY 2025/26, in a move that analysts say would distort market less than the current regime. Following the latest fuel price increase, government officials say the new prices cover about 80% of petrol costs and 70% of diesel costs. According to unnamed government officials, Egypt is currently subsidizing diesel purchases by EGP 8bn (USD 164mn) per month and petrol purchases by EGP 1.8bn per month. They reportedly said that the latest price increase will save the budget around EGP 10bn during the next quarter.

Government budget execution, Expenditures (EGP mn)
Jul - Nov 2023Jul - Nov 2024y/y (%)Budget 2024/25
Total Expenditures1,258,7251,382,791103,870,168
Compensations of Employees 202,328 240,730 19 575,000
Purchases of Goods and Services 53,589 68,791 28 166,705
Interest payments 713,414 730,597 2 1,834,468
Subsidies, Grants and Social Benefits 156,666 210,773 35 635,943
Subsidies 70,754 109,652 55 369,776
o/w state grain buyer GASC - - - 134,150
o/w state petroleum company EGCP - - - 154,499
Grants 4,882 5,690 17 21,566
Social benefits 80,529 96,162 19 197,856
Other Expenditures 56,671 63,855 13 162,238
Purchases of NFA 76,057 68,045 -11 495,815
Cash Deficit-649,765-554,702-15-1,245,000
NAFA 2,886 5,904 105 -1,977
Overall Fiscal Balance-652,651-560,606-14-1,243,022
Overall Fiscal Balance/GDP (%)-4.7-3.3--7.3
Primary Fiscal Balance/GDP (%)0.41.0-3.5
Source: Ministry of Finance
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HIGH
Foreign funds buy USD 2.3bn worth of bonds/T-bills on EGX in December (net)
Egypt | Jan 02, 11:29
  • Despite surges of portfolio inflows, Egypt seems more resilient to global shocks than previously thought
  • Foreign funds bought USD 17.0bn worth of debt notes through EGX in March-December, attracted by high nominal interest rates
  • Foreign investors held USD 36bn worth of T-bills as of end-June, according to CBE data

Foreign non-Arab institutional investors bought EGP 403bn worth of T-bills and bonds through the local exchange (EGX) in December and sold EGP 340bn worth of notes, recording a net acquisition of EGP 62bn (USD 1.2bn) in the month, according to data from the local bourse. Meanwhile, the Arab funds were also net buyers, acquiring notes worth EGP 52bn, which meant the total foreign funds acquired a total of EGP 115bn (USD 2.3bn) worth of T-bills and bonds in the month. This is one of the strongest net inflows since the currency reform and should reflect Egypt's attractive high nominal interest rates, abating FX uncertainty, improved confidence and outlook, and the government's commitment to structural reforms. Further, Egypt's sovereign ratings were upgraded in December, which most certainly played an important role.

It should be noted that the EGX launched secondary trading of T-bills relatively recently and the data is now lumped together (bonds + T-bills), with demand most likely geared almost entirely towards short-term notes.

The total purchases of foreign investors (including foreign Arab funds) was EGP 814bn in March-December, thus resulting in a total FX inflow of USD 17.0bn through the EGX since the pound was floated. Separately, the foreign investors bought around USD 8bn worth of T-bills directly from the banks, according to our calculations. This sharp increase in portfolio inflows has made Egypt more vulnerable to capital outflows and rollover risks especially when the short-term nature of the debt instruments is considered. However, the relatively muted sell-offs from August and November suggest Egypt's financial market may be more resilient to global shocks than previously thought. This resilience could be attributed to the recent reforms, improved investor confidence, and relatively large FX reserves.

Trading of T-bills/bonds by institutional investors on EGX (EGP bn)
Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24Dec-24
Buy 1,224 1,177 1,232 809 1,820
Egyptians 959 997 1,043 663 1,247
Arabs 65 53 51 50 170
Foreign non-Arab 200 127 138 96 403
Sell 1,224 1,178 1,232 809 1,822
Egyptians 903 1,032 1,084 638 1,364
Arabs 62 72 52 43 118
Foreign non-Arab 259 74 96 128 340
Source: EGX
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Government repays USD 38.7bn in debts in 2024 – PM Madbouly
Egypt | Jan 02, 07:43
  • Suez Canal revenues fell by 70% or USD 8bn due to insecurity in Red Sea
  • Egypt received EUR 1bn tranche from EU, expects USD 1.2bn IMF tranche any day now

Egypt repaid USD 7bn in debt during November and December 2024, raising total repayments for the year to USD 38.7bn, PM Madbouly said during a cabinet meeting on Dec 26. Madbouly highlighted the significant challenges that Egypt faced last year - noting Suez Canal revenues plummeted by 70% or USD 8bn because of insecurity in the Red Sea - but reaffirmed the government's commitment to meeting both local and external liabilities. Looking ahead, the PM said that Egypt is well-prepared for its future obligations, with the burden for 2025 significantly reduced compared to last year. He expressed confidence in the nation's ability to maintain stability while pursuing economic growth. We note that Egypt has just received EUR 1bn tranche from the EU and is expecting a USD 1.2bn tranche any day now.

According to CBE projections made on June 30, the government is expected to pay USD 22.5bn in medium-term and long-term debt that is due in 2025 (including interest and principal payments), while another USD 17.1bn short-term debt will mature during the first half of the year. The short-term debt, however, includes USD and EUR T-bills that are routinely rolled over and possibly GCC deposits which will be either extended or converted into direct investments.

Projected External Debt Service (USD mn)
H2 2024 H1 2025 H2 2025 H1 2026 H2 2026
Projected MT and LT Public & Publicly Guaranteed External Debt Service19,58413,7998,66312,57212,057
Principal 15,938 10,628 5,932 9,911 9,872
Interest 3,646 3,172 2,731 2,661 2,184
Projected MT and LT Private Sector Non-Guaranteed External Debt Service121191237262312
Principal 56 123 179 206 269
Interest 64 67 58 56 43
Projected Short-Term External Debt Service10,00517,144---
Principal 9,644 16,381 - - -
Interest 361 764 - - -
Note: Projections made as of Jul 1, 2024 using FX rate as of end-June
Source: CBE's quarterly external report
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Remittances jump 71% y/y to USD 2.9bn in October, sharp increase due to low base
Egypt | Jan 02, 07:00
  • Major FX reform from March has eliminated black FX market and encourages people to transfer money through official channels
  • Remittances jump 45% y/y to USD 23.7bn in Jan-Oct

Remittance inflows rose to USD 2.9bn in October from USD 2.7bn inflow in September, but surged by 71% from October 2023, according to CBE. The CBE stopped publishing monthly remittance data in 2022 and the resumption of this series is welcomed news, because these inflows are a key category in the Current Account. The CBE said remittance inflows jumped by 45% y/y to USD 23.7bn in Jan-Oct and attributed the recovering personal transfers to the major currency reform from early March. We remind the CBE liberalized the pound, which eliminated the black FX market premium and thus encouraged people to use the official channels. Remittances are one of the key sources of FX for Egypt and the government said in early 2024 it was working to increase inflows by 10% each year to reach USD 53bn by 2030. Meanwhile, the CBE launched in December the instant inbound remittance network, which should encourage more personal transfers through the official bank channels.

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HIGH
MPC keeps interest rates as subsidy cuts, global trade risks call for caution
Egypt | Jan 02, 06:38
  • MPC says current monetary stance remains appropriate until inflation slows visibly
  • Inflation to slow in Q1 on favourable base effects and tight policy stance
  • Global and regional insecurity, uncertainty around global trade pose risks to disinflation path
  • GDP growth to strengthen in Q3 supported by non-oil manufacturing, construction, and trade; MPC expects further recovery in 2024/25
  • Leading indicators for Q3 and Q4 suggest economic activity is gradually picking up

As expected, the MPC decided to keep the overnight deposit rate, the overnight lending rate, and the rate of the main operation unchanged at 27.25%, 28.25%, and 27.75%, respectively. The Committee also kept the discount rate unchanged at 27.75%. The MPC also decided to extend the inflation target horizons to Q4 2026 and Q4 2028 at 7% (+/- 2.0pps) and 5% (+/- 2.0pps) on average, respectively, in line with CBE's gradual advance towards implementing a fully-fledged inflation targeting regime.

In the accompanying statement, the MPC said the gradual unwinding of food inflation along with the improvement of inflation expectations since the start of 2024 suggest that inflation remains on a downward trajectory, albeit disrupted by subsidy cuts. Favourable base effects, tight monetary stance, and sizeable FX inflows, which helped to stabilize the pound, have all contributed to reigning in inflationary pressures. Further, the MPC sees a significant slowdown in inflation during H1 2025 due to the tight monetary stance and favourable base effects. The MPC, however, noted that rising global and regional security risks and higher than anticipated pass-through of fiscal measures pose risks to disinflation path. While energy commodity prices have mostly moderated, commodity prices continue to be susceptible to supply shocks such as global trade disruptions and adverse weather conditions.

On the domestic front, the MPC said it expects a further improvement in GDP growth during Q3, supported by non-oil manufacturing, construction, and trade and added that leading economic indicators point towards gradual pick-up in economic activity going forward. The disruptions in the Suez Canal have persisted, which together with supply line-disruptions, keep economic growth below potential. The MPC expects that economic growth will recover in 2024/25, with all forecasts pointing towards notable recovery as FX shortage are eliminated, manufacturing rebounds, FDI inflows pick up, and tourism inflows remain resilient. The MPC said that GDP growth should reach its full potential by mid-2026.

In its final remarks, the MPC said the current monetary stance remains appropriate until a significant and sustained decline in inflation materializes. The MPC will continue to follow a data-driven approach to determine the duration of policy restrictiveness based on its assessment of the inflation outlook, dynamics of underlying inflation, and strength of monetary policy transmission. Upside risks to the forecasted disinflation path, include but are not limited to, an escalation of the current geopolitical tensions, unfavourable climate conditions, both domestically and globally, and a higher than anticipated pass-through of fiscal measures.

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PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Egypt | Jan 02, 06:36

Egypt received EUR 1bn first tranche of EU EUR 7.4bn financing package (Ahram)

Egypt population surpassed 107mn by end of 2024 (Ahram)

Egypt overall budget deficit declines by EGP 92bn in July-November: Finance ministry (Ahram)

Egypt private investments grow by 30% in Q1 FY24/25 (Ahram)

Egypt real GDP growth recovers to 3.5% in Q1 FY24/25 (Ahram)

Egypt central bank sells USD 840mn in USD-denominated T-bills (Ahram)

Egypt accomplished 98.5% of its FY23/24 investment target: Planning minister (Ahram)

Egypt launches 1st phase of EGP 30bn initiative to support priority industrial sectors (Ahram)

Suez Canal revenues plummet to USD 4bn in 2024 amid Red Sea tensions: SCA chairman (Ahram)

Egypt to limit car imports to 1 per importer over next 5 years starting Friday (Ahram)

PM: Egypt's Debt Dues for 2025 Much Less than 2024 (Sada Elbalad)

CBE Withdraws Liquidity worth EGP 639bn through Open Market (Sada Elbalad)

Cabinet approves key international agreements with Japan, Serbia (Egypt Today)

Egypt awards nine golden licenses to boost strategic investments (Egypt Today)

USD 5.5bn record growth in Egypt's food industry exports for 2024 (Egypt Today)

Investment Min. reveals project to establish industrial complex for railway industries in Egypt (Egypt Today)

ACWA Power secures USD 702mn for 1.1GW Egyptian wind farm (Egypt Today)

Cabinet: Foreign Direct Investments surged 11-fold during FY2023/2024 (Egypt Today)

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United Arab Emirates
Abu Dhabi’s economy grows 4.5% y/y in Q3 2024
United Arab Emirates | Jan 02, 13:31
  • Non-oil economy expands 6.6% y/y

Abu Dhabi's economy grew by 4.5% y/y in the third quarter of 2024, according to the Abu Dhabi Media Office. The strong growth came as the non-oil economy expanded 6.6% y/y. Non-oil activities contributed 54% to the overall economy in Q3 2024.

Looking at a breakdown, the manufacturing sector grew by 2% y/y to AED 29.4bn in Q3 2024. The sector contributed 9.7% to the emirate's GDP, confirming its position as the largest non-oil activity for the seventh consecutive quarter.

Similarly, the construction sector grew by 10% y/y to AED 26.7bn, thus contributing 8.8% to Abu Dhabi's economy. Growth was the result of an increase in investments in urban infrastructure projects, which in turn led to a rise in the number of jobs created within the sector during the quarter.

The financial and insurance sector grew 11.6% y/y and contributing 6.4% to Abu Dhabi's GDP. This growth highlights Abu Dhabi's position as a leading financial hub, driven by increase in loans and the growth in deposits across major banks.

The real estate sector grew 6.1% y/y and contributed 3.5% to Abu Dhabi's GDP. These figures underline the continued demand for high-quality real estate offerings in Abu Dhabi.

As a reminder, Abu Dhabi is the capital of the UAE and the second most populous emirate after Dubai.

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UAE to expand CEPAs in 2025, foreign minister says
United Arab Emirates | Jan 02, 13:30
  • UAE currently has 24 CEPAs with countries and international blocs

The UAE will continue to increase its Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements (CEPAs) in 2025, targeting additional countries to maximise benefits for the UAE and its global trade partners, said Dr. Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, Minister of State for Foreign Trade, according to the country's official news agency.

Since the programme's launch in September 2021 until early December 2024, the UAE has signed 24 CEPAs with countries and international blocs, covering 2.5bn people. The CEPAs programme is designed to expand the country's commercial and investment partnerships worldwide, positioning the UAE as a key gateway for non-oil goods and services and a global hub for business and investment.

Our most recent article about the UAE's CEPA programme was in December 2024, when we wrote that the UAE and the five countries of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) successfully concluded CEPA negotiations.

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KEY STAT
GDP grows 3.6% y/y in H1 2024
United Arab Emirates | Jan 02, 13:29
  • Non-oil sector grows 4.4% y/y thanks to transport, financial, construction and ICT activities
  • Mining sector expands by 1.2% y/y, rebounding after contraction in 2023

Preliminary estimates show that the economy expanded by 3.6% y/y in H1, according to data from the Federal Competitiveness and Statistics Centre. Real GDP reached AED 879.6bn (USD 239.5bn) in H1. The value of the non-oil GDP grew 4.4% y/y to AED 660bn, accounting for 75% of total. The mining sector (incl. oil and gas) grew by 1.3% y/y to AED 219.7bn, rebounding after contracting for most of 2023.

Looking at the breakdown of the non-oil sector, transportation and storage activities grew 8.4% y/y, financial and insurance activities grew by 7.6% y/y, construction activities by 7.3% y/y, and information and communication activities by 5.3% y/y. The restaurants and hotels sector achieved growth of 5.1% y/y in H1.

We remind that the IMF expects GDP to grow 3.7% in 2024 and 5.0% in 2025. The central bank is more optimistic and expects the economy to expand 4% in 2024 and 4.5% in 2025.

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Foreign investors buy shares worth USD 173mn on DFM Dec 23 – 27
United Arab Emirates | Jan 02, 12:28
  • Outflow of USD 3mn during week

Foreign investors purchased shares worth AED 634mn (USD 173mn) on the Dubai Financial Market (DFM) during the week ended Dec 27 and sold shares worth AED 645mn (USD 176mn), according to DFM data. This means that net foreign investment was an outflow of AED 11mn (USD 3mn) during the week.

The total value of equity deals was AED 1.3bn during the review week. Thus, the value of shares bought and sold by foreign investors accounted for 41% and 41% of the total value of shares traded during the week, respectively. Institutional investors bought and sold shares accounting for 54% and 54% of the total value of equity purchases during the week, with individual investors accounting for the balance.

Let's look at what happened during all of December. Foreign investors purchased shares worth AED 7.8bn (USD 2.1bn) and sold shares worth AED 7.5bn (USD 2bn). That means there was an inflow of AED 311mn (USD 85mn) during the month.

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Nigeria
HIGH
Stanbic Bank PMI rises to 52.7 in December
Nigeria | Jan 02, 10:11
  • Improvement attributed to festive season
  • Expansion driven by growth in new orders, output, and employment
  • Purchase costs continued to rise rapidly
  • Sentiment remains weak, but companies are more optimistic for 2025

The Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria PMI increased to 52.7 in December from 49.6 in November, recording the first expansion in six months. The solid improvement was driven by continued expansion in new orders (for second consecutive month) as well as renewed increases in output, purchases, and employment and was attributed to the festive season, which traditionally boosts the non-oil economy.

The increase in new orders is one of the most notable developments as this is the fourth expansion in the past five months, and came at the strongest rate of increase since May. The respondents attributed the increase to improving client demand and rising customer numbers. The increase in new orders also led to a renewed expansion of business activity in December, ending a five month sequence of contraction. All four broad sectors signalled rising output at the end of 2024. Meanwhile, inflationary pressures have remained elevated and continue to be a major drag on consumer demand. Purchase costs continued to rise rapidly, driven by currency weakness and higher fuel and raw material prices. Transportation price pressures also contributed to an increase in staff costs. In response to rising input costs, output prices also saw further increases.

