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Zimbabwe to present new IMF financing programme by November

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HARARE (Reuters) – Zimbabwe will present a financing programme to the International Monetary Fund by November this year after clearing its arrears, opening the door to receiving its first loan from the Fund in nearly two decades, the finance minister said on Friday.

Patrick Chinamasa told reporters that he was optimistic an IMF executive board meeting on May 2. would accept Zimbabwe’s plan to pay $110 million in arrears to the Fund.

Another $1.7 billion would then be paid to the African Development Bank and World Bank.

Zimbabwe has not received a loan from the IMF since 1999.

President Robert Mugabe agreed last month to major reforms, including compensation for evicted white farmers and a big reduction in public sector wages. Those reforms are expected to be part of a new financing programme.

“Between September and November Zimbabwe will work feverishly to come up with a new country financing programme, on the basis of which we hope, if we clear our arrears, we should get new financing,” Chinamasa said.

Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya said on March 16. he expects a loan from the IMF in the third quarter of this year, after paying off foreign lenders by the end of June.

 

(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by James Macharia)

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South Africa’s former finmin Nene appointed as advisor at Thebe Investment

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JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – Former finance minister Nhlanhla Nene has been appointed as an advisor at Thebe Investment Corporation to help roll-out the firm’s growth plan, his second private sector job in a week.

Nene said on Thursday in an interview with Business Day TV that his appointment will be full-time for a term of two years effective from next month.

“This is interesting that I find myself in the public sector again,” he said.

“It’s going to be an interesting journey and provide me with an interesting opportunity of finding a symbiotic relationship between the private sector and public sector.”

On Monday, Asset management group Allan Gray appointed Nene as a non-executive director, hoping to tap his strategic and leadership skills.

President Jacob Zuma fired Nene, who was keen to rein in government spending in Africa’s most industrialised economy, in December, replacing him with little-known David van Rooyen.

Days later, Zuma appointed Pravin Gordhan as finance minister, giving South Africa its third finance chief in a week after a selling frenzy in the markets.

 

(Reporting by Nqobile Dludla; Editing by James Macharia)

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South Africa expects jump in maize imports due to drought – minister

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CAPE TOWN (Reuters) – With two weeks left in the current marketing season, drought-hit South Africa has imported 1.732 million tonnes of yellow maize and 72,000 tonnes of white maize in line with expectations, the agriculture minister said on Thursday.

The country will significantly increase imports in the next season when 2.4 million tonnes of yellow maize and 1.9 million tonnes of white maize will be shipped to its shores, Agriculture Minister Senzeni Zokwana told parliament.

(Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by James Macharia)

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Orange completes acquisition of Congo mobile operator Tigo DRC

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DAKAR (Reuters) – Orange has completed the $160 million acquisition of Democratic of Congo mobile operator subsidiary Tigo DRC from Millicom, the French company said on Thursday, one of four African purchases it has made this year.

“With a population of more than 80 million people and a relatively low mobile penetration rate of 50 percent of the population, the country offers considerable growth potential,” Bruno Mettling, deputy chief executive officer of Orange, said in a statement.

This month it completed the acquisition of Cellcom, Liberia’s leading mobile operator, and in January it announced a deal to buy Indian firm Airtel’s Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone subsidiaries.

 

(Reporting by Marine Pennetier; editing by Edward McAllister and Jason Neely)

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Investors want answers from Mozambique, banks over loan mystery

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LONDON (Reuters) – Investors holding Mozambique’s recently restructured ‘tuna bond’ are demanding answers from the government and its bankers over what the International Monetary Fund says are previously undisclosed loans that could exceed $1 billion.

The revelations have rocked the relationship between one of the world’s poorest countries and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which last year agreed to lend Mozambique $286 million to cushion its economy following deep declines in commodity prices and the value of the metical currency.

Only last month investors met Mozambican officials and agreed to swap an outstanding $697 million of the dollar-denominated tuna bond, issued in 2013 by state-owned fishing-company Ematum, for a sovereign issue.

The deal was seen widely as investor friendly and accepted by holders representing more than 80 percent of the issue. Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s defined the restructuring as “tantamount to a default”.

