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Kenya seeking $1.5 billion UAE commercial credit

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According to Finance Minister John Mbadi, Kenya is in talks with the United Arab Emirates for a $1.5 billion commercial loan with a seven-year tenor and an interest rate of 8.25%.

The country of East Africa is attempting to broaden its funding sources in the wake of violent demonstrations that compelled the administration to renounce a series of tax increases and postpone International Monetary Fund (IMF) payments. The potential loan was revealed by Reuters last month.

Mbadi said during a press conference, “This loan is cheaper than the Eurobond we borrowed at 10.7%,” alluding to a $1.5 billion bond issued in February to partially repurchase a $2 billion Eurobond that was about to mature.

According to Mbadi, Kenya has successfully responded to the IMF’s enquiries over the nation’s ongoing funding program, which was put on hold due to the protests and the finance bill’s abandonment. Next Monday, he will meet with the fund again in Washington, DC.

“After that, the funds will be disbursed,” Mbadi said.

The staff review of Kenya’s program will be discussed at the IMF executive board meeting on October 30, according to a report by Bloomberg News, which cited persons with knowledge of the situation.

The Fund stated that the date was not yet established when questioned about the report.

“No date has been confirmed yet for the Board’s deliberation. We will communicate the date and related information in due course,” it said.

When the existing fund program expires next year, Kenya will want to seek out a new one, according to Mbadi, but he also demanded more reasonable budgetary targets to support future lending.

“I completely believe some of the targets we have set with the IMF were unrealistic,” he said, citing a target of lowering the fiscal deficit to 3.8% this financial year from 5.2% in the year that ended in June, which has since been removed.

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IMF assessing implications of Senegal financial audit

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has revealed that a staff team has travelled to Senegal to begin evaluating the ramifications of data adjustments that emerged from a government audit of previous and ongoing initiatives that the IMF had sponsored.

IMF staff will continue to collaborate closely with the authorities in the upcoming weeks to assess the macroeconomic impact and lay out the next measures, the Fund said in a statement, even though the government’s findings have not yet been certified.

Last month, an audit of Senegal’s finances, commissioned by recently elected President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, revealed that the country’s deficit at the end of 2023 was over 10% of GDP, as opposed to the 5% that the previous administration had estimated.

Following the Fund’s evaluation in June, the government announced that it had chosen not to proceed with Senegal’s request for an IMF disbursement in July. Since then, the West African nation has been in talks with the IMF about corrective action.

From October 9 to October 16, an IMF staff team travelled to Senegal to examine the preliminary audit findings.

The next steps “will include assessing whether any misreporting occurred during previous and current IMF-supported programs”, the statement said.

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Namibia central bank drops key rate again to boost growth

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The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of Namibia’s central bank unanimously decided to cut the repo rate by 25 basis points to 7.25%, the same size of cut as at the August meeting.

The central bank cited the country’s economy’s need for additional support and the unexpectedly rapid decline in inflation as reasons for the second consecutive meeting of its main interest rate cut.

“The MPC noted the growing momentum in the international monetary policy easing cycle, the retreat in domestic inflation over the medium term, along with the recent downside surprise in the September 2024 inflation print,” Bank of Namibia Governor Johannes Gawaxab said in a statement accompanying the decision.

The nation in southern Africa saw its annual inflation decline sharply from 4.4% in August to 3.4% in September.

The central bank’s most recent meeting on Wednesday downgraded the average inflation forecast for this year from 4.7% to 4.3%.

The revision was ascribed to a more optimistic outlook for global oil prices as well as a more robust domestic currency rate.

According to the bank, credit extension to the private sector is still muted, indicating that more assistance for the home economy is necessary.
“The domestic economy, while growing at a moderate pace, was operating below full capacity,” Gawaxab said.

In 2024, growth is expected to drop to 3.1% from 4.2% in 2023.

Regarding a $750 million redemption of Eurobonds that is scheduled for late 2025, Namibia’s governor of the central bank stated that 82% of the $500 million it wishes to retire at maturity has already been put aside.

The government is still hoping to refinance the $250 million that is left! stated Gawaxab.In 2024, growth is expected to drop to 3.1% from 4.2% in 2023.

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