The overall outlook for business activity improved slightly but was still at the third lowest level on record. A moderation in headline inflation is expected to support domestic demand, though high interest rates and currency depreciation will continue to challenge the non-oil sector.

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PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Nigeria | Jan 02, 06:47

New refineries: NNPCL may cut crude supply to Dangote plant (The Punch)

New withholding tax policy begins (The Punch)

Naira defies CBN's forex reforms, tumbled 41% in 2024 (The Punch)

Economists worry as FG breaks Jan-Dec budget cycle (The Punch)

FG plans credit guarantee company for Q2 (The Punch)

Nine banks rake in N4.8tn on loan charges (The Punch)

MDAs remitted N1.96tn through IPPIS in 2024 - Report (The Punch)

NGX All-Share Index soars by 283.45% since 2020 (The Punch)

FX pressure will reduce as Warri refinery resumes - Senator (The Punch)

Ministry inaugurates NGN 250bn real estate investment fund (The Punch)

Dangote, Warri, P'Harcourt Refineries, Others to Gulp 123m Barrels of Total In-country Oil Production in H1 (ThisDay)

Insurance Sector for 2025 Outlook (ThisDay)

Top 10 best-performing stocks in the Nigerian market in 2024 (Nairametrics)

President Tinubu restates pledge to reduce inflation rate from 34.6% to 15% in 2025 (Nairametrics)

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CBN sells NGN 281.5bn one-year T-bills
Nigeria | Jan 02, 06:38
  • CBN allotted NGN 332.5bn in total
  • Subscriptions for 364-day bill reached NGN 607.8bn
  • CBN reports a strong increase demand for longer-tenured securities

The CBN offered NGN 27.3bn worth of three-month T-bills at its regular auction held on December 27, eventually selling notes worth NGN 25.5bn, according to data on the CBN's website. The stop rate remained at 18% compared to the December 11 auction. The central bank also sold NGN 25.5bn worth of 182-day T-bills and NGN 281.5bn worth of 364-day bills. The CBN allocated NGN 332.5bn across the tenors. Total subscriptions reached NGN 663.2bn across the three tenors, lower than NGN 907.9bn subscription at the previous auction. The auction results show a strong demand for long-dated bills. The breakdown indicates that 92% of the subscription was for the 364-day T-bills, despite a liquidity shortfall in the money market.

In 2024, total subscription to T-bills surged to NGN 38.1tn, up from NGN 23.5tn in 2023, according to CBN's primary market data. This increase was driven by investors seeking risk-free instruments as a hedge against inflation. The CBN raised NGN 12.3tn from the T-bill market, exceeding its target of NGN 7.6tn. In response to inflationary pressures, the CBN raised interest rates during auctions, with the 91-day T-bill rate increasing from 7% in December 2023 to 18% in December 2024. Similarly, the rates for 182-day and 364-day bills also saw significant increases. Analysts at Cordros Research highlighted that the domestic fixed income market remained volatile in 2024, driven by factors such as the CBN's tight monetary policy to curb rising inflation, the repricing of instruments to attract foreign portfolio investments and increase real returns for local investors, and tight liquidity in the financial system. They also noted that domestic borrowings increased, partly due to the federal government's refinancing of the CBN's ways & means.

T-bill auction results (NGN bn)
Auction DateTenorAmount OfferedTotal SubscriptionTotal SalesStop Rate (%)
27-Dec-2491-day27,34725,68125,53518.00
27-Dec-24182-day36,44229,66525,46518.50
27-Dec-24364-day268,740607,830281,52822.90
      
11-Dec-2491-day10,8418,8048,80418.00
11-Dec-24182-day8,36010,6137,03318.50
11-Dec-24364-day256,511888,434512,00522.80
Source: CBN
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NGX broad index up 4.7% m/m in December on oil and gas
Nigeria | Jan 02, 06:37
  • Local funds remain main players on local bourse; foreign investment share is rising slowly
  • Market capitalization hit an all-time high of NGN 61.9tn (USD 40bn)
  • Banking sector recapitalization and reforms in the oil and exchange rate sectors contributed to a more attractive market

The Nigerian Stock Exchange All-Share Index (ASI) rose by 4.7% m/m as of end-December, following a 0.1% m/m increase in November, according to NGX data. The m/m increase was mostly driven by the oil and gas index (+13.8% vs +3.3% in November) and the consumer index (+7.4% vs +2.2% in November). All the other major sector indexes also rose on the month, including the banking index by 6.8%. Market capitalization (equities only) rose to an all-time high of NGN 61.9tn (USD 40bn) as of December 27 or about 23% of GDP. The CBN's macroeconomic policies, including the naira depreciation and liberalisation of exchange rates, were key drivers of this growth. Additionally, high-profile listings like Geregu Power Plc, Transcorp Power Plc, Aradel Holdings and BUA Foods have contributed to the significant rise in market capitalisation.

Foreign investment rose particularly quickly in the first half of 2024, reflecting improved market sentiment and the liberalization of the FX rate. Foreign capital inflows steadily increased from 4% in mid-2023 to 16% by November 2024, further boosting the market's performance. Outflows have also surged, indicating a balancing act of capital inflow and outflow dynamics. While still dominant in the market, domestic investors have seen their relative share reduce as foreign investors increase their stake. The positive performance of the stock market has been further supported by the banking sector's recapitalization efforts, which have increased investor interest in banking stocks. Additionally, reforms in the oil sector and the exchange rate adjustments have also made Nigerian assets more attractive to foreign investors, leading to a more favourable market environment. Analysts expect the market to continue its upward trend, driven by year-end activities and positioning in strong stocks, suggesting further growth in the coming weeks.

ASI and selected sub-indices (m/m change)
Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24Dec-24
Bonny crude oil price (m/m) -3.6% -6.0% -3.7% 0.5% -1.4%
ASI change m/m-1.2%1.9%-1.0%0.1%4.7%
NSE 30 -0.6% 2.0% 0.3% -0.2% 3.0%
NSE Banking 5.1% 8.9% 7.2% 2.2% 6.8%
NSE Industrial Goods -13.1% -0.2% -10.3% 2.2% 1.1%
NSE Consumer Index 4.8% -0.6% -0.6% 2.2% 7.4%
NSE Oil and Gas 19.4% 7.0% 15.8% 3.3% 13.8%
Source: NSE

Despite the strong performance in 2024, challenges remain in Nigeria's capital market. High transaction costs, information asymmetry and low liquidity continue to hinder optimal market efficiency. However, experts see potential in leveraging the equity market by listing national assets such as the NNPC, which could unlock liquidity and attract both domestic and foreign investment. In 2024, Nigeria's financial sector was influenced by a series of reforms designed to stabilize the economy, particularly amid rising inflation and the removal of fuel subsidies. However, these reforms also contributed to higher inflation, which reduced consumer purchasing power and increased costs for businesses. Looking ahead, the CBN is expected to maintain a tight monetary stance to control inflation and stabilize the naira, which could further weigh on the equity market. Continued policy reforms are expected to further strengthen the market, increase investor confidence and sustain long-term growth, particularly in the oil and gas sectors.

NGX transactions summary (NGN bn)
Jul-24Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24
Total foreign inflow 37.6 33.1 11.3 33.3 25.9
Total foreign outflow 20.0 24.4 30.2 14.2 15.1
Total domestic transactions 434.1 322.1 451.6 455.3 401.4
Domestic retail 271.9 180.7 288.1 170.0 195.4
Domestic institutional 162.2 141.3 163.5 285.2 206.0
Total transactions491.6379.5493.0502.7442.3
Source: NSE
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Oil production rises 11.5% m/m to 1.49mn bpd in Nov – NUPRC
Nigeria | Jan 02, 06:37
  • Rise is mostly due to growth in Bonny and Forcados
  • Oil production remains below budget target (1.78mn bpd) and OPEC quota (1.5mn bpd)
  • Government remains optimistic production levels will pick up in 2025
  • In 2024, FG approved key transactions including Seplat Energy's acquisition of ExxonMobil's MPNU

Nigeria's crude oil production (excluding condensates) surged by 11.5% m/m to 1.49mn bpd in November following a marginal 0.7% m/m rise in October, according to the upstream oil sector regulator (NUPRC). While production rose across many categories, two major terminals/streams recorded the sharpest increase on the month - Bonny and Forcados. Meanwhile, according to OPEC's estimates based on secondary sources, Nigeria's crude oil production (excluding condensates) rose by 1% m/m to 1.42mn bpd in November following a rise of 0.8% m/m in October. Even with this growth, the country is still struggling to meet its budget target (1.78mn bpd for 2024) and OPEC output target (1.5mn bpd, crude only). Despite being Africa's largest oil producer, oil production continues to be limited by theft, vandalism and underinvestment in the Niger Delta. OPEC has extended Nigeria's oil production quota of 1.5mn barrels per day (bpd) to 2026, while the federal government is targeting crude oil production of 2.06mn bpd in the 2025 budget.

In 2024, Nigeria's oil and gas sector saw major advancements, particularly the commencement of crude oil refining at the Dangote Refinery. The refinery began producing diesel and aviation fuel in January but faced challenges in securing crude feedstock. Disputes arose between the refinery, international oil companies (IOCs) and regulators, delaying operations. By September, the refinery started producing petrol and began exporting to other African countries. A new naira-for-crude agreement with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) helped stabilize supply, although pricing disputes with marketers persisted. The Port Harcourt refinery also marked a significant milestone by resuming operations after years of inactivity. The refinery began processing crude in November. Despite some public concerns about the blending process, the NNPC defended the method, emphasizing its importance in maintaining product quality. The year also saw the approval of divestment deals that had been pending for years. The federal government gave the green light to key transactions, including Seplat Energy's acquisition of ExxonMobil's MPNU, Oando's purchase of Eni's Nigerian Agip Oil Company, Equinor's sale of its Nigerian operations and Renaissance's acquisition of Shell Petroleum Development Company assets.

Oil production, various estimates (mn bpd)
Jul-24Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24
NUPRC (crude) 1.31 1.35 1.32 1.33 1.49
NUPRC (crude + condensate) 1.53 1.57 1.54 1.54 1.69
Budget target (crude + condensate)1.781.781.781.781.78
OPEC (secondary sources, crude only) 1.40 1.44 1.39 1.40 1.42
OPEC quota (crude only)1.501.501.501.501.50
Source: NUPRC, OPEC

Crude spot prices - OPEC

The differentials for Bonny Light, Forcados and Qua Iboe crude against North Sea Dated decreased by USD 0.17, USD 0.25 and USD 0.12, respectively, resulting in premiums of USD 0.06/barrel, USD 1.06/barrel and USD 0.48/barrel. Cabinda's crude differential also declined m/m in November, dropping by USD 0.31 on average to a premium of USD 0.56/barrel against North Sea Dated.

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Government sells NGN 211.1bn FGN bonds in December
Nigeria | Jan 02, 06:37
  • Demand for shorter-tenor bonds has fallen
  • The stop rate on the longer-dated instrument remained at 22%

The federal government sold NGN 211.1bn worth of bonds of 5- and 7-year residual maturities, exceeding this month's target by 76%, according to the bond auction results released by the DMO. No bonds were allotted on a non-competitive basis. This is the fifth consecutive month in which allotment and demand exceed the target. The total subscriptions across all tenors amounted to NGN 278.8bn, lower than NGN 369.6bn recorded in the previous month. Despite declines in subscriptions and allotments, marginal rates remained stable. The stop rate for the 5-year bond increased slightly to 21.14%, compared to 21% in November. The stop rate for the 7-year bond remained at 22%. The drop in subscription and allotment volumes is likely due to seasonal liquidity constraints typically seen at the year's end.

Bid range for FGN bond at corresponding primary auction (%)
 24-Sep24-Oct24-Nov24-Dec
Bid range for FGN bond due in Apr 2029    
Min18.5018.0019.0019.30
Max21.9021.9721.9022.14
Marginal19.0020.7521.0021.14
Bid range for FGN bond due in Feb 2031    
Min17.5018.5018.0019.00
Max21.1823.2023.0024.00
Marginal19.9921.7422.0022.00
Bid range for FGN bond due in May 2033    
Min18.00   
Max22.00   
Marginal20.05   
Source: DMO

Investor interest in long-term FGN Bonds has been robust throughout 2024, driving the high amounts raised in the auctions. The rise in marginal rates indicates investors' expectations for greater returns amid tighter monetary policies, presenting challenges for the government in managing its borrowing costs. There has been a notable shift in investor preferences toward higher-yielding, longer-tenor bonds, reflecting cautious market sentiment. The DMO has responded by reopening some bonds and steadily increasing interest rates to attract more investors, particularly in light of the country's double-digit inflation rate.

In 2024, the total FGN bond allotment of NGN 5.84tn amounted to 101.4% of the DMO's offer of NGN 5.76tn throughout the year. We remind that the 2024 budget has a borrowing target of NGN 6tn. Early findings from analysts indicate that the FG may exceeded this target by 67% for the full year.

Summary of primary FGN auctions (NGN bn)
Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24Dec-24
Offer 190.0 180.0 120.0 120.0
Subscription (competitive bids) 414.9 389.3 369.6 278.8
Subscription/Offer ratio2.182.163.082.32
Allotment (competitive bids) 264.5 289.6 346.2 211.1
Allotment (non-competitive) 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.0
Source: DMO
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Net portfolio flows into equity remain positive in November
Nigeria | Jan 02, 06:37
  • Outflows rose slightly m/m while inflows fell
  • Domestic transactions outpaced foreign transactions

Net offshore portfolio flows into Nigerian equity recorded a surplus (net inflow) of NGN 10.8bn (USD 7mn) in November, according to NGX data. This is the second consecutive surplus month. Inflows edged down on the month while outflows rose slightly on the month. We remind the net inflow from October was one of the strongest in several years (NGN 19.2bn), driven by lower outflows. Analysts credit the improved net foreign inflows to fiscal and monetary reforms that boosted investor confidence. The CBN's tough stance on inflation and efforts to stabilize the naira contributed to the improved outlook for foreign investments, despite the challenges posed by higher interest rates. As of the November meeting of the CBN's monetary policy committee, the benchmark interest rate was pegged at 27.5%. Inflation hit 34.6% in November. Analysts expect the CBN will continue to raise interest rates in the new year, though not aggressively.

Looking at Jan-November, the net flow into equity was an outflow of NGN 44.98bn compared to a net outflow of NGN 48.11bn in the same period of 2023. During Jan-November, domestic transactions outpaced foreign transactions, accounting for approximately 84% of the total transactions. The report also noted that domestic transactions decreased by 11.8% m/m in November, while foreign transactions decreased by 13.7%. Looking ahead to 2025, we predict a modest uptick in market activity fuelled by strong investor sentiment and favourable conditions in Nigerian equities. However, competition from fixed-income and money markets, which offer attractive yields, may influence investment flows.

NGX transactions summary (NGN bn)
Jul-24Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24
Total foreign inflow 37.6 33.1 11.3 33.3 25.9
Total foreign outflow 20.0 24.4 30.2 14.2 15.1
Total domestic transactions 434.1 322.1 451.6 455.3 401.4
Domestic retail 271.9 180.7 288.1 170.0 195.4
Domestic institutional 162.2 141.3 163.5 285.2 206.0
Total transactions491.6379.5493.0502.7442.3
Source: NSE
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Bahrain
Government sells debt worth BHD 96mn
Bahrain | Jan 02, 08:37
  • Debt was sold in two separate issues

Bahrain's central bank has sold 91-day government T-bills worth BHD 70mn during an auction that was held on Monday Dec 30, according to a press release by the institution. The issue was fully subscribed by 100%, signaling strong investor interest. Moreover, the T-bills were sold at 5.72%, up by 4bps compared to the previous issue of the same instrument around a week ago. In a separate issue, the central bank sold 182-day short-term Islamic leasing bonds, Sukuk Al-Ijara, worth BHD26mn. The auction saw high demand as it was oversubscribed by 246%. Thus, the total amount of bids reached BHD 63.9mn. Furthermore, the expected return on the issue is 5.62%, the same compared to the previous auction of this instrument on Dec 5.

We recall that Bahrain's CPI inflation has accelerated to 0.4% y/y in November, up from 0.3% y/y in the preceding month. Furthermore, Bahrain's central bank has cut its overnight deposit rate three times since September in line with the US Federal Reserve. Bahrain typically follows the Fed's moves as the local currency is pegged to the US dollar.

