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Gov’t and Emirates Global Aluminum to build USD 3 bn aluminum factory

1

What We're Tracking Today

The Egypt Energy Show kicks off today

Good morning, wonderful people. Ramadan is still three weeks away, but it feels like the business news slowdown for the holy month has already started.

But fear not, we’ve searched far and wide to bring you exciting news of a proposed USD 3 bn aluminum factory to be developed in partnership between the government and an Emirati company, Egypt Post’s plans in 2024, and much, much more for you this fine morning.

WATCH THIS SPACE-

Three new sub-funds from the SFE? The Sovereign Fund of Egypt is looking into launching three sub-funds for education, agriculture, and healthcare in a bid to bring in more investments into the local market, SFE CEO Ayman Soliman said during his participation in Al Mal’s CEOs Thoughts conference yesterday, Mubasher reported.

HAPPENING TODAY-

#1- The Egypt Energy Show is kicking off today at the Egypt International Exhibition Center in New Cairo. The three-day event will gather 35k energy industry professionals and host over 80 conferences on energy transition and sustainable production. President Abdel Fattah El Sisi is set to open the event, which will run until Wednesday.

#2- The House is set to issue amendments to the Consumer Protection Law: The House’s Legislative and Constitutional Affairs Committee will convene today to discuss amendments to the 2018’s Consumer Protection Law, as the government looks to toughen penalties for withholding strategic food commodities from the market.

MEANWHILE- Senate committees will have another busy day:

  • The Financial and Economic Affairs Committee will discuss the prospect of the central bank issuing a national digital currency as a way of achieving financial stability and inclusion.
  • The Foreign and Arab Affairs Committee will discuss the challenges and opportunities awaiting Egypt after formally joining Brics.
  • The Industrial Committee will assess the development of industrial sectors and the increase in export volumes.
  • The Energy Committee will review the development of renewable energy in Egypt.
  • The Health Committee will discuss a report on the impact of the global economic crisis on the local healthcare sector and prices of pharma products.
  • The Agriculture Committee will look into the ways to boost fruit and vegetable exports.
  • The Culture Committee will discuss a report on ways to develop Egypt’s medical tourism.

DATA POINT-

Growth forecasted to slow to 2.8% in the event that the war on Gaza is contained and Red Sea shipping resumes in a couple of months, the Institute of International Finance (IFF) said in a recent report seen by Enterprise. However, in the IFF’s pessimistic outlook — which it gives a less than 30% chance — growth is forecasted to fall to 2.0%.

WAR WATCH-

Egypt to testify before the ICJ against Israel: Egypt will be among 52 nations that will present arguments to the UN’s International Court of Justice (ICJ) starting today for the court to build a non-binding opinion on the legality of Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories, State Information Service head Diaa Rashwan said in a statement yesterday.

CORRECTION: In yesterday's PM edition of Enterprise Egypt, we mistakenly reported that Egypt’s upcoming oral arguments at the UN on Gaza were part of South Africa’s case against Israel at the International Court of Justice. The oral arguments are instead part of a separate UN request for an advisory opinion. The story has been updated on our website.

UN likely to vote on ceasefire again tomorrow, with US expected to veto: The UN Security Council is likely to vote on an Algeria-penned draft resolution that calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, Reuters reports. Commenting on the resolution, US Ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said on Saturday that "the United States does not support action on this draft resolution. Should it come up for a vote as drafted, it will not be adopted."

THE BIG STORY ABROAD-

It’s a mixed bag this morning in the global business press: The Financial Times leads with news that Apple has been hit with it’s first-ever fine in the European Union — a EUR 500 mn hit after an antitrust probe urged on by Spotify.

The Wall Street Journal, meanwhile, notes that a USD 355 mn “New York fraud ruling against Donald Trump stands to put a serious dent in his bank account.” The Donald is barred from being an exec at any New York company for three years and is blocked from applying for loans from any financial institution chartered in New York state.

