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Anglo American to sell Australian Callide coal mine

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callide coal mine

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – Global mining firm Anglo American will sell its Callide coal mine in Australia to Batchfire Resources, it said on Wednesday.

“The transaction will be effected via a sale of shares in the subsidiary companies holding Anglo American’s interest in Callide,” the company said in a statement.

Anglo said the terms of the deal were confidential.

The company announced a major restructuring in December, saying it would offload three-fifths of its assets as it attempts to tackle sliding commodities prices.

Callide, an open pit thermal coal mine that produced 5.6 million tonnes in the first nine months of 2015, is one of four Australian coal mines the company plans to sell.

Anglo announced last month it would sell its majority interest in Dartbrook coal mine to Australian Pacific Coal Ltd in a deal worth up to A$50 million ($34 million).

The company is scheduled to give more details on its future global portfolio in February.

The overhaul at Anglo American highlights the scale of the fallout from the commodities slide, which is forcing mining companies across the board to cut jobs, investment and costs.

($1 = 1.4571 Australian dollars)

 

(Reporting by Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo; editing by Susan Thomas)

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Zambia’s kwacha weakens on low dollar supply

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LUSAKA (Reuters) – Zambia’s kwacha weakened more than 1 percent on Tuesday on tight dollar supply, sending the currency of Africa’s second-largest copper producer down 1.25 percent to 11.25 per dollar by 1302 GMT.

“Scant dollar inflows continue being snapped up by interbank and corporate players and is likely to sustain pressure on the kwacha in the near term,” Zambia’s National Commercial Bank said in a note.

 

 

(Reporting by Chris Mfula; Writing by Nqobile Dludla; Editing by James Macharia)

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Strong India, Africa demand lifts South Africa 2015 coal exports

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RICHARDS BAY, South Africa (Reuters) – Coal exports from South Africa’s Richards Bay Coal Terminal (RBTC) rose by 5.7 percent to 75.4 million tonnes in 2015 helped by demand in Africa and India.

Africa’s largest coal export facility, a major supplier to Europe and Asia, RBCT had set a target of 75 million tonnes and aims for similar results in 2016.

“Its going to be hard to beat 75 million tonnes, because of where prices are sitting this year,” Chief Executive Nosipho Siwisa-Damasane told a news conference.

Shipments to Africa and India rose sharply, offsetting a fall in demand from Europe and from China, where RBTC said it did not send a single vessel in 2015.

Coal prices have tumbled in recent years due to a glut of supply and weaker demand growth, pushing some producers to curtail activity, sell or shut coal mines.

RBCT, which moves the commodity on behalf of producers and shareholders such as Exxaro and Anglo American, said it had shelved expansions plans due to weak prices.

RBTC had planned to increase its capacity to 110 million tonnes from 91 million tonnes.

 

 

(By Zandi Shabalala. Reporting by Zandi Shabalala; editing by James Macharia and Jason Neely)

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Kenya’s new car sales jump 12.86% in 2015:

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NAIROBI (Reuters) – Kenya’s new car sales increased by 12.86 percent last year to 19,524 units, the Kenya Motor Industry Association said on Monday.

Rita Kavashe, who chairs the association, told Reuters in November that growth was driven by demand for light trucks used to distribute goods and carry construction materials.

 

(Reporting by Duncan Miriri; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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Morocco trade deficit falls 18.7% in 2015

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RABAT (Reuters) – Morocco’s trade deficit fell 18.7 percent to 152.27 billion dirhams ($15.43 billion) in 2015 compared with a year earlier, thanks to lower import costs and higher exports, the foreign exchange regulator said on Friday.

Energy imports fell by 28 percent from a year earlier to 66.84 billion dirhams, data showed. Wheat imports also fell 32.6 percent as the local harvest hit a record high last year.

Total imports fell 5.6 percent and total exports rose 6.7 percent from a year earlier to 214.27 billion dirhams, led by a 21 percent rise in auto exports and 16.3 percent hike in phosphate sales.

Exports covered 58.5 percent of imports for the first time in 10 years, the regulator said.

Tourism receipts dropped 1.4 percent to 58.51 billion dirhams, while remittances from the 4.5 million Moroccans living abroad rose 3 percent to 61.75 billion dirhams.

Foreign direct investment jumped 6.7 percent to 39 billion dirhams.