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KEY STAT
CPI inflation speeds up to 0.4% y/y in November
Bahrain | Jan 02, 07:00
  • Transport prices (+3.0% y/y) contributed to upward pressure
  • Consumer prices decreased by 0.4% m/m in November

Bahrain's CPI inflation accelerated slightly to 0.4% y/y in November, up from 0.3% y/y in the preceding month, according to data published by the country's Information and eGovernment Authority. Inflation accelerated mostly on the back of transport prices and restaurants and hotels prices, which increased by 3.0% y/y and 3.4% y/y in November, respectively. The breakdown also points that housing and utilities prices also contributed to the upward pressure as they accelerated to 0.9% y/y over the same period. In m/m terms, consumer prices speeded up its decline to 0.4% in November, up from 0.3% m/m in October.

We recall that Bahrain's central bank has cut its overnight deposit rate three times since September in line with the US Federal Reserve. Bahrain typically follows the Fed's moves as the local currency is pegged to the US dollar.

Bahrain CPI
Aug-24 Sep-24 Oct-24 Nov-24
Bahrain's CPI (y/y) 0.9% 0.4% 0.3% 0.4%
Food, non-alc drinks -0.9% -3.4% -1.3% -2.0%
Housing, utilities -4.2% -6.9% -8.3% -6.9%
Bahrain's CPI (m/m) 0.1% -0.3% -0.1% -0.4%
Source: Bahrain Open Data Portal
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Israel
Start-ups’ fundraising increases by 38% in 2024 – IVC-LeumiTech report
Israel | Jan 02, 07:48
  • Local investors decrease in Q4 but foreign ones increase

The fundraising of local high-tech start-ups increased by 38% to USD 9.58bn in 2024, according to a IVC-LeumiTech report quoted by local media. The report noted the return to a higher number of mega financing rounds of USD 100mn or more, which represented 48% of all the money raised in 2024 - the highest such figure since 2021. The amount of money raised by cybersecurity companies was 38% of all the money raised and this is a record high percentage. However, media said that the report found out that fundraising was down by 4% in Q4 2024 compared to Q3. Fundraising still rose by 60% compared to the same period of 2023 but this was supported by the low base as the war started in October 2023. According to the report, the number of Israeli investors in local tech companies has reached a low for recent years in Q4 and the number has been gradually decreasing over the course of 2024 after initial rise in early 2024 that resulted in higher number of investors than compared to pre-war figures. At the same time, the number of foreign investors increased in Q4 2024.

Fundraising reached USD 6.9bn in 2023, USD 15bn in 2022 and a record high of USD 25.6bn in 2021.

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PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Israel | Jan 02, 06:58

Ex-defense Chief Gallant Resigns From Knesset Over Bill Exempting Haredim From Army Draft (Haaretz)

LIVE UPDATES Hamas making comeback in Gaza Strip, Hostage report shows worse humanitarian conditions IDF special forces raid of Iranian missile facility in Syria • Iran is open to nuclear negotiations (Jerusalem Post)

IDF confirms special forces raid of Iranian missile facility in Syria in covert operation (Jerusalem Post)

The Haredim are beginning to understand: There is a great chance that there will be no evasion law (Calcalist)

A series of benefits for reservists ended the day before yesterday, and the Treasury still hasn't found time to extend them (Calcalist)

Yoav Galant resigns from the Knesset - and facilitates the passage of the army evasion law (Calcalist)

Bezeq increases electricity prices: Discount for new customers reduced to 6% (Calcalist)

Price increases are already here: Major car importers publish price lists for 2025 models (Calcalist)

"We will see a NIS 500 drop in wages": Public sector employees prepare for the new year (TheMarker)

Gallant resigned due to draft exemption law; sources: trying to evade parliamentary sanctions (TheMarker)

The state spent 2 billion shekels on salary increases - the doctors didn't come (TheMarker)

Cellular companies are raising the prices of their packages - and the stocks are flying (TheMarker)

Transferring assets tax-free: The sweet spot hidden in the Retained Earnings Law (Globes)

No hostage deal in sight: The stalled negotiations and Hamas' explanations (Globes)

13% per year: The pension and provident market offers dreamlike returns for savers (Globes)

The locked-in profits and the austerity package have been approved, now comes the chaos phase. (Globes)

Settlers Pressured, the Cabinet Approved. Now Annexation Is Creeping Into W. Bank's Area B (

Haaretz

)

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HIGH
Knesset plenum endorses tax on undistributed profits
Israel | Jan 02, 06:47
  • Move to bring in NIS 9bn to state budget

The Knesset plenum endorsed in a final reading on Dec 31 the law to impose tax on undistributed profits of companies, which is supposed to bring in to the state budget total of NIS 9bn. The move passed in a tight 59-58 vote with Otzma Yehudit leader Itamar Ben-Gvir not supporting the piece of legislation, which forced PM Netanyahu to leave the hospital, in which he was recovering from a surgery, to go to the Knesset and help pass the law. This is the flagship reform in the 2025 budget that accounts for the largest share of the close to NIS 40bn austerity measures' package to contain the expansion in the budget deficit as of 2025. As a result, companies will have to pay extra on undistributed profits in addition to 23% corporate tax. In case of distributing dividends, companies pay additional up to 30% in taxes and a surtax is also due in some cases. Estimations show that companies keep NIS 150bn in undistributed profits.

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Gasoline price rises by 1.1% as of Jan 1
Israel | Jan 02, 06:30
  • Increase is due to VAT hike, excise increase, shekel depreciation
  • Effect on monthly inflation to be small at some 0.03pps in January

The price of gasoline at self-service stations rose by 1.1% or NIS 0.08 to NIS 7.20 per litre as of Jan 1, fully offsetting the decline in the previous month, according to the latest update of the energy ministry. World oil prices declined but tax changes and the shekel weakening in the period pushed up the regulated fuel price on the local market. We note that the general VAT rate increased by 1pps to 18% as of Jan 1 and another factor that played a role was the rise in excises. The charging service fee, including VAT, also increased, by NIS 0.02 to NIS 0.24 per litre. We estimate that the change in fuel prices in January will have a small positive contribution of about 0.03pps to the monthly inflation in the period.

Last year, the price of gasoline rose by 2.6% or by NIS 0.18 compared to end-2023. The price change was partially affected by the government's decision to remove at the start of 2023 the reductions in the excise and purchase tax on fuel it has been implementing since April 2022 at a total cost of some NIS 2bn.

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Hotel revenues drop by real 6.0% y/y in Q3
Israel | Jan 02, 06:14
  • Revenues from locals still increase but pace continues easing

Hotel revenues fell by 6.0% in real terms in Q3, according to latest seasonally-adjusted data of the stat office. The decrease was the second consecutive and the fourth in the past five quarters, mostly reflecting effects from the war that started in October 2023 and hit severely the foreign tourist component. Revenues from foreign tourists slid by 71.7% and we note that those revenues have been declining at a similar pace in the previous three quarters too. Revenues from local tourists posted an increase of 24.3% y/y in Q3 but the pace has been declining since earlier last year. We do not expect the tourist sector to surface from the slides soon even if the war stops as it has proved to be slowly recovering after military events in the past. Jobs in the hotels business fell by 0.9% y/y in Q3 following much larger contractions of 10-20% y/y in the previous two quarters. Wages remained stable y/y in Q3 after rising in Q1-Q2 2024.


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Credit card purchases rise by 20.1% y/y in November
Israel | Jan 02, 06:12
  • Credit card purchase rise ever since Dec 2023
  • All components post increases in saar terms, headline growth accelerates in Sep-Nov

Credit card purchases rose by 20.1% sa y/y in November and we note that the low base because of the start of the war in 2023 has continued to affect the figures, according to the latest seasonally-adjusted data published by the stats office (CBS). Credit card purchases have been increasing in all months since December 2023 after a brief interruption in Oct-Nov 2023 and the average growth per month was at 6.2% y/y in the Dec 2023-Sep 2024 period while the rate jumped to 20% and above in Oct-Nov. In monthly terms, credit card purchases increased by 1.9% in seasonally-adjusted terms, partially affected by the lower number of working days in October because of the Jewish holidays that fell in October in 2024 but yet, this was the third consecutive growth in monthly terms.

In trend saar terms, credit card purchases rose by 4.6% in Sep-Nov after growing by 1.8% saar in Jun-Aug despite the escalation in the north that started at the end of September and continued for two months. Purchases in the largest component, the other goods and services (fuel, electricity and gas, computers and software, equipment and transport and communications services, books, advertising, medical services and medicines, among others, which accounted for 46% of total) rose by 3.4% saar in the period and the pace eased somewhat from 3.9% saar in Jun-Aug. Food purchases (16% of total) rose by 3.0% saar in Sep-Nov and their increase accelerated from just 0.9% saar in the previous period. Industrial goods purchases (clothing, footwear, furniture and appliances; 18% of total) rose by 10.6% saar in the period switching from a contraction of 0.4% and services (tourism, leisure and recreation among others; 20% of total) were the only component to post a deterioration as their increase moderated to only 0.2% saar in Sep-Nov.

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KEY STAT
Services exports rise by 9.1% y/y sa in October
Israel | Jan 02, 06:09
  • Services exports are up in fourth consecutive month
  • They are still pushed up by business, cargo services while travel continues to weigh

Services exports (excluding the sales of start-up companies) rose by 9.1% y/y (sa) in October and this was the fourth consecutive month with an increase, according to the latest seasonally-adjusted data of the stats office (CBS). The pace accelerated from 3.8% y/y in September though and we think that this should be related to the low base because of the start of the war in that month of 2023. Services exports have been declining in all months since March 2023 and this had an adverse impact on the current account since the services balance is the largest component.

Business services rose by 5.6% y/y. Within that, high-tech export services (programming, computers, IT, R&D, etc., 65.9% of total exports services excl. start-ups in October) increased by smaller than the headline 4.3% y/y in the month, at about the same pace like in September. Cargo transport services more than doubled y/y in October but we note that higher prices could have boosted the figures because of flight cancellations and persisting threats from Houthis to sea transports.

On the other hand, the war is still reflected in a slide in travel services, which failed to recover to pre-coronavirus levels before Oct 7, 2023. Exports of travel services fell by 40.6% y/y in October and the pace remained significant despite the low base from October 2023, which we attribute to the intensification of the fighting in the north. Passenger fares continued plummeting but they have a small weight so their impact was far less significant. Start-up exports (defined as the sale of intellectual property) did not record any exports in October while the respective figure for October 2023 was at USD 221mn. Nevertheless, total services exports managed to recover y/y and posted an increase of 5.6% y/y in October.

Exports of services, sa, USD mn
Octy/y, %Jun-Octy/y, %
Total7,1015.669,005-1.6
Total, excl. start-ups7,1019.168,0050.1
Business services6,0255.658,8323.3
High-tech4,6794.346,1024.4
Travel200-40.62,103-62.7
Passenger fares19-69.4216-70.8
Cargo851114.86,79148.6
Start-ups exports (gross)0n.m.1,000-53.4
Source: CBS
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Public’s financial asset portfolio rises by 3.9% in Q3
Israel | Jan 02, 06:06
  • Share of portfolio in GDP rises to 306.4%
  • Largest impact comes from equities in Israel, investment abroad, cash and deposits

The balance of the public's financial assets portfolio rose by NIS 221.7bn or 3.9% to NIS 5.97tn at the end of September, according to latest data of the Bank of Israel (BoI). The share of the portfolio in GDP rose by some 7.6pps to some 306.4% of GDP because of a larger increase in the value of the portfolio than the GDP expansion in the period.

All items of the portfolio marked increases in the period but those with largest contribution were the increases in equities in Israel, investment abroad and cash and deposits. The value of equities in Israel rose by NIS 69.9bn or 10.5% due to price effects partially eroded by net realisations, investments abroad were up by NIS 42.1bn or 3.5% with assets in both equities and bonds increasing due to price effects and net investment and cash and deposits increased by NIS 41.9bn or 2.0%. The value of government bonds and makam, the short-term papers sold by the central bank were also up by the significant NIS 28.8% or 2.7% and this was largely the effect of tradable government bonds due to raised capital. The balance of the asset portfolio managed by institutional investors rose by some NIS 114bn or 4.3% q/q to NIS 2.77tn at the end of September and accounted for some 46% of the total portfolio. Institutional investors' rate of exposure to foreign assets fell by some 0.3pps to about 46.7% but the exposure to foreign currency rose by 0.5pps to 24.1%.

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KEY STAT
State of economy index stabilizes m/m in November
Israel | Jan 02, 06:03
  • Index in Sep-Nov reflects adverse impacts from escalation in the north
  • Some rebound might be expected as of December due to ceasefire with Hezbollah

The State of the Economy Composite index of the Bank of Israel (BoI) rose insignificantly by 0.03% m/m in November following a similar increase in the previous month, according to latest data. The BoI commented that the index in November was similar to the prints in the previous two months, which reflected the significant impact of the escalation in the north and prevented the economy from functioning normally. We note that a ceasefire with Hezbollah was reached at the end of November and activity should have rebounded as of December because of returning to normality of businesses' operations in the north and the reopening of the schools in that part of the country as well as the reduction in the number of reservists, which should have supported the economy countrywide.

The BoI said that the index in November was positively influenced by increases in the imports of consumption goods, imports of production inputs, and credit card purchases (November), the retail trade revenue index (October), and employee posts and building starts (September). On the other hand, goods exports (November), the services revenue index (October), and services exports (September) declined and industrial production did not change in Aug-Oct, which negatively influenced the index.

State-of-economy index, m/m, sa
Jun-24 Jul-24 Aug-24 Sep-24 Oct-24 Nov-24
Total, y/y -1.59% -1.74% -2.18% -1.54% 1.00% 1.47%
Total, m/m-0.07%0.08%-0.26%-0.06%0.03%0.03%
Index of housing starts 0.00% 20.49% 0.00% 0.00% - -
Vacant employee positions (%) 4.51% 4.49% 4.36% 4.35% 4.36% 4.42%
Index of employee posts in private sector 0.38% 0.27% -0.22% 0.25% - -
Export indices, Services 0.71% 3.58% -2.00% -1.62% - -
Export indices, Goods 1.01% 3.19% 9.86% -6.68% 3.05% -6.34%
Index of imports, Production Inputs -5.31% 2.45% -1.81% 14.55% -4.13% 1.06%
Index of imports, Consumer goods -3.38% 3.86% -1.44% 5.69% -0.85% 9.74%
Index of revenue of services activities -0.05% 3.06% -1.44% 0.21% -1.76% -
Index of revenue of trade activities -0.99% 1.22% -6.37% 3.77% 1.07% -
Industrial production index -0.84% 1.47% -0.06% 0.09% 0.10% -
Electricity load (hourly) - - - - - -
Credit card purchases 0.88% 2.00% -3.74% 1.47% 0.38% 5.01%
Source: BoI
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Jordan
Energy ministry hikes diesel and 90-octane gasoline prices
Jordan | Jan 02, 08:50
  • Decision comes into effect as of Jan 1
  • However, 95-octane gasoline prices decreased by 0.5% m/m

The energy ministry's fuel pricing committee has decided to hike the prices of 90-octane gasoline and diesel prices as the move came into effect at the start of this month. The regulator meets monthly to determine the fuel prices in the country. The committee argued that price adjustments are based on the global oil prices and other costs such as shipping and taxes.

During its meeting, the committee decided to hike the price of 90-octane gasoline by 1.2% m/m (JOD 0.010) to JOD 0.870 per liter. Meanwhile, diesel prices rose by 1.5% m/m to stand at JOD 0.690 per liter. On the other hand, the price of 95-octane gasoline decreased by 0.5% m/m (JOD 0.005) and stood at JOD 1.100 per liter. Meanwhile, kerosene prices remained unchanged as they will be sold at JOD 0.620 per liter.

We remind that violent protests and strikes against high fuel prices by truck, bus, and taxi drivers erupted around two years ago following the government's decision to lift all of the remaining fuel subsidies. Local authorities responded with mass arrests while four police officers, including the deputy police director of Maan governorate, were killed during the demonstrations. The protest action first started in the southern governorate of Maan but later spread across the whole country.

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Kuwait
Government imposes 15% tax on multinational entities
Kuwait | Jan 02, 06:38
  • We expect legislation to be unified across GCC

The cabinet endorsed a draft resolution issuing a law imposing a 15% tax on multinational entities, which have business in more than one country, according to news agency Mubasher. The new tax law came into effect on Jan 1, 2025, and is in line with global tax standards, while also aiming to curb tax evasion and prevent sending tax revenues to other countries.

Specifically, Kuwait will impose a minimum top-up tax (DMTT) of 15% on multinational enterprises operating in the country. The DMTT comes under the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's (OECD) Two-Pillar Solution, which stipulates that large multinational enterprises pay a minimum effective tax rate of 15% on profits in each country where they operate. The UAE is also making the same changes to its tax laws.

We remind that Kuwait has no income tax and most of the government's revenue comes from the sale of oil.