Bloomberg notes that “Ken Moelis's long courtship of governments in Dubai and Saudi Arabia is paying off,” pointing to tombstones for Aramco and Adnoc and whispers among competitors that “Moelis has turned its Middle Eastern operation into one of the bank’s biggest revenue generators per employee — no mean feat in a part of the world that's not known for big fees.”

Deutsche Bank is also having a moment in the global business press: The Wall StreetJournal has a long take out that notes Christian Sewing may have shored up the fate of the storied institution, but investors have yet to (fully) buy into his turnaround story. And everybody and her brother is taking note of the fact that Deutsche has (a) ordered managers back to work four days a week — and (b) banned the practice of working from home on Fridays and Mondays. (Fortune | Bloomberg | Still more Bloomberg | Financial News)

MORNING MUST READ-

Speaking of working from home and other ideas reshaping the workplace: Have you heard of meeting-free Fridays ? Did you know that one recent survey found working from home could increase your odds of missing out on a promotion — or of being fired?

ICYMI- Missed this week’s Inside Industry? In our weekly vertical exploring all things industryand manufacturing, we looked at what our rapprochement with Turkey means for Egyptian industry. You can check it out here.

*** It’s Blackboard day: We have our weekly look at the business of education in Egypt, from pre-K through the highest reaches of higher ed.

In today’s issue: We speak to industry insiders to find why foreign universities are setting up shop in Egypt and what challenges they face.

Escape to Somabay, where the sun-kissed shores await your arrival. Immerse yourself in the warmth of a perfect vacation, starting each day with the radiant embrace of the sun. Unwind, explore, and create unforgettable memories in this paradise by the sea.

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Manufacturing

Egypt’s Public Enterprise Ministry to build USD 3 bn aluminum factory with Emirates Global Aluminum

A new USD3 bn aluminum factory in the pipeline: The Public Enterprise Ministry isset to team up with UAE-based Emirates Global Aluminium to build a USD 3 bn aluminum factory somewhere in northern Egypt with an estimated production capacity of 600k tons, Public Enterprises Ministry spokesperson Mansour Abdel Ghani told Enterprise. The contracts will be signed soon, he added.

Wait, there is more: The government is also in talks with Aluminium Bahrain (Alba) to establisha factory to produce bauxite — the raw material usedin the production of aluminum — in the Red Sea’s Ras Ghareb, Abdel Ghani told us.

ICYMI: Abdel Ghani said in September that the ministry was eyeing Safaga to set up a bauxite factory with Alba.

Solar energy to power EgyptAlum: Abdel Ghani also revealed that the ministry will ink acontract with an Indian company within days to build a solar power plant to supply EgyptAlum with energy in a bid to ramp up the company’s exports to markets seeking products made with a lower carbon footprint.

Sound familiar? The Public Enterprise Ministry said last month that it was in talks with Norwegianrenewable energy developer Scatec to set up a 1 GW solar power plant to power EgyptAlum’s aluminum Nagaa Hammadi complex.

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INVESTMENT WATCH

Egypt Post wants to invest EGP 6 bn in Egyptian listed and unlisted equities in 2024

Local private and public equities are on the menu for Egypt Post in 2024: Egypt Post could invest as much as EGP 6 bn throughout the year “split between private equity investments and investments in EGX-listed companies, a source at Egypt Post told Enterprise. “The investments will target a number of diverse sectors to reduce risk,” they added.

The details: Egypt Post likes “logistics, communications, microfinance, and consumer finance,”  board chair Sharif Farouk told Asharq Business. Egypt Post hopes to see its profits rise 30% this year to EGP 5 bn, Farouk told the outlet.

It has already been investing big on the EGX: Egypt Post upped its holding of local equities some 20% last year, bringing its total assets on the financial market to EGP 6 bn, Farouk added.

A vote of confidence in the EGX from one of the country’s most interesting asset managers: Egypt Post sits on massive deposits (name someone who doesn’t have an Egypt Post saving account…) and the knock on the institution has always been that it has sat on the cash or, at best, allocated it to government paper.

