HOLIDAY WATCH- Everyone from the Central Bank of Egypt to the EGX and the Ismail Cabinet has now confirmed that with Ramadan set to end on Thursday, we will have a four-day long weekend running Friday-Monday. Enjoy seeing all the people you’re getting away from in Sahel while we revel in having the capital city to ourselves. We’re off on Sunday and Monday, but will be back in your inboxes on Tuesday morning.
Want a safinga chaser? Mark the looming end of the holy month with the WSJ’s Orientalist-headlined “Beers at Ramadan: Dubai Relaxes Rules as Gulf Countries Adapt to Draw Business” and then marvel that booza (no, not *that* booza) has crossed the pond to New York, where a new shop in Brooklyn (where else?) will serve the sahlab-based ice cream.
Prime Minister-designate Mostafa Madbouly has yet to unveil his cabinet lineup. Madbouly is apparently still meeting with prospective candidates, and the echo chamber from the local press is again highlighting the candidates, adding Mac Optic President and CEO Ahmed Radwan to the list of potential entrants to cabinet. Sources tell Al Mal that Madouly gave candidates a 48-hour window to respond to his offer. The new cabinet was expected to be sworn into office before the Eid El Fitr break.
President Abdel Fattah El Sisi spoke in public for the first time on the new cabinet, saying that change in government was necessary, according remarks picked up by our friends at Al Masry Al Youm. The president thanked outgoing Prime Minister Sherif Ismail and his cabinet on behalf of a grateful nation.
Electricity Minister Mohamed Shaker will announce new electricity prices at a press conference today. The rate hikes will come into effect on 1 July as widely expected, Reuters’ Arabic service reports. The price hikes will be implemented across the board, but the lowest consumption tier be shielded from the full brunt of the rise, Shaker told Youm7. Previous reports had suggested that prices would rise by as much as 55% and that the ministry was mulling having imposing a surcharge on consumption during peak hours for users in the uppermost bracket.
Capital Economics is the latest to suggest the Central Bank of Egypt will leave interest rates on hold when its monetary policy committee meets on 28 June, writing in a note to clients yesterday that, “Inflation should resume its downward trend later this year, eventually allowing the CBE to push ahead with rate cuts. We expect the easing cycle to be resumed at September’s MPC meeting and that the overnight deposit rate will be lowered by a further 350 bps this year, taking it to 13.25%, and by another 200bp in 2019. That is a quicker pace of easing than most anticipate.”
The Donald Trump-Kim Jong Un summit in Singapore got underway in the week hours of this morning as we were writing today’s edition. Dude shook hands with a guy who assassinates political rivals living abroad, kidnaps innocent civilians, threatens to lob nuclear weapons, and blows relatives to pieces with anti-aircraft fire. “I think we will have a terrific relationship,” The Donald said. But Canadians? Close the borders, bubba. Damn them and their cheap cars and milk tariffs (and healthcare, multiculturalism and lack of handguns). Hit the front pages of the New York Times, Washington Post, Politico or Axios for the blow-by-blow as the day unfolds — the whole summit looks set to wrap in less than seven hours.
If not by the EM Zombie Apocalypse, the End Times will be inaugurated by Donald Trump’s “America First” trade policy. That’s the suggestion from IMF boss Christine Lagarde, who warned yesterday that “the global economic outlook is darkening by the day.”
Latest sign we are indeed in the early days of the End Times: Back-to-back front-page headlines in our favourite non-business newspaper announcing Dennis Rodman arrives in Singapore ahead of Trump-Kim summit and Actor Robert De Niro slams Trump at Toronto event, apologizing for President’s ‘idiotic’ behavior.
Abraaj founder Arif Naqvi “scrambles as [his] empire teeters,” the headline in the Wall Street Journal blares, quoting the 57-year-old CEO as saying a dispute over the use of investor funds for general corporate purposes was “caused by differing interpretations of Abraaj’s agreement with investors. ‘We felt we were within our rights to interpret it the way we wanted,’ he said. ‘In hindsight would we have done things differently? Possibly.’” The Journal spoke with former Abraaj staff who said that “Mr. Naqvi had a dominating attitude that laid the groundwork for trouble. Several of these former employees blame the problems on what they say was Mr. Naqvi’s overly ambitious expansion beyond Middle East deals.”