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Lebanon
Total assets of commercial banks fall by 7.9% y/y to USD 103.4bn at end-Oct
Lebanon | Jan 02, 08:59
  • Assets' value is expected to continue declining through next months

The value of the total assets of Lebanon's commercial banks decreased by 7.9% y/y to stand at USD 103.4bn at end-October, according to the country's consolidated commercial banks' balance sheet as cited by Blominvest bank. In detail, the resident customers' deposits, which represent 65.2% of the total liabilities, dropped by 7.0% y/y to reach USD 67.4bn at end-October. The breakdown points that deposits in foreign currencies, which consist 99.1% of resident customers' deposits, declined by 3.8% y/y to reach USD 66.8bn by end-October, while deposits in local currency plunged by 79.1% y/y to just USD 628.8mn over the same period. The adoption of a new official exchange rate of LBP 89,500 against the US dollar as of Feb 1 contributed to the sharp drop of resident customers' deposit in local currency. The data also signals that the country has become highly dollarized and cash based, according to the report.

On the other hand, the non-resident customers' deposits, which grasp 20.3% of total liabilities, declined by 1.1% y/y to stand at USD 21.0bn at end-October. According to the breakdown, deposits in foreign currencies decreased slightly by 0.4% y/y to reach USD 21.0bn at the end of the month, while deposits in local currency plunged by 83.0% y/y to stand at just USD 30.4mn over the same period.

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Morocco
KEY STAT
Trade deficit widens by 6.5% y/y to MAD 275.7bn in Jan-Nov
Morocco | Jan 02, 07:54
  • Imports grew by stable 5.7% y/y driven by increase in equipment and consumer goods imports
  • Export growth slows to 5.2% y/y
  • Growth in travel revenues and transfers from diaspora remains solid
  • FDI inflows surge by impressive 30.1% y/y to MAD 39.6bn in Jan-Nov

Morocco's foreign trade deficit widened 6.5% y/y to MAD 275.7bn in Jan-Nov, according to the monthly data by the foreign exchange office. The annual growth rate accelerated from 5.2% y/y in Jan-Oc and 3.9% y/y in Jan-Sep. Total imports grew by stable 5.7% y/y to reach MAD 689.16 bn. Exports also rose by 5.2%, totaling MAD 413.41bn, though its growth eased from 6.2% y/y in Jan-Oct. Imports/export coverage rate was 60%, down by 0.3pps from the same period of 2023.

Foreign trade, MAD bn
Jan-Nov 24Jan-Nov 23% y/y
Imports, CIF, o/w689.160651.7095.7%
Consumer goods159.551146.7108.8%
Intermediate goods149.051138.0867.9%
Capital goods162.730145.10212.1%
Foods82.60981.1701.8%
Energy goods104.385110.879-5.9%
Raw materials30.05129.2322.8%
Exports, FOB, o/w413.410392.8715.2%
Automotive145.935136.7746.7%
Phosphates75.23168.9479.1%
Agriculture and food77.91475.5453.1%
Electronic and electricity16.61616.2172.5%
Textile and leather43.11443.0630.1%
Other industries25.40426.762-5.1%
Goods trade balance-275.750-258.8386.5%
Source: Office des Changes

Detailed data showed that imports growth driven by increases in finished equipment goods (+12.1%) and consumer goods (+8.8%). Key contributors to import growth included purchases of utility vehicles (+36.3%), pharmaceutical products (+15.4%), and chemical intermediates (+19.7%). However, energy imports decreased by 5.9%, largely due to reduced coal imports (-25.6%) and petroleum gas (-12.2%).

Export expansion continues to be driven by key sectors like the automotive industry (+6.7%) and phosphates and derivatives (+9.1%). Increases were noted in automotive wiring and construction exports, as well as in fertilizer and phosphate shipments. Agricultural and agri-food exports grew by 3.1%, while electronics and textiles exhibited moderate performance, with nearly flat growth in textiles (+0.1%).

Foreign Trade Dashboard, MAD bn
Jan-Nov 24Jan-Nov 23% y/y
Imports727.212678.8807.1%
-- Goods598.537565.7725.8%
--Services128.675113.10813.8%
Exports604.486572.8075.5%
-- Goods352.523335.7895.0%
--Services251.963237.0186.3%
 
Trade balance, net-246.014-229.9837.0%
Services, net123.288123.910-0.5%
Balance of goods and services, net-122.726-106.07315.7%
   
Remittances, net108.676105.6842.8%
   
Tourism receipts, net77.77675.2563.3%
Receipts104.47897.4767.2%
Payments26.70222.22020.2%
Source: Office des Changes

In the services sector, exports grew by 6.3% and imports by 13.8%, resulting in a slight decline in the services surplus (-0.5%). Notably, travel revenues increased by 7.2%, supported by robust tourism activity. Transfers from diaspora increased by 2.8% y/y to amount to MAD 108.7bn in Jan-Nov.

Net foreign direct investment (FDI) flows surged to MAD 23.8bn, marking an increase of 182.9%, as receipts from FDI rose significantly (+30.1%) to reach MAD 39.6bn and expenditures dropped (-28.2%).

Overall, Morocco's external trade landscape reflects a strong performance in strategic export sectors like automotive and phosphates, contrasted by challenges in energy and consumer imports. Meanwhile, strong tourism receipts and steady transfers from diaspora as well as improved FDI inflows guarantee sufficient currency supply and no need for the central bank to intervene to support the peg.

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KEY STAT
Private sector lending increases by stable 2.4% y/y in November
Morocco | Jan 02, 06:37
  • Credit to companies rises by faster 1.8% y/y and credit to households by moderate 0.8% y/y
  • NPLs increase by 3.8% and account for 8.7% of all loans

Private sector lending increased by 2.4% y/y in November, as the rate was stable in the past three months, according to the latest data by the central bank. Credit to private non-financial corporations accelerated to 1.8%, up from 1.5% in October. Household loans experienced a slowdown, growing by 0.8%, down from 1.0%. This includes a deceleration in personal loans (2.1% compared to 2.5%) and a less severe contraction in loans to individual entrepreneurs (-9.9%, improving from -10.6%). Other data showed that credit to public non-financial corporations rose sharply to 4.5% compared to 2.7% the previous month.

By purpose, the allocation of credit showed mixed patterns. Cash loans slowed sharply (0.2% compared to 0.9%), driven by a 1.3% decline in loans to private non-financial corporations. Equipment loans expanded at an accelerated pace (8.2%, up from 7.4%), supported by a rise in loans to private corporations (7.9% compared to 6.8%). Real estate loans and consumer loans showed minimal growth, at 2.2% and 1.4%, respectively. Non-performing loans increased by 3.8% annually, slightly higher than the 3.5% recorded in October, with their share of total bank credit stabilizing at 8.7%.

M3 stood at MAD 1,856bn, showing an annual growth of 6.7%, consistent with the previous month. This growth reflects a combination of factors, including a deceleration in net claims on the central government (5.5% compared to 10.4%), stagnation in bank credit to the non-financial sector (2.5%), and an acceleration in official reserve assets (4.5% compared to 1.6%).

Domestic Bank Credit, MADbn
Sep-24 Oct-24 Nov-24
Total bank credit1,136.61,121.11,122.5
Public sector 102.9 104.0 105.7
Private sector 843.0 843.4 841.2
Private non-financial corporations 445.0 442.8 440.2
Households 398.0 400.6 401.0
Financial corporations 190.7 173.7 175.5
Source: BAM
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KEY STAT
GDP growth accelerates to 4.3% y/y in Q3
Morocco | Jan 02, 06:19
  • Economy returns to 5.7% q/q growth after declines in first two quarters of 2023
  • Domestic demand, driven by investment and household consumption, is behind strong Q3 performance
  • Broad-based growth in non-agricultural sectors, especially secondary industries, offsets contraction in primary sector

GDP growth accelerated to 4.3% y/y in Q3, up from 2.4% y/y in Q2 this year and up from 3.0% growth in the third quarter of 2023, according to the latest data by the statistical office HCP. The print as also significantly higher than the flash estimate of 2.8% growth in Q3 this year. GDP rose by 5.7% q/q reverting the declines seen in the preceding two quarters of 2023. Nominal GDP growth reached 6% y/y in Q3. In terms of inflation, the general price level slowed significantly, with the GDP deflator increasing by only 1.7%, down from 7.2% in 2023.

The expenditure approach data showed that domestic demand experienced a notable acceleration, with a growth rate of 6.3%, up from 4.2% the previous year, contributing 6.9 pps to the overall economic expansion.

Key components of domestic demand showed varied performances. Gross investment surged, reversing from a contraction of -3.5% in 2023 to a robust growth of 13.5% in 2024. This change contributed 3.7pps to GDP growth, compared to a negative impact of -1.2pps a year earlier. Household consumption, while slowing to a growth rate of 3.9% from 8.1% previously, remained a critical driver, adding 2.4pps to overall growth. Public administration consumption also grew modestly by 3.8%, slightly below the 3.9% recorded in 2023, contributing 0.7pps to economic growth.

On the external front, trade exerted a negative influence on growth. Imports rose sharply by 12.9%, compared to 8.6% in 2023, while exports grew at a slower pace of 9.8% compared to 7.2% the previous year. This dynamic resulted in a net negative contribution of -2.5pps to GDP.

GDP real growth, % y/y
Q3 23Q4 23Q1 24Q2 24Q3 24
GDP real growth % y/y3.0%4.2%2.5%2.4%4.3%
Household 8.1% 5.1% 3.0% 3.1% 3.9%
General government 3.9% 3.0% 3.9% 3.8% 3.8%
Gross fixed capital formation -3.5% 16.6% 4.6% 8.9% 13.5%
Exports 7.2% 5.5% 7.3% 7.8% 9.8%
Imports 8.6% 12.5% 9.5% 12.9% 12.9%
Source: HCP

The data on value added across various sectors displayed significant variability, reflecting the diverse contributions to economic growth. Non-agricultural value added increased by 5.1%, up from 3.1% in the same period of 2023, largely driven by strong performances in both the secondary and tertiary sectors.

The secondary sector posted an impressive growth of 7.6%, a substantial improvement from 1.1% in 2023. This surge was supported by substantial increases in the extraction industries (+15.9% versus -3.3% previously), manufacturing industries (+7.5% versus +1.8%), construction and public works (+6.9% versus +0.9%), and utilities (+3.4% versus +1.5%).

The tertiary sector also showed positive momentum, with value added growing by 3.8%, slightly higher than 3.6% in 2023. Growth was bolstered by transportation and warehousing (+4%), public administration services (+3.7%), and trade and vehicle repair (+3.2%). However, several activities experienced a slowdown, including accommodation and food services (+11.2% versus +12.5%), business services (+4.8% versus +5.4%), and financial services (+3.1% versus +4.1%).

Conversely, the primary sector registered a decline, with value added contracting by 4.1%, a sharp reversal from the 3.8% growth recorded in the same period of 2023. This was due to a 5.2% decrease in agricultural activities, offset partially by a 12% rise in fishing activities, though the latter marked a significant slowdown from 71.6% growth in 2023.

While domestic consumption and investment supported growth, the higher financing needs of the economy were evident, with the gross investment-to-GDP ratio rising to 30.7% from 28.5%, and the financing gap widening from 1.8% to 3.8% of GDP. Despite these challenges, the demand-driven growth underscores the resilience of the national economy.

Looking forward the government expects 3.3% GDP growth this year and acceleration to 4.6% growth in 2025. The government counts on stable 3.7% increase in non-agricultural GVA both this and next year but expects substantial improvement in agriculture GVA that will return to 11% growth next year. The Bank Al-Mahrib is more conservative and expects GDP growth to moderate at 2.6% this year, before accelerating to 3.9% in 2025-2026. The updated BAM forecast suggests non-agricultural growth will remain virtually stable at around 3.5% in 2024, before improving to 3.6% in 2025 and 3.9% in 2026. The agricultural GVA is expected to decline by 4.6% this year, before progressing by 5.7% in 2025 and 3.6% in 2026, assuming cereal harvests of 50mn quintals, equivalent to the average of the past five years.

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Oman
HIGH
Government expects OMR 620mn fiscal deficit in 2025 – news agency
Oman | Jan 02, 10:33
  • Oman recorded OMR 540mn surplus in 2024 against a target of OMR 640mn deficit
  • Revenues is projected to increase 1.5% to OMR 11.2bn as budget assumes USD 60 oil price
  • Spending to increase 1.3% to OMR 11.8bn, with dent service costs seen at OMR 0.9bn

Oman is projecting an OMR 620mn (USD 1.6bn) deficit in its 2025 budget, according to the Oman state news agency. The government projected a OMR 640mn deficit in 2024, but the actual balance came in a SAR 540mn surplus as revenues overshot the target by strong 15% on the back of sharp increase in crude oil revenues.

According to the Oman news agency, the 2025 budget assumes an oil price of USD 60/barrel, which looks very conservative. This will result in total revenues of OMR 11.18bn, up from last year's estimated revenue. Oil and gas continue to account for the bulk of fiscal revenues, accounting for nearly 75% of revenues in Jan-Sep 2024. Meanwhile, total spending is projected to increase by 1.3% to OMR 11.80bn, with the cost of public debt expected at OMR 0.9bn.

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Qatar
Qatar welcomes 5mn international visitors in 2024
Qatar | Jan 02, 13:30
  • Qatar now has more than 40,000 keys

Qatar welcomed 5mn international visitors in 2024, surpassing its target of 4.8mn and an increase of 25% from 2023, according to Arab News. The country's hotel sector now boasts more than 40,000 keys.

The statistics show that 41% of international visitors were from the other five countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council, while 59% came from other countries.

Qatar's National Tourism Sector Strategy 2030 calls for the country to welcome over 6mn annual visitors by the end of this decade. The authorities also want to increase the tourism sector's contribution to GDP to 12%. The travel and tourism sector's contribution to GDP reached a record QAR 81.2bn (USD 22.2bn) in 2023, or 10% of the entire economy.

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KEY STAT
GDP rises 2.0% y/y in Q3 2024
Qatar | Jan 02, 13:29
  • Non-hydrocarbon sector expands 4.5% y/y
  • Hydrocarbon sector contracts 2.3% y/y

Qatar's GDP expanded 2.0% y/y during the third quarter of 2024, according to the National Planning Council. That is an acceleration from growth of 0.8% y/y during the second quarter and the fastest growth since the first quarter of 2023.

Looking at a breakdown, the mining and quarrying sector decreased 2.3% y/y, while the non-mining and quarrying sector expanded 4.5% y/y. We note that the mining and quarrying sector, which is essentially Qatar's hydrocarbon sector, was only 36% of the total economy in Q3 2024.

Looking at a breakdown of the non-hydrocarbon sector, the construction sector was the largest and posted growth of 7.7% y/y. Similarly, the financial services sector grew 10.6% y/y. The public administration sector added just 1.8% y/y. Conversely, the manufacturing sector decreased 2.7% y/y and was the only major non-hydrocarbon sector to decrease y/y during the third quarter.

The IMF expects Qatar's economy to grow 1.5% in 2024 and 1.9% in 2025. That is faster than the growth of 1.2% in 2023 but significantly below the expansion of 4.2% in 2022, when Qatar hosted the FIFA World Cup.

Looking forward to 2025, we expect the economy to benefit from lower inflation and lower interest rates.

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Saudi Arabia
Govt raises SAR 11.6bn via domestic sukuk sale in December, yields keep rising
Saudi Arabia | Jan 02, 13:59
  • Total issuance was SAR 71bn in 2024, rising by sharp 55% on the year
  • Government's financing activities during H1 amounted to SAR 172bn, including SAR 63bn for early domestic debt repurchases
  • Government has revised 2024 budget deficit projection up by 49% to SAR 118bn

The National Debt Management Center (NDMC) issued SAR 11.6bn (USD 3.1bn) worth of Sukuks with various maturities on December 26, according to the auction results. The issuance comes under Saudi Arabia's local currency Sukuk program, which issues Islamic bonds on regular monthly basis. The yields kept rising on the month, despite the recent interest rate cuts by SAMA. We believe foreign investors are pricing in higher risks from regional as well as global escalations. The NDMC does not publish information on foreign participation in the monthly auctions, but we think foreign investors' interest in the local sales has risen gradually over the years and Saudi Sukuks have become more exposed to global sentiments. The share of foreign investors had been relatively small since the program started in 2017, but then jumped to SAR 2.4bn or 5% of total issuance in 2023.

Cumulatively, the NDMC issued SAR 70.8bn worth of Islamic bonds in 2024, rising by sharp 55% over 2023. Separately, Saudi Arabia issued USD 12bn Eurobond in January (equal to SAR 45bn) and more recently, a USD 5bn international Sukuk (SAR 19bn), so we concluded that the NDMC had already secured the financing needs for 2024. The original 2024 budget projected the financing needs at SAR 86bn that would cover the fiscal deficit (SAR 79bn) and maturing debt in 2024. In October, however, the finance ministry published its H1 Budget report, which showed that the government had revised the deficit target to SAR 118bn (up sharp 49%). In addition, the government purchased back SAR 63bn worth of domestic debt maturing in 2024-2026 during H1. In total, the government's financing activities amounted to SAR 172bn during H1, comprising of SAR 104bn in domestic financing and SAR 68bn in external issuances, the finance ministry said.