** This story was amended on  Monday, 19 February to clarify that Egypt Post will be doing the investing and not Post for Investment. 

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LAST NIGHT’S TALK SHOWS

The nation’s talking heads headed to the opera

It was a quiet night on the airwaves last night, as many of the nation’s talking heads, including Amr Adib and Lamees El Hadidy, took the evening off to attend the inaugural Saudi-Egyptian Nights concert at the Cairo Opera House. However, it wasn’t completely a night off for Amr Adib, who took to the stage to tell the audience and those watching from home that, “This is not just a concert — this event holds many meanings that everyone here understands that very well. It demonstrates the cooperation between Egypt and Saudi, and it demonstrates the strength of the decades-long relationship between the two countries” (watch, runtime: 3:09).

But for the talking heads whose invites to the concert must’ve been lost in the mail, the topic of the day was the economy: The National Dialogue will meet next week to discuss the economy with the participation of the government, the dialogue’s general coordinator Diaa Rashwan told Kaswaa Elkhelaly (watch, runtime: 6:50). “We hope to have proposals for solutions to the economic crisis that will be submitted directly to the president by the end of next week. We are trying to come up with specific things that are implementable and urgent and answer the question of how and when,” Rashwan added.

“The government will issue executive regulations for the Building Reconciliation Law no later than February 22,” cabinet spokesperson Mohamed El Homsani said in a phone call with Azza Mostafa (watch, runtime: 5:56). “The prime minister is pushing to ease the process of the reconciliation process, and is taking measures to eliminate any future violation of the law,” El Homsani added.

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EGYPT IN THE NEWS

The Cairo Citadel opens up another wing

Egypt’s monuments are once again gaining the attention of the int’l press — but for all the right reasons this time: The Tourism and Antiquities Ministry will be glad that Reuters has decided to move past the controversial restoration of the Pyramid of Menkaure and instead focus on the opening of a new wing of the Cairo Citadel to visitors. Opening up the additional area in the citadel comes as part of an effort by the ministry to promote short visits to the capital — dubbed Cairo City Break — which the ministry is set to unveil in the coming months. (Reuters | Xinhua)

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Also on our Radar

EKH wants in on the state’s privatization program. PLUS: Sawari Ventures USD 150 mn fund, Evolve gold investment fund, Fincart KSA HQ, Tamar ups production, Marakez loan

INVESTMENT-

#1- EKH may be interested in getting in on the state’s privatization program: Our friends at EGX-listed investment company Egypt Kuwait Holding (EKH) have taken an interest in and are open to investing in stakes in companies being offered up by the state asset sale program, EKH chairman Loay Jassim Al Kharafi told Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly yesterday, according to a cabinet statement.

That’s not all: EKH wants to set up electricity distribution stations under build-own-transfer agreements with the government. The investment company also has its eyes set on completing work on its hotel project in Arish and other touristic investments in the city. EKH is also gearing up to soon run trial operations at a new USD 120 mn factory for producing MDF wood.

#2- SEII to invest USD 20 mn in Egypt this year:Saudi Egyptian Industrial Investment (SEII) is set to invest some USD 20 mn into Egypt’s market this year, with a particular focus on industrial projects, Al Borsa reports, citing company CEO Ahmed Ata.

STARTUPS-

#1- Sawari Ventures looks to invest USD 150 mn in local startups: Cairo-based venture capital firm Sawari Ventures is setting up a new USD 150 mn fund for Egyptian startups, the company’s managing partner Hany Al Sonbaty told Al Arabiya Business. The fund will be primarily interested in investing in fintech, edtech, and healthtec companies, Al Sonbaty added.

#2- Fincart to open up regional HQ in KSA: Local shipping and financing solutionsprovider Fincart plans to open its regional headquarters in Saudi Arabia during the second quarter of the year, CEO Mostafa Masry told Al Mal. The startup also aims to launch operations throughout the whole of GCC by 2025 and in Morocco, Kenya, and Ethiopia later down the line, Masry said. The startup will soon close a funding round, which will be spent on improving its tech infrastructure and marketing.

