Good morning, friends. After so much macro and gnashing of teeth in the past few months, your Thursday morning read is packed with corporate announcements.
In the news well: EFG Hermes is said to be fundraising for Vortex, its high-profile renewable energy fund, Raya is making a smart play to up its stake in Ostool, B Investments’ board is going ahead with its bid for Orascom Financial, and the red-hot securitization market shows no sign of flagging heading into the final days of the year.
In Also on our Radar: There’s a gentle current of optimism running through the news. Majid Al Futtaim is looking to invest some EGP 5.7 bn to open 50 new Carrefour branches and 144 branches of wholesale grocery Supeco. Beltone Mortgage Finance is aggressively raising its capital, signaling confidence in its quick-turnaround mortgage product that could help breathe life into a frozen secondary market. And Sky Investments is lining up an EGP 3 bn facility to finance the buildout of a real estate project in the Fifth Settlement.
BEFORE YOU READ anything else this morning: Benedict Evans is back with his annual presentation on the macro and strategic trends he thinks will shape technology and business in the new year. Evans rose to prominence at Andreessen Horowitz and now runs his own consultancy — and is a sharp presence on Threads, for those so inclined.
His AI-focused deck this year has few answers, and plenty of questions — many of them worth pondering regardless of the industry in which you do business. Among the questions and takeaways:
- The tech venture space is slowing down across the board — except within AI
- Finance and tech executives are pushing hardest to figure out what AI means for their businesses. Retail and professional services execs are lagging behind.
- Nobody knows what’s next: Is this a platform shift? Does generative AI change the nature of software? Does it take us to artificial general intelligence?
^^ The presentation is at its best when it’s unpacking all the questions within those last three questions. It’s worth an hour of your time this morning to read the presentation (87 easy-to-read slides) and then watch Evans deliver it in this video recorded earlier this month (watch, runtime: 27:40).
HOTEL BOOKINGS REBOUND-
Hotel bookings in Egypt + the Middle East are rebounding -Accor: Bookings in the region are rebounding after an initial freeze that followed Israel’s invasion of Gaza in October, with occupancy rates in Egypt holding strong, Accor CEO Sébastien Bazin tells Bloomberg. The hospitality giant saw heavy cancellations during the “total panic” of the first few weeks after the outbreak of hostilities, but this was “very, very short-lived, he said. “The occupancy we have today in Sharm el-Sheikh, in Cairo, and many other places has been very, very strong.”
Remember: Business for our tourism sector has remained steady despite the war on Gaza, with Tourism Minister Ahmed Issa still expecting we will hit our target of bringing a record 15 mn tourists into the country this year.
COMMODITY CRUNCH-
Coping with the commodities crisis: Prime Minister Moustafa Madbouly held “intensive talks” yesterday with a number of ministers and senior officials to lay out his government’s response plan spiraling prices and short supply of a number of basic commodities including sugar and onions.
The goal, per a cabinet readout: Short-term price stability. Here’s the rundown:
- Clear definitions: Cabinet will finalize and issue a list of what, exactly, constitutes a “basic commodity” at any given time;
- The Supply Ministry will take steps to improve the supply of those goods in the market. The statement didn’t say whether the ministry would tap strategic reserves or import more to address the gaps.
- Are you hoarding? Price gouging? Government inspectors are going to be making more visits to wholesalers and retailers alike.
PSA- The blackouts are back: With the election over, the four-day respite from blackouts is officially at a close. Expect two hours of power cuts a day from here on out, Electricity Ministry sources tell Al Mal.
HAPPENING TODAY-
#1- Deadline day for brownfield mining bid round: Companies have until 12 pm today to bidfor five brownfield gold concessions in the Eastern Desert from the state-owned Shalateen Mining Resources Company. Another 13 exploration concessions will also soon be up for grabs at the start of next year, a government source recently told Enterprise.
Another extension could be in the cards: The government will wait until the end of submissions to determine whether to extend the deadline for a third time, our source said.
#2- The Food Africa Expo concludes today: The three-day trade show in Cairo has hosted b2b networking and taste-testing between F&B players from 30 countries around the Middle East and Africa.
#3- Hopes for yet more trade with KSA: Egyptian manufacturers have spent the week in Jeddah vying for more orders on pumps, car parts, and other engineered goods from Saudi Arabia, the largest importer for our engineering sector. The trip, organized by Egypt’s Engineering Export Council, wraps tomorrow.