Sukuk Issuance results (SAR bn)
Auction date:Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24Dec-24
Maturity date-Jul-27--Jul-27
Bids 3.4  5.6
Allotment  0.3  5.6
Yield 4.30%  5.10%
     
Maturity dateJan-29Jan-29Jan-29Jan-29Jan-29
Bids3.00.01.02.53.9
Allotment 3.00.01.02.53.9
Yield4.70%4.39%4.72%5.00%5.15%
     
Maturity dateApr-31Apr-31Apr-31Apr-31Apr-31
Bids2.00.60.50.40.7
Allotment 2.00.60.30.40.7
Yield4.75%4.48%4.83%5.04%5.19%
     
Maturity dateJan-34Jan-34Jan-34Jan-34Jan-34
Bids0.21.02.40.11.4
Allotment 0.21.02.20.11.4
Yield4.86%4.67%5.03%5.07%5.25%
     
Maturity dateApr-36Apr-36Apr-36Apr-36Apr-36
Bids0.40.21.50.010.02
Allotment 0.40.21.50.010.02
Yield4.94%4.70%5.12%5.14%5.27%
     
Maturity dateJan-39Jan-39Jan-39Jan-39-
Bids0.60.13.10.3
Allotment 0.60.13.10.3
Yield5.03%4.76%5.24%5.20%
Source: National Debt Management Centre
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HIGH
Saudi Aramco hikes diesel prices by 44% to USD 0.44 per litre
Saudi Arabia | Jan 02, 09:24
  • Petrol prices were kept unchanged
  • Diesel has relatively small weights in WPI and CPI baskets

Saudi Aramco has increased diesel prices by 44.3% to SAR 1.66 (USD 0.44) per liter, effective Jan 1, 2025, according to news reports. Meanwhile, Aramco has kept petrol prices unchanged, with Gasoline 91 priced at SAR 2.18 per liter and Gasoline 93 at SAR 2.33 per liter.

The annual review of diesel prices is part of Aramco's pricing mechanism, implemented in 2022. This year marks the fourth review under the system, following a 53% hike in January 2024. Despite the series of price hikes, diesel prices in Saudi Arabia remain lower than those in many neighboring Arab countries. In the UAE and Qatar, a liter of diesel is priced at USD 0.73 and USD 0.56, respectively, while in Bahrain and Kuwait, it costs USD 0.42 and USD 0.39 per liter. Further, the diesel category has relatively small weights in the WPI and CPI baskets (1.8% and 0.01%, respectively), which means that the impact on consumer inflation will be rather muted.

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KEY STAT
Trade surplus drops 28.6% y/y to USD 5.5bn in Oct on lower oil prices
Saudi Arabia | Jan 02, 08:39
  • Saudi Arabia extends oil production caps to December 2026
  • Most important non-oil exports are chemicals, plastics and rubber
  • Machinery and equipment tops imports list, followed by transport equipment
  • China remains Saudi Arabia's main trading partner

The trade surplus fell by strong 28.6% y/y to SAR 20.8bn (USD 5.5bn) in October, following a much sharper drop of 63.1% y/y in the preceding month, according to GSTAT data. The trade surplus has fallen considerably from the 2022's levels because of a slump in oil revenues due to lower oil prices and production cuts. While a recovery in oil export volumes (up 3.0% m/m to 5.9mn bpd, according to JODI oil data) shored up the trade surplus in the month, it is set to remain under pressure until December 2026, as the kingdom has extended the voluntary and OPEC-coordinated oil production cuts over that period. Meanwhile, global oil prices have moderated over concerns for weak economic growth in China. The 2023 merchandise trade surplus came in at SAR 417bn or 10% of GDP, nearly half of the SAR 830bn surplus recorded in the preceding year, reflecting the oil production cuts. The 2024 merchandise surplus is expected to fall even further, and we expect it to fall into the SAR 350-400bn territory.

Breakdown

National exports fell by sharp 10.7% y/y to SAR 93bn in the month, after following a stronger drop of 14.4% y/y in the preceding month. The y/y drop in total revenues is entirely due to falling oil exports, which plunged by 17% y/y to SAR 67bn, thus staying near one of the lowest levels since June 2021. The m/m improvement was driven by both rising export volumes (as noted, up 3% m/m) and higher oil prices, as the benchmark Arab Light rose by marginal 1.0% m/m to USD 75.9/barrel in the month. Interestingly, Saudi Arabia hiked the November price of the benchmark crude sold to Asia, which remains the main buyer of Saudi crude, reflecting the rising tensions between Iran and Israel, but these tensions have eased and oil prices have moderated since then.

Saudi Arabia remains dependable on oil exports, although significant external and fiscal buffers make the economy less vulnerable to oil price swings. The most important non-oil export goods were chemicals (27% of non-oil exports) and plastics and rubber (24% share). We remind the government is investing in new industries such as electric vehicles and drug manufacturing as part of an ambitious program to diversify the economy away from oil. The government also wants to boost tourism and mineral exploration and has set ambitious FDI inflow targets up to 2030. Exports to China accounted for 16% of Saudi exports, followed by India (10%) and Japan (9%).

Aramco's Asia prices as differential to Oman/Dubai (USD/barrel)
Sep-24Oct-24Nov-24Dec-24
Extra Light 1.7 - 2.0 1.5
Light2.01.32.21.7
Medium 1.3 - 1.4 1.0
Heavy 0.5 - 0.2 -0.2
Arab Light Crude price 75.2 75.9 74.5 -
Source: News Reports

Total imports fell by 3.8% y/y to SAR 72bn, following a strong 20.3% y/y increase in the previous month. Imports have been rising steadily since 2020 due to Saudi Arabia's robust non-oil economic growth fuelled by consumption, investments, and looser fiscal policy. The most important imported merchandise goods were machinery and electrical equipment (26% of total merchandise imports), followed by transport equipment and parts (15% share). In terms of utilization, imports for intermediate consumption accounted for 45% of total imports, followed by imports for final consumption (34%) and capital goods (21%). While skewed towards consumption, the nature of imports have gradually transitioned towards capital goods as part of the economic transformation program of the government. Imports from China accounted for 24% of total imports in the month, followed by the US (8%) and the UAE (6%). The ratio of non-oil exports (including re-exports) to imports rose to 35.2% in October from 30.1% in the same month of 2023, reflecting rising non-oil exports (including re-exports). Looking back at 2023, the average ratio deteriorated to 35.1% from 44.7% in 2022.

Merchandise goods trade statistics (SAR bn)
Jul-24Aug-24Sep-24Oct-24
National export 94.8 93.1 89.1 92.8
Oil export 69.1 65.3 62.6 67.4
Non-oil export 18.9 19.2 19.2 19.4
Re-export 6.8 8.7 7.3 6.0
Import 77.9 69.8 73.1 72.0
Balance16.923.316.020.8
Source: GSTAT
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Tunisia
Net foreign currency reserves rise to TND 27.1bn at end-2024
Tunisia | Jan 02, 05:57
  • Reserves are up to 121 days of import at the end of 2024 from 119 days at the end of 2023
  • Strong recovery in tourism revenue and the rise in remittances support the building of reserves

The stock of net foreign currency reserves increased to TND 27.1bn (USD 8.5bn) at the end of 2024, comprising 121 days of imports, according to the latest figures provided by the central bank. This represents and increase from TND 26.4bn (USD 8.3bn) reported at the end of 2023 (119 days of import). The rise in international reserves is a welcome development and reflects the increase in inflows from tourism and remittances. The country expects a substantial recovery in tourist numbers in 2024 to 10 million from 8.8 million tourists in 2023, corresponding to a 50% increase. The continued rise in tourist numbers reflected on revenues from tourism which were reported at TND 7.3bn as of Dec 20, a 7.8% y/y increase. Remittances revenues also rose though at a softer rate of 5.5% y/y to TND 7.87bn as of Dec 20. Economic growth is recovering in 2024 from stagnation in 2023. Following lacklustre real GDP growth of 0.3% y/y in Q1, the pace has picked up to 1.0% y/y in Q2 and 1.8% y/y in Q3 thanks to a substantial acceleration in domestic demand to 4.1% y/y in Q3 from 2.6% y/y in Q2. According to the central bank, economic growth is set to accelerate further in Q4. Nonetheless, IMF projections suggests relatively weak economic activity at a rate of 1.6% in both 2024 and 2025 due to fragile public finances and rigid structural problems.

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Central bank keeps main policy rate unchanged at 8.0%
Tunisia | Jan 02, 05:56
  • BCT notes the persistently high inflation despite the slight easing in November
  • BCT cites medium term risks on inflation stemming from commodity prices and govt finances
  • BCT expects higher demand due to wage hikes to slow down the disinflation process
  • Inflation is forecast at 6.2% in 2025, slowing from 7.0% in 2024

The central bank board decided to keep its main policy rate unchanged at the last interest rate meeting for 2024 on Dec 28, according to a statement. The BCT noted that inflation remained relatively high although easing slightly to 6.6% y/y in November from stability at 6.7% y/y in the preceding three months. The slight easing was explained by the considerable disinflation in the core measure (excluding fresh fruit and administered prices) to 5.8% y/yin November from 6.4% y/y in the preceding month which in turn was due to the declined in olive oil prices by 3.1% y/y from a rise of 16% y/y in the preceding month. However, fresh food inflation accelerated to 14.1% y/y in November from 13% y/y in the preceding month and administered price inflation accelerated marginally to 3.7% y/y from 3.5% y/y in October.

The central bank projected that inflation will continue on a gradually decelerating path but noted that upside risks, stemming mostly global commodity prices and the ability of the government to manage public finances, persisted. These risks warrants caution on the part of the central bank which aims to preserve price stability. The central bank also indicated that the planned wage hikes in the private and public sector will slow pace of deceleration in the short term as they will put pressure on the production costs and further add to demand in a context of weak production capacity. We remind that the labour union UGTT and the government signed an agreement in 2022 to raise wages in the public sector by 3.5% in each of 2023, 2024 and 2025. At the time, the UGTT said the agreed increase corresponded to a 5% hike on gross pay. In addition, minimum wages would be raised by 7.0% in each of the three years. The government said in the 2025 budget that the 2022 agreement on wages will be implemented. The central bank forecast 2024 inflation at 7.0% will ease to 6.2% in 2025. We note that the IMF projected in October the inflation rate at 6.7% in 2025 and the World Bank sees it down to 6.0%.

The central bank also reported a substantial narrowing in the current account deficit to TND 2,611mn (USD 823mn) in Jan-Nov, accounting for 1.6% of GDP from TND 3,464mn (USD 1,090mn) or 2.3% of GDP in the same period in 2023. This narrowing reflected stronger remittances and tourism foreign currency inflows, offsetting the slight deterioration in the foreign trade balance. The central bank also pointed out that the narrowing in the CA gap and the easing pressure on the domestic currency has supported the rebuilding of foreign exchange reserves despite the substantial expenditure on external debt service in 2024. Thus, the stock of net foreign exchange reserves amounted to TND 25.6bn (USD 8bn) as of Dec 26, representing 115 days of import compared to TND 26.4bn (120 days of import).

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Angola
KEY STAT
Industrial output increases by 3.4% y/y in Q3
Angola | Jan 02, 07:10
  • Manufacturing and utilities sectors register strong annual output growth of 11.1% and 8.7%
  • Oil extraction decreases by 0.5% y/y

Industrial output increased by 3.4% y/y in Q3, accelerating from 2.7% growth in Q2, according to the latest data by statistical office INE. This performance was primarily driven by gains in manufacturing industries where output increased by 11.1% y/y and electricity, gas, and steam production and distribution that registered 8.7% y/y output growth. Extractive sector performance was moderate with 0.4% y/y rise as the 25.6% increase in diamond mining compensated for the 0.5% decline in oil extraction. Industrial output also increased by 3.3% q/q in Q3 driven by extractive Industries and manufacturing.

Labor dynamics in the industrial sector were similarly positive. The employment index rose by 3.1% y/y and q/q. Additionally, the hours worked index recorded a 4.4% y/y increase and a 4.1% quarterly rise, indicating heightened labor demand and activity within the sector.

The results reflect sustained growth in industrial production, supported by improved labor utilization and a notable boost from non-oil sectors in line with the strong diversification efforts of the government. Still it is worth nothing oil extraction still has 85.3% weight in the industrial production index.

Industrial production
Weight (2010)Change y/y (%)Change q/q (%)
Total Industry1003.43.3
Extractive Industries87.20.44.6
Oil Extraction85.3-0.54.1
Diamond Extraction1.925.618.4
Other Extractive Industries0-22.420.1
Manufacturing Industries10.111.15.3
Food, Beverages, and Tobacco Industries5.60.70.1
Food Industries4.32.80.1
Beverages and Tobacco Industries1.3-4.60.1
Textiles, Apparel, and Footwear0.5-3-0.2
Wood Industries0.15.5-0.1
Paper, Publishing, and Printing0.2-2.1-0.1
Petroleum, Chemicals, and Other Products3.447.120.1
Metallurgical Industries0.33.7-0.9
Machinery, Equipment, Devices, and Automobiles0-0.9-1.8
Furniture, Mattresses, and Others06.90.8
Electricity, Gas, and Steam Production & Distribution1.78.7-13.1
Electricity Production & Distribution1.78.7-13.1
Water Treatment & Distribution0.9-6.10.2
Water Treatment and Sanitation0.9-6.10.2
Intermediate Goods4.225.219
Consumer Goods6.30.40.1
Energy Products89.51.20.1
Source: INE
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Ethiopia
HIGH
Central bank keeps policy rate at 15%, raises credit growth ceiling to 18%
Ethiopia | Jan 02, 08:00
  • Central bank held its inaugural MPC meeting targeting inflation and stability
  • Inflation dropped to five-year low of 16.9% in November, economic growth soars by 8.1% in 2023-24
  • Credit growth ceiling raised to 18% from 14%, broad money grows by 20%
  • Ethiopia's foreign exchange reserves reach record highs post-reforms

Ethiopia's central bank held its policy rate at 15% during its inaugural Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, focusing on controlling inflation and stabilizing the economy amid global challenges. The MPC's decision reflects a cautious shift towards easing monetary restrictions as inflation showed signs of cooling. We note that y/y inflation dropped to a five-year low of 16.9% in November. Food inflation remained elevated at 18.5%, but core inflation improved, supported by exchange rate reforms and effective monetary tightening measures. The monthly inflation rate decreased by 0.8% in November. Meanwhile, real GDP growth surged by 8.1% in the 2023-24 fiscal year, driven by a record harvest, robust industrial output, and growth in tourism and air transport services. The positive growth outlook is expected to continue into the 2024-25 fiscal year.

The central bank further raised the annual credit growth ceiling for commercial banks to 18%, up from 14%. Broad money and base money grew by 20% and 17%, respectively. Despite the reduction in key monetary aggregates relative to GDP, the MPC recommended gradually reversing the decline to support medium-term economic growth. The July exchange rate reforms boosted exports, remittances, and foreign capital inflows, resulting in record-high foreign exchange reserves. These improvements reflect growing confidence in Ethiopia's economic policies and its shift to a market-driven foreign exchange system.

Ethiopia's banking system remains stable, though private banks face liquidity pressures due to high loan-to-deposit ratios. New interbank and standing lending facilities at the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) have helped alleviate liquidity challenges, ensuring continued financial sector stability. Despite global commodity price fluctuations and trade slowdowns, Ethiopia's economy demonstrated resilience, emphasizing the need for greater trade integration to enhance external stability. We further note that the MPC's decisions to maintain the policy rate at 15% and adjust the credit growth ceiling to 18% reflect a balanced approach to fostering economic growth while managing inflation. The next policy review is scheduled for March 25, 2025.

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Gabon
KEY STAT
Oil production rises 3.8% q/q in Q3
Gabon | Jan 02, 06:13
  • Production increased by 0.03% y/y, exports fell by 8.4% y/y
  • Production growth q/q is attributed to recovery following previous operational incidents
  • Gabonese crude price fell in Q3

Oil production increased by 3.8% q/q to 2.924mn tonnes in Q3, according to the latest quarterly economic report of the economy ministry. This translates into daily production of about 232,011bpd, compared to 225,905bpd in Q2. The ministry said this growth reflects recovery following operational incidents recorded in the previous quarter and the fire accident at Perenco's Becuna platform in the Simba oil and gas field. In y/y terms, production rose by only 0.03%. Oil exports declined by 8.4 % y/y, to 2.425mn tonnes in Q3. After rising in Q2, the average Gabonese crude price fell in Q3, reaching USD 78.71. On a y/y basis, crude prices declined by 8.7%. The CFA franc was stronger during Q3 compared to the previous quarter.

The 2025 Finance Law projects a 2.1% decrease in oil production, estimated at 11.125mn metric tonnes, compared to 11.64mn tonnes in 2024. Additionally, the price of Gabonese oil is expected to be USD 75 per barrel in 2025, a 5.1% decline from the anticipated USD 79 per barrel in 2024. These adjustments reflect the government's efforts to align budget projections with the realities of the oil market.