 

Figures are in billions of dirhams:

 

Jan-Dec Jan-Dec Jan-Nov

2015 2014 2015

EXPORTS 214.27 200.80 195.29

IMPORTS 366.53 388.08 335.32

BALANCE -152.27 -187.27 -140.02

MIGRANT

REMITTANCES 61.75 59.97 56.68

TOURISM

RECEIPTS 58.51 59.31 54.66

FOREIGN DIRECT

INVESTMENT 39.01 36.55 33.96

 

($1 = 9.8654 Moroccan dirham)

 

(Reporting by Aziz El Yaakoubi; Editing by Alison Williams)

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Crude oil falls as market braces for more Iranian oil

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TOKYO (Reuters) – U.S. crude oil futures fell in Asian trade on Friday, heading lower after posting the first significant gains for 2016 in the previous session, as the prospect of additional Iranian supply looms over the market.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) was down 48 cents at $30.72 a barrel at 0345 GMT. On Thursday the contract rose 72 cents, or 2.4 percent, to settle at $31.20. It hit a 12-year low of $29.93 earlier this week.

WTI is on track to post a third consecutive weekly loss, down more than 6 percent. The contract is down nearly 18 percent from a 2016 high on January 4.

Brent crude was down 20 cents at $30.68 a barrel. The global benchmark settled up 72 cents, or 2.4 percent, at $31.03 a barrel on Thursday, after falling to $29.73, its weakest since February 2004.

Over the previous eight sessions, Brent had lost about $7 a barrel, almost 20 percent.

Western sanctions on Iran are expected to be lifted within days, potentially paving the way for more crude oil exports from the country, under a landmark agreement on Tehran’s disputed nuclear programme.

“This is three or four months ahead of what the market was thinking last year, so it just adds fuel to the fire,” said Tony Nunan, Oil risk Manager, Mitsubishi Corp in Tokyo.

Iran has removed the sensitive core of its Arak nuclear reactor and U.N. inspectors will visit the site on Thursday to verify the move crucial to the implementation of the atomic agreement with major powers, state television said on Thursday.

Any additional oil from Iran would add to the glut that has pushed oil prices into a deep slump since the middle of 2014.

“It is the wrong time for Iran to be returning to the oil market, both for the market and likely also for Iran,” Phillip Futures said in a note on Friday.

“It would have been so much more ideal for Iran to return to the oil scene if prices were soaring at $100,” it said.

 

 

(By Aaron Sheldrick. Reporting by Aaron Sheldrick; Editing by Richard Pullin)

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Nigeria stocks hit 3-1/2-year low as funds sell on naira woes

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LAGOS (Reuters) – Nigeria’s share index tumbled 3.4 percent on Thursday and hit its lowest point in almost 3-1/2 years, spooked by the weak outlook for the currency, traders said.

The share index, which has the second-biggest weighting after Kuwait on the MSCI frontier market index, has fallen for five straight days, sliding below the psychologically important 25,000 point line not seen since September 2012.

At the market close, the index was down 3.4 percent at 24,239 points. The index has dropped 12.4 percent in the first nine days of trading this year.

Currency and stock markets in Africa’s biggest economy have been hit hard by the fall in the price of crude oil, Nigeria’s main export, which has slashed government revenues and triggered an exit of foreign investors.

“From what foreign investors are telling us, when they have confidence in the naira/dollar exchange rate they can then make investment decisions,” Oscar Onyema, CEO of the Nigerian Stock Exchange told Reuters.

The naira has dived 34 percent on the black market compared with its official level of 197 after the central bank stopped dollar sales to retail currency outlets. The move has intensified speculation that Africa’s top oil producer will have to formally devalue its currency soon.

Onyema said the bourse expected 2016 to be challenging for the market after the index shed 17.4 percent last year with losses continuing into this year, as oil prices plunged and the domestic economy faltered.

Foreign buyers, who accounted for 54 percent of trading volumes, were on the sidelines owing to the lack of clarity on Nigeria’s forex policy, highlighting naira weakness as a deterrent to a market rally in 2016, he said.

The index of Nigeria’s top 10 banks fell 4.69 percent to lead the bourse lower. Top decliners included Seplat, Oando, Guaranty Trust Bank and FBN Holdings all down more than 9 percent.

“With crude oil prices down, accretion to FX reserves is out of the question … putting investors on red alert. The central bank may not be able to meet all the demand for FX even if it were to devalue,” said Ayodeji Ebo, head of research at Afrinvest.

 

(Reporting by Chijioke Ohuocha and Oludare Mayowa; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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Kenya aims to cut external, fiscal deficits

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NAIROBI (Reuters) – Kenya’s economy is expected to grow 6.1 percent in 2016 and the government wants to trim ballooning budget and current account deficits to steady the economy, its finance minister said on Thursday.