Fincart? The startup connects small businesses with local and international shipping companies, helping them scale up operations and has plans to work with fintech firms and banks to provide financing to small and micro enterprises.

CAPITAL MARKETS-

Another gold investment fund from Evolve? Evolve Investment Holding wants tolaunch another gold investment fund during the first half of the year, CEO Sameh El Torgoman told Asharq Business. The company launched the country’s first gold fund with Azimut in May 2023 and launched another — dubbed Beltone Evolve Gold — with Beltone Securities Holding last month.

ENERGY-

Tamar gas field to expand production 60%: Chevron’s Tamar gas field in Israel — which also supplies gas to Egypt and Jordan — will increase daily production to o 1.6 bn cubic feet per day, from a current 1 bn cubic feet per day, Reuters reports, citing the American oil and gas giant.

DEBT-

Marakez’s District 5 is getting a EGP 1.2 bn loan from NBE and Banque Misr: Fawaz Alhokair Group’s real estate and mall developer subsidiary Marakez is seeking a long-term, syndicated loan of EGP 1.2 bn from the National Bank of Egypt and Banque Misr to fund its New Cairo project District 5, Al Mal reported, citing sources it says are in the know. The loan agreement is expected to be signed in March.

MINING-

Shalateen’s gold deliveries to the central bank up 14% in 2023: The state-owned Shalateen Mineral Resources Company has delivered 720 kg of gold — worth EGP 1.3 bn (USD 42 mn) — to the Central Bank of Egypt in 2023, Asharq Business reported, citing an anonymous government source. The 14% y-o-y increase is below half of the targeted 32% increase to 830 kg announced by the company’s chairman in July.

Looking ahead: The company now targets to boost its 2024 deliveries by around 40% to reach 1 ton of gold, the source added.

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PLANET FINANCE

Investors worry that Red Sea disruptions and consumer boycotts could put an end to US stock rally

S&P 500 jitters: While earnings forecasts for S&P 500 companies over thenext 12 months are at a record high and have helped the index surpass the 5k mark for the first time earlier this month, the risk of Israel’s war on Gaza further disrupting Red Sea shipping and leading to larger consumer boycotts could potentially upend the index’s historic rally in the event that earnings forecasts have to be scaled back, writes Bloomberg.

A nightmare on Wall Street: Mentions of the Red Sea and geopolitics in American and European companies’ earnings calls have occurred as frequently in the first half of 1Q2024 as during the entirety of 4Q2023, according to data collected by Bloomberg.

ICYMI- Geopolitical uncertainty was the defining feature of forecasts for 2024 at the end of lastyear. A poll of 500 global institutional investors saw geopolitics as the biggest economic risk in 2024. Almost half of respondents (49%) cited “geopolitical bad actors” as a key concern.

MEANWHILE- Asian markets are mixed this morning as Shanghai opens for the first trading day since the weeklong Lunar New Year holiday. The Shanghai Composite and the Kospi are up, while the Hang Seng and Nikkei have slipped into the red in early trading. Europe looks set to open in the red later this morning, while the Nasdaq, Dow, and S&P look set to open the trading day flat.

EGX30

29,126

+0.7% (YTD: +17.0%)

USD (CBE)

Buy 30.83

Sell 30.96

USD at CIB

Buy 30.85

Sell 30.95

Interest rates CBE

21.25% deposit

22.25% lending

Tadawul

12,502

+0.1% (YTD: +4.5%)

ADX

9,427

+0.2% (YTD: -1.6%)

DFM

4,259

+0.5% (YTD: +4.9%)

S&P 500

5,006

-0.5% (YTD: +4.9%)

FTSE 100

7,712

+1.5% (YTD: -0.3%)

Euro Stoxx 50

4,766

+0.5% (YTD: +5.4%)

Brent crude

USD 83.47

+0.7%

Natural gas (Nymex)

USD 1.61

+1.8%

Gold

USD 2,024.10

+0.5%

BTC

USD 51,874.54

+0.1% (YTD: +22.5%)

THE CLOSING BELL-

The EGX30 rose 0.7% at yesterday’s close on turnover of EGP 5.3 bn (38% above the 90-dayaverage). Local investors were net sellers. The index is up 17% YTD.