Oil production and exports
 Q2 2024Q3 2024% change
Production (mn tonnes)2.822.923,8%
Exports (mn tonnes)2.422.430,1%
Average Brent price (USD/barrel)84.9480.18-5,6%
Average Gabonese crude price (USD/barrel)83.9278.71-6,2%
USD/XAF exchange rate609.30597.09-2,0%
Source: Economy ministry
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Transitional govt takes control of timber industry
Gabon | Jan 02, 06:13
  • Govt officially reclaimed the Société Nationale des Bois du Gabon as state-owned
  • SNBG struggled financially before being temporarily rescued by the Gabon Special Economic Zone
  • New decree places 600,000 hectares of forest under the govt oversight

The transitional military government officially has reclaimed the Société Nationale des Bois du Gabon (SNBG) as state property, gaining full control of the country's timber industry. Gabon's timber industry contributes approximately 3.2% to the country's USD 19.4bn economy, according to the World Bank. Once a leading figure in the national timber industry, SNBG faced financial struggles which included over XAF 30bn in debt in 2016. The company was briefly rescued by the Gabon Special Economic Zone (GSEZ) in 2018, which is managed by Dubai-based Arise IIP and the Gabonese government. However, the company continued to struggle under GSEZ control. Giving a speech on Monday (Dec 30), transitional president Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema said the official transfer of SNBG's control back to the state represents a commitment to the timber sector's revitalization.

Oligui Nguema stated that the government aims to modernize infrastructure, create local employment and maximize benefits from natural resources, while preserving ecosystems. The new decree places 600,000 hectares (1.5mn acres) of forest under the government's control. The military-led transition government has focused on asserting control over key national assets since coming into power. In addition to the timber industry, the military government used its rights to block the sale of Assala Energy shares to France's Maurel & Prom this year.

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Ghana
Court to rule on disputed parliamentary vote in four constituencies on Jan 4
Ghana | Jan 02, 08:56
  • Results in these constituencies were initially declared all in favour of NDC
  • NPP has disputed results and electoral body has since declared new results in three of constituencies
  • Regardless of final outcome, NDC has secured strong majority in parliament

The Accra High Court is set to rule on the disputed parliamentary election results in four constituencies on Jan 4 after completing the hearings on the cases. The constituencies in question are Tema Central, Okaikwei Central, Techiman South, and Ablekuma North. All of these were initially declared in favour of opposition NDC, which has won a strong majority in parliament, but later the electoral commission ordered a new vote count as the process had been disrupted at some polling stations, allegedly by NDC supporters. Later, the electoral commission declared the seats in Tema Central, Okaikwei Central, Techiman South to have been won by NPP candidates but is yet to declare the final result in Ablekuma North.

In the meantime, the electoral commission declared the NDC candidate Elikplim Akurugu as winner from the Dome-Kwabenya constituency, the only other constituency besides Ablekuma North, where the final results were not declared. With this, the total number of seats won by NDC reached 182, while NPP has won 89 and independents have won 4 seats. This means that the NDC is just short of securing a two-thirds majority but given than at least two of the independent winners are former NDC members, and of the other two, one has already declared he will join the NDC caucus, it is likely that the party will be able to secure the needed 184 MPs to allow it to make constitutional amendments.

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College teacher union launches indefinite strike
Ghana | Jan 02, 08:40
  • Union threatened with strike in December unless govt met its demands
  • Demands include payment of allowances and compensation, other changes

The Colleges of Education Teachers Association of Ghana (CETAG) declared an indefinite strike starting on Jan 2 as the government failed to address their demands by the end of last year. The held a two-month strike at 46 public colleges of education (colleges for teachers) in Jul-Aug last year but suspended it after agreeing on a road map with the government to settle some due payments. However, the union said in December that this agreement had been breached and warned of an impending strike. The key demands the union listed including migration of colleges of education's teaching staff onto affiliate universities' pay structure within 20 months, payment of book and research allowance for 2023 to the staff at the Akrokerri college, and payment of one-month basic salary as compensation for work done in 2022 as ordered by the National Labour Commission in May 2023.

It was not expected that the outgoing government will do something to prevent the strike, but the new administration will want to deal with it to prevent prolonged action. In 2022, a series of strikes in the education sector had a negative impact on the country's services GDP.

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PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Ghana | Jan 02, 07:15

NDC majority cannot do the work of nation building alone - Mahama (Joy FM)

High Court concludes hearings on 4 disputed constituencies, judgment set for Jan. 4 (Joy FM)

JUSAG pushes for salary review approval, threatens industrial action (Joy FM)

NDC government must consolidate all taxes imposed on us - Ghana Hotels Association (Joy FM)

CETAG declares indefinite strike effective January 2 (Citi Newsroom)

Court dismisses NDC PCs objections against NPP's Mandamus applications (Starr FM)

Ghana Airport Company shuts down McDan Aviation Private Jet Terminal over $3m dollars debt (Starr FM)

We don't owe Ghana Airport Company Limited $3m - McDan Group (Starr FM)

Elikplim Akurugu declared as MP-elect for Dome-Kwabenya (Starr FM)

President Akufo-Addo calls for unity in final New Year message to Ghanaians (Class FM)

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Government sells GHS 4.6bn T-bills exceeding target
Ghana | Jan 02, 07:00
  • Yields rise by 11-18bps
  • T-bills sold in 2024 account for 100.5% of full-year target

The government sold GHS 4,646mn T-bills at the weekly auction held by the Bank of Ghana on Dec 27, which is above the GHS 4,262mn target. Yields rose further, by 11-18bps. The weighted average yield on the 91-day T-bill increased by 18bps w/w to 28.04%. The total amount of T-bills issued this year so far (the government has not issued any bonds since July 2022) has reached GHS 237bn, which accounts for about 100.5% of the full-year target.

T-bill auction results
Dec 27
91-day182-day364-day
Bids (GHS mn)3,838.34628.16179.37
Allocated (GHS mn)3,838.34628.16179.37
Weighted average yield, %28.036328.683230.0706
Source: Bank of Ghana
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Ivory Coast
Cocoa arrivals up by 27.4% y/y by Dec 29– exporter estimates
Ivory Coast | Jan 02, 08:18
  • Weekly arrivals rise by 2.5% y/y
  • Cocoa output is seen to grow to 2.0-2.2mn tonnes this season
  • Growth expected as result of good weather, efforts to limit smuggling

Cocoa arrivals increased by 27.4% y/y to 1,054,000 tonnes in the period Oct 1-Dec 29, according to a Reuters report citing exporter estimates. The rate of increase slowed further from 30.1% for the period to Dec 22 as weekly arrivals (Dec 23-29) rose by just 2.5% y/y to 82,000 tonnes. The results so far suggest production will likely rebound strongly this season.

The regulator expects cocoa arrivals to recover from the low of 1.78mn tonnes in 2023/24, thanks to favourable weather conditions and efforts to reduce smuggling. According to sources, the crop is seen to reach 2.0-2.2mn tonnes, of which about 1.4mn tonnes during the main crop (Oct-Mar), up 10% y/y. As part of efforts to deal with illegal trade, the government hiked the minimum farm-gate price by 20% at the start of the current season on Oct 1 to XOF 1,800 per kg, which is equivalent to about USD 2.9 per kg at the current exchange rate, roughly the same as in neighbouring Ghana. The government has also tightened security around the borders, especially those to the west of the country, to curtail smuggling as prices are still higher in other cocoa producing countries in the region with liberalised markets.

Cocoa arrivals in period Oct 1-Dec 29
2024/252023/24 % y/y
weekly82,00080,0002.5
cumulative1,054,000827,00027.4
Source: Reuters, based on exporter estimates
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Eni launches second phase of Baleine oil and gas project
Ivory Coast | Jan 02, 08:11
  • Oil production is seen to grow to 60,000bpd from project
  • Development of third phase is under way and it should start producing in 2028
  • Baleine to boost country's oil output to over 200,000bpd by 2028

Italy's Eni announced it has launched production from the second phase of the Baleine oil and gas project. It said it expects oil production from the field to rise to 60,000bpd and gas production to 70mn cubic feet of associated gas from 15,000bpd and 25mn cubic feet projected under the first phase (Eni has not provided information on current levels of production). The first phase launched operations in August 2023 and the third phase is expected to be completed in 2028, boosting production to 150,000 bpd of oil and 200mn cubic feet of gas. Eni has been present in Ivory Coast since 2015 with a current equity oil production of around 22,000bpd. It operates 10 blocks in the country (CI-101, CI-205, CI-401, CI-501, CI-801, CI-802, CI-504, CI-526, CI-706 and CI-708) in partnership with state-owned Petroci Holding.

The government has seen an increase in investments in the mining sector, in particular in oil and gold mining, thanks to new discoveries. The sector has recorded significant growth with oil and gas production expanding by 48.1% y/y in Jan-Aug and metallic ore extraction rising by 12.4% y/y over the same period. The total oil production is currently about 50,000bpd, but the Baleine field is expected to bring it to over 200,000bpd by 2028, making the country a major producer.

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President Ouattara announces exit of French troops
Ivory Coast | Jan 02, 06:54
  • French troops are expected to hand over military base in Abidjan this month

President Alassane Ouattara announced in his end-of-year address to the nation that French troops would withdraw from Ivory Coast handing over control of their military base in Abidjan in January. The French military base currently hosts around 1,000 soldiers. The withdrawal will mark the end of the French military's decades-old presence in the country and is part of its gradual exit from West and Central Africa. France has already pulled out its troops from Mali, Burkina Faso, Nger and most recently Chad, while Senegal has also announced the end of all foreign military presence from 2025. The only French troops still present are in Djibouti and Gabon.

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Kenya
University lecturers again threaten to strike over delayed pay
Kenya | Jan 02, 07:35
  • Following strikes in September and October, lecturers were granted 7-10% salary hikes, increased retirement age
  • Universities claim the govt has not released funds for the hike to be effected

Kenyan university lecturers have again issued a 15-day strike notice, citing delayed implementation of a November 2024 agreement with the government. The University Academic Staff Union (UASU) claims the government failed to honor promises made under the 2021-2025 Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), which includes 7-10% salary increases backdated to October 2024. The lecturers previously ended a 24-day strike in November after a return-to-work formula was signed, but December salaries reportedly excluded the agreed pay rise and arrears with university heads saying they had not received funds to effect the increases. The KES 9.7bn CBA, to be implemented in three phases, had reportedly promised the first tranche of KES 4.3bn by June 2025.

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Govt to pay bonuses to sugarcane farmers this January
Kenya | Jan 02, 07:26
  • In 2024 country for first time achieved self-sufficiency in sugar production
  • Development attributed to fertilizer program, better sector management

President William Ruto has announced that sugarcane farmers in Kenya will receive bonuses for the first time in the country's history, according to local news reports citing remarks made by the president on 1 January. Ruto said the payments align with his campaign promises and will address inequities in the agricultural sector, where tea and coffee farmers have traditionally benefited from such incentives. The bonuses will be disbursed to all farmers registered with the government, with the initial payouts scheduled for the end of January.

This move follows the government's decision to discontinue sugar imports for 2025 after achieving self-sufficiency in sugar production, with output exceeding 800,000 metric tonnes in 2024. The sugar industry, which supports 6mn people mostly in Western Kenya and Nyanza, has reportedly seen a boost due to subsidized fertilizers and better sector management. Officials said the payouts would recognize farmers' contributions to the country's reduced reliance on imports while promoting continued growth in the industry.

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Ruto admits security excesses but warns against protests in New Year address
Kenya | Jan 02, 06:18
  • Admission is change in tone following months of denial of allegations of enforced disappearances linked to state agencies
  • Nonetheless, the dual message undermines prospects of change, fuels concerns state is more concerned with controlling dissent

In his New Year address, President William Ruto offered a mixed message on the state of security in Kenya, acknowledging instances of extrajudicial actions by law enforcement while also praising their role in maintaining public safety. The president further emphasized the need to strike a balance between safeguarding democratic freedoms and ensuring public safety, and cautioned against what he described as "radical, self-centred interpretations of rights" that could undermine national security.

The admission of excess on part of security services confirms a shift in tone after months of denial regarding allegations of enforced disappearances linked to state agencies. The president acknowledged the problem for the first time on 27 December following the disappearance of six young Kenyans who had shared social media content against him. Despite his pledge to end the abductions however, the whereabouts of the six youth, as well as tens of previously abducted Kenyans, remained unknown, which led to a demonstration on 30 December. The protest was dispersed by the police and more than 20 Kenyans, including Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah, were detained before being released on bail.

On the other hand, the praise of security services as well as the warnings against protests have undermined the prospects of justice for victims of enforced disappearances and their families and have fueled concerns that the government is more focused on controlling dissent than addressing the systemic failures within law enforcement.

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PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
Kenya | Jan 02, 04:41

Probe into irregular NSSF bonds trading goes quiet (Business Daily)

World Bank unveils monthly pay for teens to remain in school (Business Daily)

Kenya posts slowest festive month inflation in more than 20 years (Business Daily)

Mbadi blocks indebted parastatals from State funding (Business Daily)

Unpacking 2024, the year of femicides and cold-blood murders (Nation)

House of indiscipline: How quorum hitches hit National Assembly in 2024 (Nation)

2025: A sneak peek into economic joys and pains (Nation)

Red flag over affordable housing shaky funding (Nation)

State hopes for better fortunes in the new year after turbulent 2024 (The Standard)

High food prices dampen new year holiday spirit as living cost rises (The Standard)

President Ruto admits police abuses at protests (Citizen)

Why Scores of Kenyans Will Start the Year Unemployed (Kenyans.co.ke)

Govt Announces Historic Bonuses for Cane Farmers (Kenyans.co.ke)

Ruto Faces Growing Outrage Over Abductions 5 Days After Promise (Kenyans.co.ke)

Most Memorable Moments in Parliament in 2024 (Kenyans.co.ke)

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KEY STAT
CPI inflation edges marginally up to 3.0% y/y in December
Kenya | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Inflation has trended below midpoint of govt's target range (5.0%) since June on lower food, fuel prices
  • The strengthening of the shilling has contributed as well
  • Central bank has cut the benchmark rate by cumulative 175bps to support economic activity, and sees scope for further easing

Headline CPI inflation edged marginally up to 3.0% y/y in December from 2.8% in November, according to the latest release by the statistics office KNBS said. On monthly basis, the overall index posted 0.6% growth, increasing from 0.3% in the preceding month.

The slight uptick in the annual inflation rate has largely driven by increases in food and transport prices. In the food group, which accounts for about a third of the index, inflation inched up to 4.8% y/y in December from 4.5% y/y in November. This was largely due to an increase in the prices of some fresh foods, partly offset by decline in the prices of wheat and maize flour, sugar, and maize.

In the housing and utilities group, the second heaviest in the index, annual price growth was negative at -0.2% y/y in December vs. 0.1% in November on the back of continued decline in electricity and fuel prices. In contrast, inflation in the transport group, which had been negative in November, printed at 0.1% y/y in December, likely underpinned by increased demand during the festive season.

Inflation has been trending below the mid-point of government's 2.5% - 7.5% target range since June. This allowed the central bank to ease its monetary policy stance. The main policy rate was thus cut by cumulative 175bps in three consecutive MPC meetings. The last two cuts - in October and December - were surprisingly large, though in the latter meeting the MPC concluded there was scope for further easing given the low inflation and a slowdown in growth in H2 affecting most economic sectors.