It looks like internal OPEC politics could play against Saudi’s bid to ramp up production. Other OPEC members, including Iraq, have voiced opposition to lifting production curbs, according to Bloomberg. Iraq “rejects unilateral decisions made by some producers which do not consult with the rest,” Iraqi Oil Minister Jabbar Al Luaibi said in a statement. “Producers from within and outside OPEC have not yet reached the goals set,” he added. Iraq, the second largest producer in OPEC, is now lending its voice to both Iran and Venezuela.
And the award for the best use of a marketing hook to make sell-side research readable goes to…Goldman Sachs for its “The World Cup and Economics 2018” (pdf). You can hit the landing page for the publication here or flip to page 17 of the pdf version to Goldman’s synthesis of football and economic analysis as applied to Egypt: “An economic recovery to match a footballing renaissance…While there are still significant risks of delivery, so far the [reform] programme has been surprisingly successful: the current account deficit is gradually correcting alongside inflation and business, and investor confidence has been restored.”
Okay, but who does Goldman think will win the World Cup? Not the Pharaohs, who GS suggests won’t make it to the group of 16: “England meets Germany in the quarters, where Germany wins; and Germany meets Brazil in the final, and Brazil prevails.”

The Band’s Visit was named best musical at the Tony awards and snagged a further nine awards to boot on Sunday night, the Associated Press reports. Starring Katrina Lenk and Lebanese-American actor Tony Shalhoub, who was named best actor in a musical, the play promotes tolerance and cultural understanding through the story of an Egyptian police band that gets stranded in a remote Israeli town. The critically-acclaimed musical is based on a 2007 Israeli film of the same name and won consistent critical acclaim when it opened in November last year (watch, runtime: 01:25).
Five pieces offering food for thought this morning:
#1– How secure is your encrypted messaging service? Slack promises that traffic to and from its app is fully encrypted in transit and at rest. WhatsApp and Signal also boast end-to-end encryption. But there are still ways for evildoers and other parties to get access to your chats: Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort used Telegram and WhatsApp, but “investigators were able to read backups of the conversations on his iCloud” account. And a former US Senate Intelligence Committee aid arrested for allegedly lying to the FBI during a leak investigation sent chills through reporters when prosecutors quoted Signal messages in the indictment. Did they find a way in? Or did someone save screenshots of messages? Read How did investigators read James Wolfe’s Signal messages?
#2– How secure is that back-office investment bank job? Citigroup suggests it will cut up to half of its 20k jobs in technology and operations over the next five years as “machines supplant humans at a faster pace,” the FT reports in an exclusive that has been widely picked up by the financial press. “If replicated across the industry, the potential job losses would represent a steeper rate of cuts than in 2007-2017, when almost 60k jobs were cut from eight of the world’s top 10 investment banks,” the salmon-colored newspaper writes. “If your job involves a lot of keyboard hitting then you’re less likely to have a happy future,” Barclays investment bank boss Tim Throsby is quoted as saying.
#3– How low can ETFs go? On the fee side, that is. Both BlackRock and VanEck slashed fees on popular exchange-traded funds last week in “the latest salvo in an increasingly ferocious price war between ETF providers [as] … money has typically flowed to the largest funds, since they have the most liquid shares, giving operators economies of scale that they are able to pass on to customers.”
#4– How likely is it that alien life will resemble your spouse? “The evolution of life everywhere in the universe is constrained by the laws of physics, which means that aliens would have to resemble creatures we already know,” writes a professor of astrobiology in a ridiculously cool essay for the Wall Street Journal.
#5– How to shoot yourself in the foot: Firing your driver can lead to the complete collapse of your business empire. Just ask Martin Sorrell, the former WPP boss who transformed a maker of wire supermarket baskets into the world’s largest comms group — and whose professional undoing began the night he fired his driver in a “moment of executive intemperance.” Sorrell resigned in April after the ensuring board-led investigation, and the Financial Times has talked to more than 25 people who worked closely with the ad man. “What has emerged is a picture of routine verbal abuse of underlings and a blending of Sir Martin’s corporate and private life that jarred with some colleagues.”
So, when do we eat? For those of us observing, Maghrib is at 6:57 pm CLT today. You’ll have until 3:08 am tomorrow to finish your sohour.




