World Bank Group President Ajay Banga kicked off the IMF and World Bank Group’s spring meetings last Thursday with a press conference at which he talked about challenges facing the global economy and how the group plans to expand its role in addressing them (watch, runtime: 34:26).
G20 wants the WB Group to play a larger role on the global scale: Banga touched on some of the most-talked-about global issues including climate change, food insecurity, pandemics, poverty, and scarce resources, saying that “G20 leaders challenged the World Bank Group to change and to be a bigger part of the solution,” with the bloc providing a roadmap of 27 recommendation for the group to boost the speed and simplicity of its processes, “leveraging our [the group’s] balance sheet, engaging partners and the private sector.
More bucks for more bang: The group has liberated USD 40 bn over the past 10 years from its balance sheet by adjusting its loan to equity ratio to be able to take part in more projects with bigger investments. The group plans to use some of its tools including the portfolio guarantee mechanism, and the hybrid capital instrument “ to leverage every USD we receive, six to eight times over the coming decade,” Banga explained.
A new fund for cross-border projects: Earlier this month, the group “began offering 50-year financing through IBRD at no additional cost for projects that provide cross-border benefits,” said Banga, adding that the group has launched a “Livable Planet Fund that can be funded by governments, but also by philanthropies,” to finance these new incentives. “All these instruments, what they do is they help us support the ambitions of middle-income countries, but we must do all we can to lift up lower-income countries,” he highlighted.
Mobilizing funds for lower-income countries: The IDA replenishment is coming up at the end of 2024 and the group is aiming to pool together generous funds to refill the association’s coffers. “IDA is the largest source of concessional financing for lower-income countries,” said Banga.
Data openness to encourage private investment in developing economies: “Last month, we started to publish our proprietary data as a global public good to kind of inspire investor confidence,” said Banga, explaining that the group started by publishing private sector data by country income level, private sector default data categorized by credit rating, and sovereign default and recovery rate statistics dating back to 1985.
THE MARKETS THIS MORNING-
Holding steady? Traders around the world seem to be taking Iran’s missile and drone attack on Israel — unprecedented though it may be — with a grain of salt:
- US stock futures ticked up overnight and European futures inched down ever so slightly. All three major US indexes closed down last week;
- Gold and oil prices — both on an upward march of late, with gold having hit another all-time high last week — pulled back slightly yesterday;
- The USD is holding steady and BTC strengthened overnight.
HAPPENING NOW- Major Asian benchmarks are down across the board this morning. The Shanghai Composite is taking it in stride, off 0.3% in early trading, while the Hang Seng, Kospi, and Nikkei are all down 1.1-1.3%
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EGX30 |
28,504 |
+1.3% (YTD: +14.5%) |
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USD (CBE) |
Buy 47.52 |
Sell 47.66 |
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USD (CIB) |
Buy 47.50 |
Sell 46.60 |
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Interest rates (CBE) |
27.25% deposit |
28.25% lending |
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Tadawul |
12,667 |
-0.3% (YTD: +5.9%) |
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ADX |
9,237 |
0.0% (YTD: -3.6%) |
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DFM |
4,244 |
-0.1% (YTD: +4.5%) |
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S&P 500 |
5,123 |
-1.5% (YTD: +7.4%) |
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FTSE 100 |
7,996 |
+0.9% (YTD: +3.4%) |
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Euro Stoxx 50 |
4,955 |
-0.2% (YTD: +9.6%) |
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Brent crude |
USD 90.45 |
+0.8% |
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Natural gas (Nymex) |
USD 1.77 |
+0.3% |
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Gold |
USD 2,374.70 |
+0.1% |
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BTC |
USD 64,251.30 |
+1.9% (YTD: +50.8%) |
THE CLOSING BELL-
The EGX30 closed with a 1.3% gain last Monday on turnover of EGP 2.3 bn (53.9% above the 90-day average). Local investors were net buyers. The index is up 14.5% YTD.
In the green: Alexandria Containers and Cargo Handling (+12.0%), Juhayna (+4.6%), and Ibnsina Pharma (+4.4%).
In the red: Qalaa Holdings (-0.4%), GB Corp (-0.3%), and Fawry (-0.1%).