In the green: Beltone Holding (+5.6%), Oriental Weavers (+5.0%), and Alexandria Containers and Cargo Handling (+3.4%).

In the red: Ibnsina Pharma (- 4.0%), Eipico (-2.1%), and AMOC (-1.4%).

CORPORATE ACTION-

FRA approves CIB capital increase: CIB will increase its issued and paid-up capital by EGP 236.6 mn to EGP 30.4 bn after the Financial Regulatory Authority approved the move, according to an EGX disclosure (pdf). The capital increase will allow CIB to issue the 23.7 mn shares it owes to its employees for the year 2020 under its employee stock ownership plan. The decision, which was approved by the board of directors (pdf) last week, now awaits go-ahead from the bank’s ordinary general assembly and the central bank.

QNB Al Ahli will pay out dividends worth EGP 1 per share on its earnings for 2023, itsaid in an EGX disclosure (pdf).

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BLACKBOARD

What do foreign universities see in the Egyptian market and what challenges are they facing?

Egypt’s transnational higher ed sector is picking up steam: The government andprivate sector have been increasingly partnering up with foreign universities in recent years in a bid to improve the quality of the country’s higher education sector, meet international standards, and turn the country into a hub for international education. The result is what the British Council calls a “relatively mature” transnational education (TNE) market brimming with a wide range of models, according to a report (pdf) it released in September.

There are at least 102 foreign higher education institutions operating in Egypt through anumber of models — international branch campuses (IBCs), joint and dual degrees, franchises, and other partnerships.

Remember: Regulations issued by the Higher Education Ministry around six years ago requirelocal universities to form academic partnerships with well-established foreign universities ahead of receiving or renewing their licenses to operate.

A snapshot of our current IBC landscape: Seven IBCs — government’s preferred TNE model — have popped up in the country following the introduction of the International Branch Campus Act in 2018, according to the British Council report. The universities have set up their branches in four university hubs in the new capital:

** Enterprise sat down with the vice chairman of TKH’s board of trustees Ihab Salama for a chat about Nova University’s branch campus in Egypt back in August. You can read the full story here.

Remember: The IBC Act — ratified back in 2018 — sets forth the regulations by whichinternational universities can set up branches in Egypt, which they can do by building their own campuses or partnering up with Egyptian universities.

There’s plenty more where that came from: Greece’s University of Patras is reportedly ontrack to set up a branch in Alexandria by 2025 and Russia’s University of St. Petersburg is opening a branch in New Cairo, along with fellow Russia Kazan Federal University, which is establishing a presence in Sixth of October City. Toronto-based Seneca College also plans to open two branches in Egypt — one in East Cairo and the other in West Cairo — and the US’ University of Texas Medical Branch and Portugal’s University of Aveiro could also set up shop here at some point in the future.

BUT WHY CHOOSE EGYPT?-

The government has a growing appetite for TNE: The overall operating environment iswelcoming to international higher ed institutions (HEIs) thanks to a “supportive government with an internationalization agenda” and “an enthusiastic domestic higher education sector that is eager to develop foreign university partnerships,” the report reads. The drive to deliver an attractive environment for foreign universities is part of the government’s efforts to improve the quality of higher ed, boost employability, and develop a modern workforce, the report states.

Our demographics make for a promising TNE market: Coupled with one of the largest youthpopulations in the world, rapid population growth means the higher education sector faces the challenge of generating significant capacity to meet current and future demand. Almost 51% of our 105.9-mn population is under the age of 25 and the current average growth rate stands at an annual 1.7% — with Egypt set to see the largest overall population increase in the region between 2015 and 2030 — according to the report. The government plans to tap into international education to provide the needed capacity while introducing new subjects and skills.