Kenya, East Africa’s biggest economy, set a budget deficit target of 8.7 percent for the 2015/2016 fiscal year starting July, unnerving some investors who were also uneasy about Kenya’s current account deficit, which stood at above 8 percent.

The current account deficit was fuelled by a growth of imports like oil and consumer goods which was not matched by growth in exports. The budget deficit swelled due to increased spending on infrastructure projects and local government units created in 2013.

Officials and investors say the government has to deal with the deficits to boost investor confidence and stave off instability in the currency and borrowing rates. The shilling lost 11 percent against the dollar in 2015, but faired better than most African currencies.

Finance Minister Henry Rotich said the global slump in the price of crude oil had helped the country’s current account deficit to improve due to a lower import bill.

“With the measures we are taking to cut the fiscal deficit, the twin deficits will obviously go down,” he told Reuters by phone.

“We are aiming at around 6.5 percent (current account deficit) and also getting our fiscal deficit, including grants, coming down to about 4.5 percent.”

The Treasury wants to start attaining those targets from the next fiscal year and into the medium-term, Rotich added.

He said Kenya was reviewing all government ministries’ expenditure plans for this fiscal year with a view to cutting unnecessary items and reducing borrowing.

“By the end of this month we will have known what savings we are likely to achieve from the exercise,” he said, adding the measures will be contained in a supplementary budget to be taken to parliament for approval.

Growth was expected to be 6.1 percent this year, slightly up from last year’s projection of about 5.8 percent. Rotich said growth will be driven by public investments in infrastructure, a recovery in tourism and farming.

“We are still seeing infrastructure supporting the growth. Construction remains strong. We see recovery of tourism boosting that. With the favourable weather, we see agriculture will also be strong,” he said.

The government is investing in a Chinese-built 327 billion shilling ($3.2 billion) modern railway, tarmac roads and power plants. Tourists have started to return to the country’s beaches and game reserves after key Western markets like Britain lifted travel warnings.

The warnings had been put in place after a string of attacks by al Shabaab militants from neighbouring Somalia.

Rotich said the main risks to Kenya’s growth outlook were global developments including any slowdown in the Chinese economy, the direction of the oil price and U.S. interest rates.

“The risks continue to be external developments. It has become difficult to get a full feel of forecasts for global economic developments,” he said, adding the main risk at home was any adverse weather like poor rainfall.

 

(By Duncan Miriri. Editing by Drazen Jorgic)

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Nigeria approves $200 million World Bank loan for projects in Lagos

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ABUJA (Reuters) – Nigeria’s government has approved a $200 million loan from a World Bank agency to develop infrastructure in Lagos state, its commercial hub, the minister for works, power and housing said on Wednesday.

The loan was the second tranche of a total of $600 million lent by the International Development Association to the Nigeria government for Lagos state since 2010, Babatunde Fashola said.

Lagos, a mega-city of 21 million people in the state of the same name, is the commercial engine of Africa’s biggest economy. Its gross domestic product accounts for about a third of Nigeria’s overall GDP.

Fashola, who did not give details of any projects for which the loan would be used, said the money had been intended for distribution in three tranches each of $200 million to end in 2013 but had been delayed.

“It suffered delays as a result of partisan political differences in the last dispensation. After the first tranche was disbursed there was a freeze on the second tranche,” he told reporters.

Fashola said the loan was to be repaid over 25 years at an interest rate of 2.5 percent.

 

(Reporting by Felix Onuah; Writing by Alexis Akwagyiram; Editing by Chijioke Ohuocha, Larry King)

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Ugandan shilling extends losses as banks seek dollars

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KAMPALA (Reuters) – Uganda’s shilling extended losses on Wednesday as banks sought to cover short dollar positions amid uncertainty before next month’s presidential election and traders also cited an excess in local currency liquidity.

By 0948 GMT, commercial banks quoted the shilling at 3,475/3,485, compared with Tuesday’s close of 3,450/3,460. The shilling has lost nearly 3 percent of its value against the dollar so far this year.

“There’s general uncertainty being generated by the coming election so there’s a lot of speculation-driven demand by banks to cover short positions,” said Shahzad Kamaluddin, a trader at Crane Bank. He also noted a lot of shilling liquidity.

The presidential election is due on Feb. 18, and some analysts are concerned about possible vote-related violence.

 

 

 

(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by Edmund Blair)

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