Good afternoon, folks, and congratulations on making it to the weekend — and if you’ve cashed in your PTO for Sunday and Monday, happy early Eid break. It’s a cool (and calm) day in Cairo, and we’ve got an issue to match. Today, we’re breaking down Swatch’s ingenious marketing strategy after making headlines for shutting its stores this week, revisiting a 2008 melodrama that had us reaching for the Kleenex, listing all the footie we’re watching this weekend, and more.
But first, the news…
THE BIG STORY ABROAD-
🌐 No single story is getting top billing, with a hodge-podge of headlines dominating the front pages this afternoon. Still getting plenty of ink, however, is SpaceX’s historic IPO — hailed as the largest IPO in history — as the aerospace giant filed its prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Commission last night, paving the way for a global roadshow starting 4 June. The company is eyeing a 12 June Nasdaq debut at a USD 1.75 tn valuation, with expected proceeds of USD 70-75 bn — more than double the USD 29.4 bn record set by Saudi Aramco in 2019. If the IPO achieves its target, the world’s richest man — Elon Musk — could become its first t’naire.
SpaceX, the world’s leading rocket maker and a major US government contractor, confidentially filed for an IPO last month, giving regulators time to review the offering before its public reveal. “Our mission is to build the systems and technologies necessary to make life multiplanetary, to understand the true nature of the universe, and to extend the light of consciousness to the stars,” SpaceX declared in its filing.
^^Read more on: AP News, The Guardian, Reuters, and BBC.
Also making the rounds in the business press is AI giant Nvidia’s shares falling by 1.6% in after-hours trading after failing to wow skeptical investors despite positive results. Now the world’s most valuable company, with a market capitalization hovering around USD 5.3 tn, Nvidia saw its shares dip in extended trading amid what analysts described as the inevitable pressure of scale. With the chip giant now accounting for roughly 8% of the S&P 500, some investors are no longer reacting to strong results alone, but instead looking for signs of continued hypergrowth.
^^Read more on: Financial Times, BBC, and Bloomberg.
MEANWHILE- In a departure from diplomatic norms, US President Donald Trump claims he is willing to speak with Taiwanese leader Lai Ching-te, in an unprecedented move from a US leader since 1979. After being asked on Wednesday whether he would consult with Lai before making a decision on US arms sales, Trump signaled he was open to discussions, saying: “I'll speak to him. I speak to everybody. We'll work on that, the Taiwan problem.” This could potentially roil US-China relations, with China’s foreign ministry spokesperson denouncing the comments.
^^Read more on: BBC, The Guardian, and CNN.
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- The State Council’s Administrative Court suspended a decision by the General Authority of Investment and Freezones (Gafi) compelling the Egyptian Resorts Company to convene a general meeting and elect a new board. An interim ruling by the court found that Gafi’s directive lacked a statutory basis and blocked votes scheduled for 16 and 23 May;
- International lenders are competing to fund the USD 3 bn alumina refinery Egypt Aluminum (EgyptAlum) is building with Aluminium Bahrain — the largest alumina refining and production facility ever built in Egypt. EgyptAlum will fund half of the of the project’s estimated cost — around USD 1.5 bn — with the financing structure open to review at a later date;
- The government raised the ceiling on its medium-term international bond program to USD 40 bn — up from USD 30 bn — on the back of recent sovereign credit rating upgrades. The government doesn’t plan to max it out — the strategy is to issue annual external debt roughly equivalent to maturing obligations, minus USD 1-2 bn, to gradually bring the overall external debt load down.
☀️ TOMORROW’S WEATHER- We’re in for a moderately warm start to the weekend, with temperatures in Cairo peaking at 31°C before dipping to a low of 19°C, according to our favorite weather app.