CPI inflation
Weights Jun-24 Jul-24 Aug-24 Sep-24 Oct-24 Nov-24 Dec-24
Annual
Food & Non-alcoholic Beverages32.9%5.6%5.6%5.3%5.1%4.3%4.5%4.8%
Alcoholic Beverages, Tobacco and Narcotics 3.3% 7.7% 6.9% 8.2% 7.7% 7.2% 7.6% 7.2%
Clothing and Footwear 3.0% 3.8% 3.6% 3.5% 3.3% 3.4% 2.9% 4.5%
Housing, Water, Electricity, Gas and other Fuels14.6%3.1%3.9%4.2%2.6%0.4%0.1%-0.2%
Furnishings, Household Equipment and Maintenance 3.7% 4.1% 4.4% 4.2% 3.8% 4.1% 3.9% 3.8%
Health 2.9% 2.4% 2.7% 2.8% 2.7% 3.0% 2.9% 3.0%
Transport9.6%7.7%4.0%3.9%0.5%-1.3%-1.1%0.1%
Communication 7.8% 1.3% 1.2% 1.6% 1.4% 1.4% 1.4% 1.2%
Recreation and Culture 1.7% 4.9% 4.5% 4.5% 4.3% 4.3% 4.3% 3.9%
Education 5.6% 2.2% 2.2% 2.8% 2.9% 2.9% 2.9% 2.8%
Restaurant and Hotels 8.1% 4.4% 4.3% 4.5% 4.4% 4.6% 4.5% 4.5%
Insurance and Financial Services 2.2% 0.9% 0.9% 0.7% 0.7% 0.7% 1.3% 1.2%
Miscellaneous Goods and Services 4.5% 4.8% 4.8% 4.6% 4.5% 4.4% 4.1% 4.1%
Overall100.0%4.6%4.3%4.4%3.6%2.7%2.8%3.0%
Monthly
Food and Non-Alcoholic Beverages 32.9% 0.7% -0.5% -0.7% 0.4% 0.5% 0.6% 0.7%
Overall100.0%0.4%-0.2%0.0%0.2%0.2%0.3%0.6%
Source: KNBS
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Senegal
Government sells XOF 165bn in T-bills, bonds in last 2024 auction
Senegal | Jan 02, 11:28
  • On offer were XOF 150bn worth of 1-year T-bills, and 3- and 5-year T-bonds
  • Investor interest is shifted towards the shorter term papers
  • Govt raised XOF 452bn in bills and bonds in Q4, well above XOF 155bn preliminary plan

The government sold XOF 165.0bn in T-bills and bonds in its last auction in 2024, held on 26 December on the regional WAEMU market, according to a notice published by the West Africa debt planning agency UMOA-Titres. The target for the auction had been set at XOF 150.0bn worth of the three papers, sizably hiked from a preliminary plan, in which it was cited at XOF 25bn.

The shortest-term paper, maturing on 25 December 2025, attracted XOF 91.4bn of bids, of which XOF 79.0bn were endorsed, with the weighted average rate printing at 6.86%, down from 6.91% in the previous sale of the bill mid-November. The paper was also offered in the auction held mid-December, however all bids were rejected in that auction.

The 3-year T-bond attracted XOF 87.0bn worth of bids, of which XOF 57.0bn were accepted with the weighted average rate coming in at 6.51%, edging marginally down from 6.56% in the preceding sale of this tenure mid-December.

There was least interest in the 5-year T-bond, which attracted XOF 29.1bn worth of bids, all of which were accepted, resulting in a weighted average rate of 6.77%, down from 6.83% mid-December.

We note according to UMOA's the preliminary issuance calendar, Senegal was to raise XOF 155bn in Q4, though that target seems to have been subsequently tripled with the government raising a total of XOF 452bn. Overall, since the start of the year and including the last auction, gross T-bill issuance stands at XOF 702bn. Prior to the last auction, the government had repaid XOF 525bn worth of T-bills and bonds, according to UMOA data.

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Customs revenue increases by 13% in 2024 amid anti-fraud success
Senegal | Jan 02, 08:40
  • Growth attributed to enhanced tax base controls and operational improvements

The Customs Directorate reported collecting XOF 1,613bn (EUR 2.47bn) in duties and taxes during 2024, a 13% increase from XOF 1,426bn (EUR 2.18bn) in 2023. The growth, amounting to XOF 186.4bn (EUR 285mn), was attributed to enhanced tax base controls and operational improvements, particularly in vehicle imports and in the informal trade sector.

Anti-fraud efforts also saw significant gains, with contentious recoveries reaching XOF 67.8bn (EUR 103mn) by November 2024, up from XOF 28.3bn (EUR 43mn) in December 2023, a 139.5% increase. Seizures related to transnational crime surged from XOF 4.4bn (EUR 7mn) in 2023 to XOF 226.4bn (EUR 346mn) in 2024, including 2.68 tons of cocaine and counterfeit currency worth XOF 11bn (EUR 17mn). The Customs agency credited these successes to its digital transformation, operational enhancements, and strong collaboration with partners, with plans to further step up efforts in 2025.

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Extractive sector revenues increase by 38% y/y to EUR 581mn in 2023 - EITI
Senegal | Jan 02, 08:21
  • Govt has initiated an audit of mining companies with state participation, claiming state's stakes have been undervalued
  • Other reports have also highlighted mismanagement of revenues, losses due to tax evasion and avoidance

Senegal's extractive industries generated XOF 380.03bn (EUR 581mn) in 2023, marking an increase of 38% y/y, according to the country's 2023 EITI report. Of the total revenue, XOF 346.19bn (EUR 529mn), was allocated directly to the national budget. The sector also had higher contribution to the country's exports, GDP and employment. According to the report, export earnings reached XOF 1,111bn, representing some 38% of the country's goods exports, with gold remaining the primary earner (XOF 492bn or 44% of the extractive sector's export earnings), followed by phosphoric acid (XOF 301bn) and cement (XOF 97bn). The extractive industries accounted for 4.72% to the country's GDP in 2023, up from 4.50% in the preceding year. On the other hand, the sector's contribution to employment remained minor, printing at 0.16% in 2023 (8,523 jobs), inching marginally down from 0.17% in 2022. Wage expenditures totaled XOF 96.32bn (EUR 147mn).

The report comes on the heels of an announcement by the government that it has started a comprehensive financial audit of mining companies where it holds equity in an effort to evaluate the value of state participation and optimize the country's share of revenues in the sector, which it claims has been undervalued. In addition, a recent audit of the sector covering 2022, revealed discrepancies in revenue management, according to local news reports. Previously, NGO Natural Resource Governance Institute highlighted significant financial losses in revenues from the country's mining sector due to tax evasion and avoidance. Its report estimated the government loses between USD 57mn and USD 153mn annually, primarily through trade mis-invoicing and tax system weaknesses with the losses representing 1-3% of the country's annual tax revenues.

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GTA project starts gas production
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Opening of first well marks completion of technical operations

The Greater Tortue Ahmeyim (GTA) project has started gas production following the official opening of its first well on 31 December, according to a joint statement by Senegal and Mauritania. The step marks a significant milestone - the completion of the technical operations, and paves the way for the commercialization of the gas, the statement read.

We recall the project, located on the maritime border between Senegal and Mauritania, is operated by BP while the joint venture comprises also Kosmos Energy, as well as Petrosen and SMHPM, the national oil companies of the two countries. It is designed to extract gas using an ultra-deepwater subsea system connected to a mid-water floating production, storage, and offloading (FPSO) vessel. The extracted gas will be transported to a hub on the maritime border of Mauritania and Senegal, where a floating liquefied natural gas (FLNG) facility is located. This FLNG has a capacity of approximately 2.5mn tons annually, with the total gas resources in the GTA field estimated at 15 trillion cubic feet. Production was initially targeted for 2022, but the project has faced multiple delays.

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President Faye re-iterates commitment to governance reforms in New Year address
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Announces plan to restore peace in Casamance, assist displaced populations
  • Re-iterates plan to discontinue France's military presence in country this year
  • Four new draft laws to be introduced to boost anti-corruption efforts
  • New platform to be launched enabling citizen application for govt jobs, submission of investment proposals

President Bassirou Diomaye Faye delivered his New Year's address on 31 December, highlighting peace, development, and governance reforms as key priorities for Senegal in the coming year. Faye emphasized the government's commitment to achieving lasting peace in Casamance, unveiling the Diomaye Plan for Casamance (PDC) to assist displaced populations and advance reconciliation efforts. He also reaffirmed his support for Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko's government program, rooted in the Senegal 2050 National Transformation Agenda.

The president outlined several forthcoming governance reforms, including:

  • the restructuring of the oil and gas oversight body COS-PETROGAZ to include opposition parties, civil society, and professional organizations, ensuring transparent management of petroleum resources;
  • the introduction of four legislative proposals, focusing on whistleblower protection, anti-corruption reforms, access to information, and mandatory asset declarations for public officials;
  • the launch of a new platform, "Ligeeyal sa reew", in early 2025, enabling citizens to apply for public positions or propose investment projects;
  • the launch of consultations to address the proliferation of political parties.

Institutional changes, including the abolition of the Economic, Social, and Environmental Council and the High Council of Local Authorities, will also continue in 2025 to streamline government structures and strengthen democratic accountability, Faye said. He also re-iterated plans to discontinue France's military presence in the country in 2025.

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KEY STAT
GDP expands by record 11.5% y/y in Q3 2024
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Extractive industries contribute 7.9pps boosted by the start of oil production in June
  • The contribution of the primary sector edges up, remains unchanged for the services sector
  • Authorities see full-year growth at 6.7%
  • Economy expected to rebound in 2025 due to boost from start of gas production, easing of domestic political tensions

Senegal's GDP (s.a.) expanded by record 11.5% y/y in Q3 2024, accelerating notably from 3.9% and 2.3% in the preceding two quarters of the year, the latest report released by the statistics office showed (table below).

The improvement came largely on the boost by the start of oil production in the review quarter while growth in non-oil sectors was largely unchanged. The secondary sector contributed 8.5pps to the overall growth rate, up from 1.0pps in the preceding quarter, on the back of 7.9pps contribution by the extractive industries. Manufacturing industries, which had been weighing on the downside for the past four quarters, had a positive contribution in Q3 (0.4pps). The contribution of the primary sector was also positive, increasing marginally to 0.8pps in Q3 from 0.6pps in Q2. As to the services sector, its contribution was unchanged, at 2.1pps, underpinned by a stable growth rate of 4.0% y/y.

In the expenditure breakdown, GDP growth was mainly driven by net exports, which contributed more than 20pps to the overall growth rate, reflecting increase in exports and a decline in imports. Final consumption contributed 3.5pps whereas capital formation weighed on the downside slashing 12.3pps from the overall growth rate.

The stats office also released final data on the annual GDP growth in 2022 and semi-final data on GDP growth in 2023. According to this publication, GDP growth stood at 3.9% in 2022 (revised marginally upwards from 3.8% previously), and at 4.3% in 2023 (unchanged from previous estimates).

We note 2024 growth was initially seen accelerating to close to 10% y/y driven by the start of oil and gas production, initially projected in Q1. Oil production was launched with a delay in June, while the start of gas production is now seen in 2025. Growth projections have since been revised downwards. The IMF last projected 2024 growth at 6.0% (October WEO), and sees it picking up to 9.3% in 2025. The authorities forecast 2024 growth at 6.7%, and 2025 - at 8.8%.

Quarterly GDP growth, % y/y
Q3 23 Q4 23 Q1 24 Q2 24 Q3 24
Agriculture 11.1% 15.6% 3.1% 3.7% 4.4%
Activités extractives -13.7% -7.9% -7.9% 35.9% 452.7%
Manufacturing industries -32.5% -36.3% -36.6% -34.6% 3.9%
Trade 6.4% 2.7% 1.2% 2.7% 0.3%
Public administration 5.0% 7.1% 8.8% 9.7% 9.5%
Quarterly GDP5.4%3.6%2.3%3.9%11.5%
Source: ANSD
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National Assembly adopts 2025 budget
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Budget adopted without debate after PM Sonko invokes provision tying it to a confidence motion
  • Budget targets 7.1% of GDP deficit, down from 11.6% this year

The National Assembly adopted the 2025 Initial Finance Bill (PLFI) in a plenary session on Saturday, 28 December. The adoption proceeded without debate, with PM Sonko invoking Article 86, of the Constitution, which allows the government to expedite the adoption of the budget by tying it to a confidence motion.

We recall the budget targets a deficit of 7.1% of GDP, down from 11.6% of GDP in the revised 2024 budget, according to the draft budget law, published earlier. Revenues are expected to increase by 24% y/y vs. the expected 2024 turnout, and expenditures - by 3%. The budget assumes growth of 8.8%.

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PM Sonko outlines fiscal and economic reforms in policy declaration
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Fiscal strategy to target a tax-to-GDP ratio of 20%
  • Key tax reforms include removal of exemptions, expanding the tax base, oversight on strategic sectors and treaties
  • On expenditure side, audits and payroll reviews aim to improve fiscal accountability
  • Economic diversification seeks to reduce reliance on raw exports
  • Govt will also focus on education and healthcare for social equity
  • Political reforms to continue with removal of the controversial Amnesty Law
  • Govt will initiate dialogue on elections, and party governance
  • Foreign policy to emphasize sovereignty and sustainable agreements

Prime minister Ousmane Sonko outlined ambitious policy agenda aimed at overhauling the country's fiscal policies and economic framework in his General Policy Declaration, read before Parliament on 27 December. The plan is fully anchored in the newly adopted Senegal 2050 framework, Sonko said, promising a transformative approach to governance and socioeconomic development. We recall the declaration is a constitutionally mandated address by the PM to MPs, outlining the government's short, medium and long-term priorities. The speech had been postponed since last June, when Sonko refused to appear before the Parliament dominated at the time by the allies of his predecessor Macky Sall. The legislative elections of 17 November were largely won by his PASTEF party, giving president Faye and PM Sonko a comfortable majority.

Fiscal reforms are at the forefront, as the government seeks to enhance revenue mobilization while rationalizing expenditures. These should provide for a new fiscal trajectory, which should see the budget deficit contract to 3% of GDP within 3 years maximum, Sonko said. Consequently, the current outstanding public debt should be reduced to below 70% by 2029 at the latest. Sonko acknowledged the reforms will be difficult, and pledged to seek dialogue with the society and trade unions where necessary.

The fiscal strategy prioritizes achieving a tax to GDP ratio of at least 20%, consistent with regional standards under the UEMOA convergence criteria. Currently, the ratio hovers below 18%. To bridge this gap, the government plans to curtail tax expenditures, which amounted to XOF 2.23tn between 2019 and 2022. Measures will include a comprehensive reform of the General Tax Code, aimed at broadening the tax base while reducing average tax rates.

Key sectors such as real estate, land, and informal trade will face stricter fiscal oversight. Senegal will also withdraw from any bilateral treaty with tax havens and renegotiate unfavorable clauses in agreements with jurisdictions that apply normal taxation. Tax exemptions scattered across multiple legal texts, such as the Mining Code, Industrial Free Zones, Export Free Enterprise Regime, Petroleum Code, Telecommunications Code, and Investment Code will be streamlined and included in the General Tax Code to ensure a more equitable and efficient fiscal system. Additionally, Senegal plans to reinstate the taxation of incoming international calls, a practice discontinued in 2012, which had been expected to bring some XOF 50bn annually.

The plan also emphasizes accountability through audits of public finances and state payroll. Over 29,000 irregular employment contracts have already been identified, and further reviews are anticipated to streamline state expenditures, which currently consume 16% of GDP. The government aims to reduce this figure to create fiscal space for public investment.

On the economic front, Senegal aspires to diversify its economy and reduce its reliance on raw material exports. The government has outlined initiatives to bolster industrialization, including the establishment of agro-industrial hubs and enhanced support for agricultural entrepreneurs. Efforts to formalize the informal economy and foster public-private partnerships are expected to drive sustainable growth. International marketing campaigns under the "Invest in Senegal" label aim to attract foreign investment, while a revamped investment code will prioritize local value creation.

Social equity and human capital development are also pivotal to the government's agenda. Plans include expanding access to education, healthcare, and social safety nets. The government has committed to eliminating temporary school shelters by 2029 and integrating emerging technologies into the curriculum. Investments in regional universities and vocational training centers will equip youth for roles in agriculture, technology, and other high-growth sectors.

On the domestic political front, PM Sonko highlighted progress in justice administration, an area previously marred by political interference, and pledged continued reforms towards safeguarding whistleblowers, modernizing the penitentiary system, and expediting cases related to pre-electoral violence. He further said the government will soon submit to Parliament a draft law to repeal the controversial Amnesty Law of March 2024. The government also plans to launch consultations to reform the political landscape, focusing on key issues such as the governance and public financing of political parties, the conditions for electoral participation, the organization of elections, and the formal recognition of the leader of the opposition as outlined in Article 58 of the Constitution.

Finally, Senegal's foreign policy and governance approach will emphasize sovereignty, equity, and sustainability. The government will reject exploitative agreements, such as prior EU fishing accords, Sonko said. Discussions have already been held with BCEAO on the status and prospects for implementing the reform of the CFA Franc in view of the monetary sovereignty of the West African Monetary Union. In addition, the PM announced the upcoming closure of France's military bases in Senegal.

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Audit reveals discrepancies in 2022 extractive industry revenue management
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Recommends more monitoring and transparency to prevent misappropriations

The Court of Auditors has identified significant irregularities in the management of revenues from extractive industries in 2022, local media reported citing the court's latest audit report. A notable discrepancy of XOF 38.03bn was found between amounts recorded by the Customs Directorate and those tracked by Dakar-Port's tax collector, raising concerns about the accuracy of revenue monitoring. Additionally, the report highlighted a broader shortfall of XOF 148.4bn between figures reported by financial authorities and those in accounting records. This includes a XOF 112.9bn variance in revenues from the Tax and Land Administration Directorate.

The Court criticized lapses in compliance with regulatory requirements for reporting and tracking extractive revenues. It cited unilateral declarations, unaccounted payments by non-industry entities, and gaps in cashflow recording, despite existing guidelines. Recommendations from the Court include revising monitoring procedures, enhancing inter-agency coordination, and improving transparency to prevent potential misappropriations.