Demand for TNE is also driven by financial considerations: With Egyptian families facingtighter budgets and limited access to foreign currency as a result of the devaluation of the EGP and the ongoing FX crunch, international education on home soil stands as an attractive alternative to overseas education. While IBCs can quote tuition fees in foreign currency for international students, Egyptian students can only be charged in local currency.

THE HEADWINDS-

Despite the Madbouly government’s efforts to bring more foreign universities to Egypt, a number of obstacles have remained untackled.

#1- The sector is squeezed by the FX crunch: IBCs in the pipeline have been facing delayson the back of the foreign exchange crunch and soaring construction costs, Universities of Canada in Egypt President Magdy El Kady (LinkedIn) told Enterprise. While the hub’s Prince Edward Island University has been in operation since 2018, construction work on its three other planned universities has come to a halt, with construction only a third of the way complete, El Kady said.

#2- There’s room for improvement on the regulatory front: While the regulatory environment for TNE is most advanced for IBCs, which are governed by the IBC Act, the processes by which other types of TNE are set up aren’t as clear-cut, the report states. For instance, joint and dual degrees are arranged at the discretion of the partners involved, and there are no specific regulations for franchises or online learning. Improved clarity could serve to attract more foreign universities, the report suggests.

#3- Even IBC rules aren’t without hurdles: There are “unwritten expectations” that IBCs should partner up with local investors and consultants to set up shop here. It’s been the case for all IBCs created since 2018 that a private Egyptian investor covers the land, infrastructure, and operational costs, while the foreign university sees to the academics. While this lowers the cost of market entry for foreign universities, it makes them more dependent on the information provided by their partners.

THE STATS-

The UK has the lion’s share of the market: With 27 HEIs, the UK accounts for some 26% of TNE partnerships in the country, followed by Germany (20%), France (12%), and the USA (10%), according to the report. Egypt is the largest host of UK TNE in the region and was the fifth largest market for it in the 2021-2022 academic year — during which some 23.8k students were enrolled in British higher ed courses here. Other HEIs active here hail from Italy, Spain, Greece, Ireland, Finland, Sweden, Austria, Slovenia, Russia, Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, Sudan, and Kenya.

But, UK TNE growth in the country has been slowing: Growth of transnational education inEgypt in recent years has been driven by other countries — such as Germany and the US — as UK universities take a more cautious approach to expansion.

Despite robust TNE growth at home, Egyptians are still choosing to study abroad: Thenumber of Egyptian students traveling for higher education has grown more than fourfold to over 50.8k currently from 12.3k in 2008, according to the latest figures by UNESCO. The majority of these students go to the UAE (30%), Germany (11.7%), and Turkey (8.7%).


Your top education stories for the week:

  • Gifted students are on the government’s radar: The ministries of educationand higher education yesterday signed off on a plan to identify and train students that are gifted in the fields of science and technology.
  • Egyptians can’t be forced to pay tuition fees in USD: The Education Ministry issued a circular last Monday prohibiting private and international K-12 schools from collecting tuition fees in foreign currency from Egyptian students.
  • Giza Systems, Nahdet Misr to support social startups: Giza Systems’ corporate social responsibility arm Giza Systems Foundation and Nahdet Misr’s VC arm EdVentures will offer social startups training programs and one-on-one mentoring.

2024

FEBRUARY

19-21 February (Monday-Wednesday): Egypt Energy Show, Egypt International Exhibition Center.

22 February (Thursday): The executive regulations for the new building reconciliation law will be out.

24 February-1 March (Saturday-Friday): Egypt hosts the 71st African Airports Council International (ACI) Conference and Exhibition at the Alamera Hall Air Forces House Center and Le Méridien, Cairo Airport.

25 February (Sunday): Deadline to bid for 23 blocks in an international oil and gas tender.

26 February (Monday): Eighth edition of the Capital Markets Summit at the InterContinental Semiramis Hotel, Cairo.

MARCH

1 March (Friday): New public-sector minimum wage goes into effect.

2-3 March (Saturday-Sunday): The Emigration Ministry’s International Health Tourism Conference at the St Regis Almasa Hotel, New Administrative Capital.