#4- El Gouna Film Festival kicks off today after having been postponed from its original October date. In response to the catastrophe unfolding in Gaza, this year’s edition will also feature a program of Palestinian cinema in collaboration with the Palestine Film Institute.
HAPPENING THIS WEEK-
Negotiators are giving GERD talks another go: Efforts to find a breakthrough in the so far intractable GERD dispute will resume in the Ethiopian capital on 16-18 December.

THE BIG STORIES ABROAD-
#1- Fed signals pivot to rate cuts, sparking market rally: Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday that the US central bank’s tightening cycle is “likely at or near its peak,” and that officials are now discussing the prospect of lowering interest rates from their current 22-year high, Financial Times reports. As expected, the central bank held the fed funds rate unchanged at 5.25-5.5% in the wake of inflation data that showed price growth moving closer to the 2% target in November, despite indications of persisting underlying pressures.
Fed officials penciled in no further rate hikes in their projections — the first time they’ve done so since March 2021, boosting traders’ predictions of a reduction in March to “a near certainty,” according to Bloomberg.
Officials expect to lower rates by 75 bps in 2024, and expect them to fall to 3.5-3.75% by 2025, according to the Fed’s “dot plot” (pdf). This is a bigger drop than analysts expected, as a recent poll saw economists predicting that the Fed would only trim rates by half a percentage point or less in 2024.
What analysts said: “His presser certainly had a tone of finality to it,” one economist told Bloomberg. “Jerome Powell seems to be done taking the punch bowl away,” said another. “It’s a big change in the language that indicates policymakers see less need to aggressively tighten.”
Cue huge market rally:
- US stocks rallied: The Dow Jones closed at a record high of 37k, while the benchmark S&P 500 gained 1.4% to close at its highest level since January 2022.
- Bond yields tanked: The two-year treasury yield recorded its biggest daily fall since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March.
- Gold popped: The precious metal gained 2.7%.
- The greenback fell: The USD fell to a four-month low.
- BTC spiked: The cryptocurrency jumped as much as 4% to more than USD 43k.
Powell’s presser is already having an effect here at home: The surge in the international gold price pushed local gold prices to record highs. The price of 24 karat gold rose 1.4% to EGP3,234 per gram yesterday, leaving it almost 70% higher year-to-date.
** It’s the CBE’s turn next week: The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) is scheduled to convene for its final meeting of 2023 next Thursday, 21 December.
The news is dominating the global business news agenda this morning:Reuters | Bloomberg | Financial Times | New York Times | Wall Street Journal | CNBC.
IN OTHER BUSINESS NEWS-
- Bad day for Tesla: The EV giant has been forced to recall almost all 2 mn of its cars on the road in the US to patch the safety features of its autopilot system. (Reuters)
- Argentina’s Chicago boy starts the shock therapy: Argentina’s currency plunged more than 50% yesterday, as the country’s new libertarian president Javier Milei kicked off his (slightly less) radical reform agenda, which includes slashing government spending (but doesn’t include burning the central bank to the ground). (Reuters)
- SBF’s lawyer breaks silence on his client: “He may be at the very top of the list as the worst person I’ve ever seen do a cross examination.” (Bloomberg)
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WAR ECONOMICS-
#1- The cost of the war on Israel’s neighbors: Egypt, Lebanon and Jordan could suffer an economic blow of at least USD 10 bn from the ongoing war in Gaza, according to a UN study picked up by Reuters. The three countries could together lose USD 10.3 bn (equivalent to around 2.3% of GDP), an amount that could double if the fighting continues for another six months.
#2- Ships are rerouting away from the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden amid increasing attacksonvessels by the Houthis, according to S&P Global. Companies are tightening security measures, with some choosing to transit around Africa to avoid the risk of attack, despite prolonging their journeys by around two weeks. Ins. rates have also climbed as the Houthis warned last week that they would expand their target to all ships heading to Israel, regardless of their nationality.
Another vessel came under attack yesterday near the Bab El Mandeb strait: Two missiles fired from a Houthi stronghold in Yemen narrowly missed a commercial tanker heading to the Suez Canal and carrying Indian-manufactured jet fuel, the Associated Press reported.