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Court of Auditors refutes claims on public finance report publication
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Local paper had claimed the much awaited report is being delayed on govt's request
  • Court says report is still under preparation

On 24 December, the Court of Auditors issued a statement refuting claims made by the local paper Le Quotidien regarding the status of its public finance report. The newspaper had reported that the much awaited audit report, covering 2019 to March 31, 2024, was delayed at the government's request and would be published on December 31, 2024.

The Court clarified that the report is still under preparation and its adoption will follow established institutional rules. It also denied receiving any government request to delay the publication. Highlighting its operational principles, the Court reiterated that its audits and reports are based on the government's data and proceed under the framework established by the 2012 organic law and related regulations. The final report will be released only after its formal adoption by the Court's competent bodies.

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National Assembly approves revised 2024 budget
Senegal | Jan 02, 02:33
  • Revision was needed due to significant revenue shortfalls amid spending pressures
  • Deficit goes up threefold vs. initial budget

On 24 December, the National Assembly approved the amended 2024 Finance Bill with 139 votes in favor, 12 abstentions, and no opposition. This revised budget aims to realign the state's financial projections with emerging economic and social realities. Finance and Budget Minister Cheikh Diba, presenting the bill to the lawmakers, emphasized its significance in addressing the country's evolving fiscal challenges, and noted the approval is seen as a critical step in advancing the government's economic strategy for 2025 as the nation prepares to tackle upcoming budgetary demands, according to local news reports.

We recall the supplementary budget was necessitated due to significant revenue shortfall and increasing expenditure demands. While the government clarified its 2024 projections within the draft 2025 budget law, the supplementary budget itself is yet to be published. According to the details available within the 2025 draft budget, revenues are cut by XOF 839bn, and expenditure - upped by XOF 683bn, leading to a fiscal deficit of XOF 2,362bn, or 11.6% of GDP, almost threefold increase from XOF 840bn in the original budget.

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South Africa
KEY STAT
Domestic private sector credit growth slows to 4.16% y/y in November
South Africa | Jan 02, 11:30
  • Total loans and advances growth slows marginally to 4.3% y/y in November
  • Both corporate and household credit growth eases as economy remains fragile

Domestic private sector growth slowed marginally to 4.16% y/y in November from 4.26% y/y in October, according to data released by the central bank. Credit growth has been easing for three months in a row following the rise of 4.9% y/y reported in August. The deceleration in November reflected mostly a 1.3% m/m drop in the volatile investment and bills category. However, total loans and advances, which exclude investment and bills, also weakened to a growth of 4.3% y/y from 4.4% y/y in the preceding month.

Household credit growth continued to slow to 3.1% y/y in November from 3.2% y/y in the preceding month. A steeper slowdown occurred in the extension of corporate credit growth to 5.4% y/y in November from 5.6% y/y in the preceding month. In the household segment, general loans and advances and overdrafts declined y/y, while instalment sale credit, leasing, and credit card advances rose at a slower pace y/y. The only credit category that rose at an accelerated rate was the mortgage advances. The broad-based weakness suggests household finances are still under pressure, although the demand from credit is expected to recover gradually this year thanks to lower food and fuel costs, the drop in the main interest rate and the withdrawals from the two-pot pension system.

In terms of corporate credit, mortgage growth remained stable at 4.9% y/y in November, while general loans advances growth accelerated further to 4.9% y/y in November from 4.5% y/y in the preceding month, which is a positive signal for the health of credit demand. However, there was a slowdown in the instalment sales credit (similarly to households) and overdrafts (the main downside pressure). The investments and bills category also helped to slow corporate credit growth in November.

Overall, weakening of credit growth comes against the backdrop of slowing economic activity in the third quarter. Although the economy is expected to have picked up the pace (from non-agricultural growth of 0.4% q/q in Q3) in the final quarter, structural weaknesses continue to constrain growth below the long-term average of 2.0%.

Domestic credit, ZAR mn
Jul-24 Aug-24 Sep-24 Oct-24 Nov-24
Total loans and advances4,349,8234,398,0774,439,0414,411,4074,428,600
Instalment sales credit 585,319 587,917 590,807 595,388 599,695
Leasing finance 13,344 13,088 13,054 13,082 14,339
Mortgage advances 1,852,833 1,860,464 1,865,468 1,871,340 1,876,094
Other loans and advances 1,898,327 1,936,608 1,969,712 1,931,596 1,938,471
Households2,162,7492,169,2232,175,9842,181,4802,188,327
Corporate2,187,0742,228,8542,263,0572,229,9272,240,273
Source: SARB
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KEY STAT
Foreign trade surplus widens to ZAR 34.7bn in November
South Africa | Jan 02, 10:06
  • Exports continued to rise although at a slower pace m/m in November
  • Imports, however, contracted sharply amid lower oil prices
  • Cumulative surplus at ZAR 181bn in Jan-Nov is substantial and will help to reduce the CA deficit

The foreign trade surplus widened to ZAR 34.7bn in November from ZAR 14.1bn in October, according to data released by the South African Revenue Service (SARS). The surplus was a reflection of ZAR 180.9bn exports and ZAR 146.2bn imports. Exports rose for a third month in a row although at a slowing pace of 1.2% m/m in November. Imports, however, contracted by a sharp 11.2% m/m, the steepest decline since the preceding November.

According to the SARS, export growth was strongly underpinned by the automotive industry where exports rose by 21% m/m. The other sources of export growth were the mineral products (iron and coal) which rose 9% m/m, and base metals which were up by 9% m/m as well. On the downside were the export of vegetables (-24% m/m), and the export of precious metals and stones (-5% m/m). On the import side, the decline was broad-based, including a drop in mineral products (-12% m/m), vehicles and transport equipment (-21% m/m), original equipment components (-26% m/m) as well as textiles (-22% m/m) and base metals (-14% m/m).

In cumulative terms, the foreign trade surplus reached ZAR 181bn in the first eleven months of the year, widening from ZAR 111bn in the same period last year. Exports dropped 1.4% y/y to ZAR 1,880bn but imports were down by larger 5.4% y/y to ZAR 1,699bn. Agriculture and food was the only source of export growth so far, rising 4.7% y/y but base metals (copper and steel) were the largest downside contributor to exports. On the import side, mineral exports (oil) and the machinery weighed the most, falling by nearly 14% y/y and 11.4% y/y, respectively. The decline in the import of vehicles and original equipment which is closely related to the automotive sector was substantial as well.

The acceleration in economic activity could serve to support import growth next year. Domestic exports face multiple risks, stemming from the uncertain external backdrop. A slowdown in global growth and specifically China may reduce the demand for South African exports and weaken commodity prices. In addition, potential protectionist tariffs in the US and deterioration of geopolitical risks could also weigh on global growth and trade and thereby impact South African exports and the local currency. The central bank kept its CA deficit forecast unchanged in November at 1.4% of GDP in 2024 and 2.2% in 2025.

Foreign trade including BELN, ZAR mn
Jan-Nov 2023Jan-Nov 2024%y/y
Total exports, incl.:1,907,887.01,880,975.0-1.4%
Agri/food225,850.0236,393.04.7%
Mineral products (iron, coal)479,940.00473,262.00-1.4%
Chemicals industry110,325.00107,171.00-2.9%
Precious metals/stones344,274.00342,555.00-0.5%
Base metals (copper, steel)207,199.00190,789.00-7.9%
Machinery140,692.00135,026.00-4.0%
Vehicles, transport263,824.00256,993.00-2.6%
Total imports, incl.:1,796,903.01,699,652.0-5.4%
Agri/food120,888.0115,821.0-4.2%
Mineral products (oil)385,540.00331,926.00-13.9%
Chemicals industry178,031.00185,820.004.4%
Base metals (steel)89,994.0093,077.003.4%
Machinery432,283.00383,138.00-11.4%
Vehicles, transport159,677.00136,716.00-14.4%
Original equipment components151,477.00138,779.00-8.4%
BALANCE110,984.0181,324.0
Note: BELN = Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Namibia
Source: SARS
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Regulator hikes petrol and diesel prices as of January
South Africa | Jan 02, 07:38
  • Small hike is almost entirely due to the depreciation of the rand in December
  • Petrol prices will still make a negative contribution to the headline CPI
  • CPI is expected to remain below the central bank target in January, supporting another 25bps rate cut

The regulator increased petrol prices by an average of 0.7% effective Jan 1, according to a statement released by the Central Energy Fund (CEF). Petrol 93 prices rose ZAR 0.19/l to ZAR 20.95/l and petrol 95 prices increased by ZAR 0.12/l to ZAR 21.20/l. Diesel prices also rose although slightly more modestly by ZAR 0.075/l for the low sulphur variety and by ZAR 0.105/l for the ultralow sulphur grade. The higher prices reflected almost entirely the depreciation of the rand over the relevant period to USD/ZAR 18.11 from USD/ZAR 17.9 in the preceding period, the regulator said. Meanwhile, international product prices for petrol increased, while those for diesel decreased in the period.

Despite the modest price increases, the fuel prices will remain in deflation mode in January due to the high base from last year. In our estimates, fuel prices will continue to subtract from headline CPI growth in January, although at a falling rate since October. We expect overall CPI growth to accelerate from 2.8% y/y in October and 2.9% y/y in November to 3.1% y/y and 3.4% y/y in the following two months, respectively. The headline CPI in January will therefore remain below the central bank target of 4.5%, providing space for the central bank to cut the main policy rate by another 25bps at its January 30 rate meeting.

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KEY STAT
Substantial increase in November revenues drives down budget deficit
South Africa | Jan 02, 06:58
  • Main budget deficit at ZAR 4.5bn in November is a historic low for this month
  • Main budget deficit accounts for 4.1% of full-year GDP against full-year target of 4.7%
  • Personal income, corporate income and VAT revenues rise considerably in November

The main budget deficit in November shrank to only ZAR 4.5bn which is a record low for this month historically. The November deficit has averaged about ZAR 20bn in the past five years. The smaller main budget deficit this November has contributed to a narrower gap in the first eight months of the fiscal year to about ZAR 306bn (ZAR 312bn in the same period 2023/24). In our calculations the deficit accounted for 4.1% of the full-year GDP projection of the Treasury, narrower than 4.4% reported in the same period last year.

The main budget deficit in November reflected total revenues in the amount of ZAR 136.3bn, recording a substantial increase of 11.8% y/y. Meanwhile, expenditures increased by only 1.9% y/y to ZAR 140.8bn. The growth in total revenue exceeded the full-year revenue growth projection of 4.3%. Gross tax revenues were nearly ZAR 16bn higher in November relative to the same month last year. The strong growth was attributable to personal income taxes growth of ZAR 8.5bn due to the employee tax revenue (likely as a result of more hiring and bonus payments), corporate income tax growth of ZAR 3.4bn (probably reflecting mining sector revenues) and domestic consumption contributing an increase of ZAR 5.3bn in VAT receipts. The net increase in domestic and import VAT revenues of ZAR 2.7bn was partially offset by the ZAR 1.6bn decline in the revenues from the fuel levy (reflecting lower prices).

The Treasury also said the gross borrowing requirement amounted to only ZAR 5.2bn due to relatively low redemptions. The Treasury reported a substantial increase in cash worth ZAR 102.5bn in November as it raised ZAR 39.5bn in domestic long-term bonds and ZAR 63.4bn in foreign loans as well as ZAR 4.8bn in short-term borrowing.

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PRESS
Press Mood of the Day
South Africa | Jan 02, 06:08

Mashatile calls ministers to order for unanswered questions in parliament (Business Day)

Koeberg unit 2 synchronised to the grid (Business Day)

Ramaphosa sends special envoy to Mozambique (Business Day)

Petrol and diesel prices to rise in January (Business Day)

Small to mid-cap stocks may have further to run in 2025 - despite Trump (News24)

SA bonds beat all peers in 2024, rand outperformed - how the GNU changed everything (News24)

Transnet posts wider loss (Moneyweb)

South Africans urged to avoid Mozambique as election protests and border chaos intensify (Moneyweb)

National Treasury, DWS working together to tackle CoJ's water problems - Joburg Water (Eyewitness News)

The political new year in the making: Five trends to watch closely (Daily Maverick)

SA made progress in 2024, but jobs, service delivery and water challenges need urgent attention (Daily Maverick)

Eskom 'on the right trajectory' but caution prevails for future stability (Daily Maverick)

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Uganda
Coffee export volume drops by 6.0% y/y in November
Uganda | Jan 02, 08:33
  • Decline reflects continue drop in Arabica exports
  • Export value still grows by 54% y/y thanks to high coffee prices
  • Prices have been pushed up by concerns over Brazil ad Vietnam crops

The volume of coffee exports decreased by 6.0% y/y to 400,536 bags (of 60kg) in November, according to the latest report of the Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA). The production level is way below the 520,000 bags projected by UCDA with the decline mainly due to the continued drop in Arabica exports which has been attributed to the off-year cycle and poor flowering in the Mount Elgon region. In addition, Robusta exports have slowed due to the ending of the main harvesting season in the Greater Masaka and the Southwestern regions. However, the UDCA expects the exports to increase to 500,000 tonnes in December as the main harvest north of the equator and the fly crop harvest in the Greater Masaka and South-Western regions have started.

Despite the drop in volume, the value of coffee exports continued growing at strong rate, by 54.0% y/y to USD 108.9mn in November, as the average price of coffee grew by 61.8% y/y to USD 4.53 per kg. Global coffee prices have been reached record levels over concerns about the effect of dry weather on crops in major producers Brazil and Vietnam. The coffee exports in the 2023/24 season (Oct-Sep) rose by 3.4% y/y to 6.4mn bags and their value grew by 49.0% to USD 1.4bn. The average price of USD 3.6 per bag. Coffee is a key agricultural export commodity for the country accounting for 20-30% of total exports.

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KEY STAT
Inflation picks up to 3.3% y/y in December
Uganda | Jan 02, 06:46
  • Acceleration mainly reflects rise in some food prices
  • Passenger transport, restaurants and accommodation also record higher price increases
  • Core inflation inches up to 3.9% y/y but remains below 5% target
  • Central bank expects inflation to remain below target over next 12 months

The headline inflation rate picked up to 3.3% y/y in December from 2.9% y/y in November, the statistical office said. The pickup was mainly due to a rise in some food prices such as vegetables, flour, rice and meat which resulted in a slowdown in the annual decrease in food prices. Core inflation picked up but only slightly, to 3.9% y/y in December from 3.8% y/y in November to reflect faster growth in services inflation, in turn driven by higher passenger transport, and restaurant and accommodation services prices. At the same time, the energy, fuel and utilities inflation eased to 1.0% y/y in December from 2.2% in November as charcoal prices grew at slower pace and liquid fuels decreased at faster rate. The core inflation print remains below the 5% medium-term target of the central bank signalling moderate underlying price pressures.

The December print marks the end of the disinflation trend which allowed the central bank to cut the policy rate by 25bps in August and further 25bps in October. The average inflation was 3.3% in 2024, down from 5.4% in 2023, and the average core inflation was 3.6% in 2024, down from 4.7% in 2023. The central bank expects core inflation to remain below the 5% target over the next 12 months but return to it in the medium term. The risks to the inflation outlook were assessed as balanced with those on the upside including extreme weather, heightened geopolitical tensions, and stronger domestic growth, and those on the downside including stronger appreciation of the shilling, favourable harvest and weaker growth due to previous policy actions.

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Zambia
KEY STAT
GDP growth slows to 2.5% y/y in Q3 amid drought-driven setbacks
Zambia | Jan 02, 13:31
  • Recovery in agriculture (0.4% y/y) and mining (3.0% y/y) following contractions in H1 not enough to boost growth
  • Construction sector grows 13.0% y/y in Q3, while electricity supply contracts by 44.3% y/y amid drought and increased power imports
  • The wholesale and retail trade sector remained subdued, shrinking by 1.0% y/y, as load-shedding persisted, curtailing industrial output
  • GDP growth is expected to slow down to 1.2% this year as drought affects food, electricity production

GDP growth slowed down to 2.5% y/y in Q3 2024 from 5.7% y/y in Q3 2023 according to the latest report from the statistical office. We note that there were revisions to the Q2 GDP from 1.7% y/y to 1.9% y/y on account of a revision in the financial and insurance sector where the value added was revised upwards to 13.9% y/y from 9.9% y/y in the previous estimate.

In Q3, despite notable recoveries in agriculture (0.4% y/y) and mining (3.0% y/y) after consecutive contractions in the first half of the year, these improvements were not enough to offset the overall contraction in GDP growth. The construction sector also performed strongly, expanding by 13.0% y/y, up from 9.4% y/y in Q2, driven by ongoing infrastructure projects. However, several key sectors remained under pressure. Electricity supply recorded a sharp contraction of 44.3% y/y in Q3, worsening from a 15.4% y/y decline in Q2. This was accompanied by a significant downturn in water supply (-36.7% y/y), reflecting the continued impact of drought on utilities. We note that state-owner power utility, ZESCO recen