7 March (Thursday): Deadline to apply to Shalateen Mining Company’s international gold exploration tender.

10 March (Sunday): First day of Ramadan (TBC).

20 March (Wednesday): End of sugar export ban.

28 March (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

29 March (Friday): Egypt removed from JPMorgan Chase’s Emerging Local Markets Index Plus.

APRIL

9 April (Tuesday): Eid El Fitr (TBC) (national holiday).

15-21 April (Monday-Sunday): The IMF / World Bank Spring Meetings.

25 April (Thursday): National holiday in observance of Sinai Liberation Day (TBC) (national holiday).

28 April (Sunday): Grace period to ins. brokerage firms to comply with Law 215 for 2023 expires.

28-29 April (Sunday-Monday): Saudi Arabia hosts a World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting on ‘global collaboration, growth, and energy.’

29 April (Monday): The government’s car export scheme expires.

MAY

1 May (Wednesday): National holiday in observance of Labor Day (TBC) (national holiday).

5 May (Sunday): Coptic Easter.

6 May (Monday): Sham El Nessim (national holiday).

20 May (Monday): Malaysian Palm Oil Forum in Cairo, with attendance from Malaysian Plantation and Commodities Minister Johari Abdul Ghani.

23 May (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

29 May (Wednesday): Virtual launch of Chicago Booth Executive Program.

JUNE

15-19 June (Saturday-Wednesday): Eid El Adha (TBC) (national holiday).

30 June (Sunday): June 30 Revolution Day (national holiday).

JULY

7 July (Sunday): National holiday in observance of Islamic New Year (TBC).

18 July (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

23 July (Tuesday): Revolution Day (national holiday).

SEPTEMBER

2-5 September (Monday-Thursday): Egypt International Airshow, El Alamein International Airport.

5 September (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

15 September (Sunday): National holiday in observance of Prophet Muhammad’s birthday (TBC).

25-26 September (Wednesday - Thursday): The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank’s (AIIB) 2024 annual meeting, Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

OCTOBER

6 October (Sunday): Armed Forces Day.

17 October (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

21-27 October (Monday-Sunday): The World Bank and IMF annual meetings.

NOVEMBER

21 November (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

DECEMBER

26 December (Thursday): Central Bank of Egypt’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

January 2024: The Red Sea Ports Authority is set to finalize an agreement with the Abu Dhabi Ports Group for the operation and maintenance of the tourist passenger terminal in the Sharm El Sheikh Sea Port.

February 2024: Egypt will sign a USD 1.5 bn financing agreement with the International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC).

February 2024: Funds from the Islamic Development Bank for the high speed electric railway will get the sign off.

April 2024: President Abdel Fattah El Sisi will visit Turkey.

1Q 2024: Egyptian-Qatari Joint Supreme Committee.

1Q 2024: Opening of the newly developed Pyramids Plateau in Giza.

1Q 2024: The government is set to finalize the sale of the Gabal El Zeit wind farm.

February-May: The Grand Egyptian Museum could officially open to visitors.

March 2024: The USD 2.7 bn MIDOR Refinery is set to begin full operations.

May 2024: Arab Finance Ministers’ meeting at Egypt’s administrative capital.

June 2024: Gov’t expects to finalize sale of Beni Suef combined-cycle power plant.

1H 2024: Gov’t expects to finalize sale of four water desalination plants.

1H 2024: The European Union is set to hold an investment conference in Egypt during spring.

2H 2024: Gov’t to launch the Cairo Ring Road BRT buses.

November 2024: Egypt to host the World Urban Forum (WUF12).

End of 2024: The launch of the high-speed train line linking Ain Sokhna with Al Alamein City.

2025

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

2Q 2025: Safaga Terminal 2 to start operations.

2027

EVENTS WITH NO SET DATE

End of 2027: Trial operations at the Dabaa nuclear power plant expected to take place.

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