The original $850 million bond has been controversial from the start: when it was launched, it was presented to investors as funding for “fishing infrastructure” but it quickly became apparent most of the cash was for defence.

Under IMF pressure, the government re-allocated $500 million of the debt to its defence budget. The subsequent bond rescheduling was part of efforts to clean up and rebuild trust for the southern African nation, under pressure from donors to improve the transparency of its finances.

However, last Friday the IMF said it believed Maputo borrowed $1 billion more than previously disclosed.

The Fund’s Africa Director, Antoinette Sayeh, said the additional loans appeared to have been borrowed from Credit Suisse and Russia’s VTB Bank and allocated to Mozambique’s defense and security sector.

Credit Suisse and VTB Bank were also joint dealer managers on the exchange offer launched in March. Mozambique’s Finance Minister Adriano Maleiane was quoted on Sunday saying the country had no hidden loans and that this was down to “some confusion”.

Investors say if found to be true, the IMF allegations could greatly damage the country’s reputation and ability to raise funds.

“At this stage, things are really up in the air until we hear from the various parties of what is really going on,” said one fund manager, who holds the bond but declined to be named. “If this is additional debt which was not included in the overall debt stock it completely changes the overall relationship with the international financial institutions’ community, the IMF, the donor community and it changes the market relationship. There is a lot of harm created in the short term.”

Details of the alleged new loans are sketchy and have not been disclosed in the prospectus to holders of the new bond issue.

However, a February 2013 Credit Suisse document obtained by Reuters outlines a $372 million loan to Proindicus, a company owned by the Ministries of Interior and Defence and the State Security and Intelligence Service. According to the document, the funds are to be spent on high-speed naval interceptors, radar stations, off-shore patrol vessels and aircraft. Credit Suisse declined to comment on the document.

The Ematum bond swap prospectus seen by Reuters also notes under “conflicts of interest” that the dealer managers may make loans or be involved in other transactions to Mozambique.

Marco Ruijer, portfolio manager at NN Investment Partners, who also holds the bond said he had addressed questions to Credit Suisse.

“It was perhaps not prudent of Credit Suisse to say we are doing restructuring to extend maturity from 2020 to 2023 when they themselves have a loan on the books which is maturing before 2023,” said Ruijer. “Now they get money back earlier than the bondholders.”

A Credit Suisse spokesman declined to comment on whether the bank had arranged loans for Mozambique in addition to the Ematum bond.

A source closed to VTB said the bank was assured by Mozambique’s finance ministry that all its financing had been disclosed to the IMF, and that the total debt spelled out in the prospectus included all outstanding direct and publicly guaranteed debt.

Mozambique has seen its foreign debt spiral in recent years. According to the restructuring prospectus, total foreign direct and government-guaranteed debt ballooned from $5.244 billion in 2012 – before the Ematum bond issue – to $9.637 billion in 2015. Combined with domestic debt of $1.5 billion, the government had obligations last year equivalent to 102 percent of GDP, the document said.

 

(By Karin Strohecker. Additional reporting by Sujata Rao in London, Ed Cropley in Johannesburg and Lidia Kelly in Moscow; Editing by Dominic Evans)

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Burundi’s inflation eases to 4.3% in March

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KIGALI (Reuters) – Burundi’s year-on-year inflation eased to 4.3 percent in March from 6.7 percent in February due to falling food costs, official data showed on Wednesday.

Food inflation in the 12 months to March slowed to 6.4 percent from 10.9 percent in February, the country’s Institute of Economic Studies and Statistics (ISTEEBU) said.

Despite falling inflation, the economy has been battered by a year-long political crisis and associated violence, mainly in the capital. Western donors have reduced vital aid leaving the poor nation more dependent on its modest tea and coffee exports.

Burundi’s economy shrank by 7.2 percent in 2015 and is only expected to expand by 3.4 percent in 2016, according to the International Monetary Fund in a recent report.

 

 

(Reporting by Patrick Nduwimana; Writing by Edmund Blair, editing by David Evans)

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Kenya KCB Group to manage and may buy closed Chase Bank

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NAIROBI (Reuters) – Kenya’s KCB Group has been appointed to manage Chase Bank and could buy a majority stake in the closed lender whose branches will reopen next week, the central bank said on Wednesday.

