China Business News

BRICS – Brazil, Russia, India, China … and South Africa (or BASIC?)

Denmark's Queen Margrethe (C) gives a toast to German Chancellor Angela Merkel (3rd L), U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon (L), China's Premier Wen Jiabao (3rd R), South Africa's President Jacob Zuma (2nd R), Mexico's President Felipe Calderon (R) and other guests during a dinner at the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 in Copenhagen December 17, 2009.

Denmark's Queen Margrethe (C) gives a toast to German Chancellor Angela Merkel (3rd L), U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon (L), China's Premier Wen Jiabao (3rd R), South Africa's President Jacob Zuma (2nd R), Mexico's President Felipe Calderon (R) and other guests during a dinner at the United Nations Climate Change Conference 2009 in Copenhagen December 17, 2009.

BRICS or BASIC? For many a year mere mention of the term BRIC has been guaranteed to set South African officials’ teeth grinding.

As the economic powerhouse of sub-Saharan Africa, South Africa has long dreamt of being a global player since the end of apartheid – and been frustrated by the fascination of so many economists with the big four emerging economies, the so-called BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), to the exclusion of South Africa.

Now, however, South Africa is daring to dream again, as is Jacob Zuma, its sometimes controversial leader, who just may have found a compelling geopolitical theme for his nine-month-old presidency.

Much has been made of the dramatic final evening at December’s climate change conference in Copenhagen when Barack Obama paid a call on the Chinese delegation, only to find that a meeting was already under way between Chinese, Brazilian, Indian, and South African leaders. Read the rest of this entry »

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Oil Industry in Nigeria: Old Guard on Back Foot in Oil Sector Shake-Up

Nigerian Oil IndustryThe main players in Nigeria’s oil industry have spent at least the past 18 months vying to influence a proposed shake-up of sub-Saharan Africa’s biggest energy sector.

The draft Petroleum Industry Bill is evolving into the most comprehensive overhaul of the country’s oil sector since the first crude departed Nigeria half a century ago.

But behind the tussle over taxes and regulation is a battle that could lead to big changes in who controls the world’s 10th largest reserves. From local towns to Chinese oil groups, there are a growing number of claims to a limited resource. Three western oil companies – ExxonMobil and Chevron of the US and Europe’s Royal Dutch Shell – appear ready to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to ensure that expiring leases to some of their Nigerian blocks are renewed, though such payments are not required by law. Read the rest of this entry »

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East Africa Community (EAC): The Region’s Leaders Take Another Step Towards Building a Common Market

East AfricaFree Trade fingers crossed, some time this summer, goods should start being sold without tariffs across borders within the five countries of the East African Community (EAC). The new common market will take in 130m-plus people in Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda. The next step is monetary union, with political federation a far remoter prospect.

The agreement signed last year at the EAC’s headquarters in the Tanzanian city of Arusha was a first step. Optimists say the EAC should join free-trade blocks in southern and western Africa before 2030.

The EAC should be better placed to trade with Congo, Ethiopia, and Sudan. And if it can build its own wider manufacturing base, its goods may start to compete with cheap stuff from China.

Kenya, which has the region’s strongest manufacturers, retailers, and banks, is sure to gain most. But for the EAC to succeed, others must win too. Rwanda and Burundi should benefit from cheaper and quicker transport of goods to and from the ports of Mombasa and Dar es Salaam. Uganda is well placed to expand its agriculture for export. Read the rest of this entry »

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Nigeria Reassures Investors on New Lekki Greenfield Oil Refinery

Oil RefineryNigeria’s state-run oil firm Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) on Friday reassured Oando, ONGC Mittal Energy (OMEL), and other oil firms that it fully supported building the OPEC member’s first crude refinery in more than 20 years.

Mohammed Barkindo, Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), said NNPC will partner investors to develop the Lekki Greenfield Refinery near the commercial capital Lagos with the aim of starting production in 2017.

Nigeria’s four state-owned refineries have failed to keep pace with surging domestic demand for electricity and gasoline, forcing Africa’s biggest energy producer to import 85% of its fuel needs. Read the rest of this entry »

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Investec Asset Management Gains from its South African Roots

Investec Asset ManagementZimbabwe is a market that is too exotic to be top of mind for the average international investor, but not for Investec Asset Management, according to Hendrik du Toit, chief executive of the group.

Investec has been buying into Zimbabwe for some time, he says, making use of its South African roots and exploiting its advantage in the area.

It has been increasing exposure in its Africa fund and Africa Frontier private equity fund, though liquidity in the market remains an issue, says Mr du Toit.

Despite recent political turbulence following remarks by prime minister Morgan Tsvangirai that he would “disengage” from working with Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s president, and his ZANU PF party, Mr du Toit remains optimistic about the long-term fundamentals for post-Mugabe Zimbabwe.

In an interview before this incident, Mr du Toit said there were a couple of triggers that had made the country a talking point for “Africa enthusiasts”. These were the positive effects from the switch to using US dollars from local currency, and the influence the government’s coalition partner, Mr Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), is having on the economy.

Mr du Toit said before the most recent upheaval: “It is very difficult to call a bottom in a place that’s been down but we’ve seen triggers [such as the shift to using the US dollar]. There is a more palatable partner that is by and large in charge of the economy, which is a powerful signal.” Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: Eko Atlantic City – The New Lagos – Part 2

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VIDEO: Eko Atlantic City – The New Lagos – Part 1

Eko Atlantic City

Source(s): Silverbird TV

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VIDEO: Financial Times (FT) Interview with Egbert Imomoh, Chairman, Afren

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Afren

Financial Times

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South African Hedge Fund Industry Presents a Compelling Case through Global Downturn, Says Hedgeweek

HedgeweekSouth Africa’s market architecture has withstood the seismic shocks unleashed by the global financial market collapse. While the rest of the world, including the in-favor quartet of Brazil, Russia, India and China, dusts itself off and revisits the drawing board, South Africa is ready to capitalize on its solid foundation and prudent construction in an environment of fast-paced recovery.

A sophisticated, regulated, and transparent environment that offers multiple opportunities for alpha extraction in a maturing market, South Africa is unfortunately still often overlooked when it comes to allocations to emerging market economies.

On a structural level, South Africa’s infrastructure has the bells and whistles that one should expect from a ‘new world’ financial system. Its banks are strong, competitive and well-capitalized. Over the past few months there have been no crises or need for government bail-outs. There is open communication and collaboration between regulators and market participants, who are already comfortable with the concept of unrestricted regulatory insight into activities and a conservative approach to consumer credit and financial engineering. Read the rest of this entry »

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ExxonMobil Takes $4 billion Stake in Ghana’s Jubilee Oil Field

ExxonMobilExxonMobil has agreed to acquire a large stake in Ghana’s Jubilee oil field from its private equity owners, paying about $4 billion for one of Africa’s most potentially lucrative oil discoveries in recent years.

The deal was first mooted at the end of last year and attracted interest from many of the world’s big oil groups, but became bogged down by horse-trading with Ghana’s government.

It would generate about a four-times return for Blackstone and Warburg Pincus, which together invested $800 million in Kosmos Energy, owner of the Jubilee stake. Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: New Scramble for Africa? Africa Offers Growth, Says Insparo Asset Management

Investors should look to African markets for its growth potential and low correlation with other markets, says Francis Beddington, Head of Research, Insparo Asset Management. Read the rest of this entry »

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