The Central Bank of Kenya said in a statement that an understanding had been reached with KCB on “modalities to reopen Chase Bank Ltd in the next few days and the eventual acquisition of a majority stake in the bank.” It said KCB would carry out due diligence to inform its decision on taking a stake.

Central Bank of Kenya Governor Patrick Njoroge told a news conference he had received nine indications of interest in the mid-sized lender that was put into receivership this month.

 

 

(Reporting by Duncan Miriri; Writing by Edmund Blair; Editing by George Obulutsa)

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South Africa’s rand weakens as oil price retreats

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JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – South Africa’s rand weakened against the dollar on Wednesday, in line with a pullback in commodity currencies as the global oil price fell one more.

The rand fell to 14.3750 versus the dollar earlier in the session, and was trading at 14.3015 by 0656 GMT, 0.2 percent lower than Tuesday’s New York close.

Commodity-linked currencies such as the rand reversed the previous day’s gains as a recovery in crude oil prices stalled after a workers’ strike which had cut output ended in Kuwait.

The rand had touched a near five-month high of 14.1900 on Tuesday in the wake of improved global risk sentiment linked to better oil prices.

“Commodities are off their highs from yesterday and trade softer so far; this has seen the rand get back above 14.3500 with more resistance at 14.4000/4100 likely to attract offers first up,” said Standard Bank trader Oliver Alwar.

Traders and analysts said the rand could take further direction from domestic CPI data due out at 0800 GMT, with analysts polled by Reuters expecting the main year-on-year number to ease to 6.3 percent from 7 percent.

Government bonds also weakened, and the yield for the benchmark instrument due in 2026 rose 4 basis points to 8.925 percent.

The stock market looked set to open slightly down, with the

Top-40 futures index down 0.5 percent by 0656 GMT.

 

(Reporting by Tanisha Heiberg; Editing by Stella Mapenzauswa)

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Sinosteel cedes half its chrome claims in Zimbabwe to state

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HARARE (Reuters) – China’s Sinosteel Corp Ltd’s business in Zimbabwe has ceded half its mining claims to the government, complying with Harare’s demands to chrome producers to give up some of their claims, a company official said on Tuesday.

The Southern African nation holds the world’s second largest deposits of chrome, which is smelted to produce ferrochrome, a raw material used in the making of stainless steel.

Zimbabwe’s mines minister last year asked Sinosteel’s Zimasco and Zimbabwe Alloys, which owned 80 percent of all chrome mining claims, to release some ground for distribution to new investors. The companies were owned by Anglo American until 2006.

The government has previously said it wants to redistribute some claims to several local investors as part of its black economic empowerment drive and would not pay compensation.

Zimasco held 45,900 hectares of claims before giving up half to the government, Clara Sadomba, the company’s general manager for administration told Reuters.

“It is accurate regarding Zimasco in that we have indeed ceded 50 percent of our chrome claims to the government,” said Sadomba.

Zimbabwe Alloys officials would not say whether they had also given up some of the company’s claims.

Zimbabwe holds more than 950 million in chrome reserves, according to ministry of mines data.

In 2014 Zimbabwe produced 260,000 tonnes of high-carbon ferrochrome, which was 2.3 percent of global output. Zimasco produced 68 percent of Zimbabwe’s ferrochrome in 2014.

 

(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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France signed deals worth 2 bil Euros with Egypt

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PARIS (Reuters) – France signed several deals worth about 2 billion euros ($2.26 billion) with Egypt during a visit by French President Francois Hollande to Cairo, the French president’s office said on Monday.

The deals included a satellite communications contract agreed upon following discussions between the two presidents and their defence ministries, the Elysee said.

The military telecommunications satellite is expected to be build by France’s Airbus Space Systems et Thales Alenia Space.

French energy Engie firm said earlier that it also signed LNG and renewable energy contracts during the visit.

 

(Reporting by Elizabeth Pineau and Jean-Baptiste Vey; Writing by Bate Felix; Editing by Sandra Maler)

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