Tag: U.S

  • U.S. added another 200,000 jobs in November

    The economy has settled nicely into hiring grove since the early spring, adding more than 238,000 jobs a month and putting the U.S. on a path to produce the strongest employment gains in 15 years.

    What’s still missing, however, is a big uptick in wages that typically occurs when the unemployment rate shrinks quickly, or the occasional huge job gain in the 350,000-plus range, the telltale sign of an economy in full-blown recovery mode.

    Wall Street is expecting more of the same when the November employment report is released on Friday. Economists polled by MarketWatch forecast a net increase of 230,000 jobs. Other monthly reports on auto sales, manufacturing and construction are also projected to show decent gains that underscore the improvement in the economy since a shockingly weak first quarter.

    Steady as she goes isn’t a bad thing. The unemployment rate has shrunk rapidly over the past year and it’s likely to fall another notch to 5.7% from 5.8%, bringing it down to the lowest level since mid-2008. And hourly wages are likely to continue to rise at a 2% annual rate as they have done over the past four years.

     

  • Delta deal to bring U.S. crude to Pennsylvania Refinery

    Delta Air Lines Incorporated (DAL), the largest United States  carrier by market value, is trying to cash in on the biggest oil boom in the nation’s history by bringing more domestic crude to its refinery near Philadelphia.

    The Atlanta-based airline signed a five-year agreement with Addison, Texas-based midstream company Bridger LLC to supply the Trainer, Pennsylvania, refinery with 65,000 barrels of crude a day, more than a third of the plant’s capacity.

    Delta is hoping that greater use of domestic crude will help it turn a profit at the refinery, which it bought from ConocoPhillips in 2012 in an attempt to control prices and supplies for its fleet. U.S. crude production has risen 55 percent since the start of 2010, making prices cheaper than in the rest of the world.

    “We definitely believe domestic crude will be competitive versus foreign alternatives,” Graeme Burnett, Delta’s senior vice president for fuel optimisation, said by phone July 18. “We want to push the levels of domestic crude as high as we can.”

    Trainer is 100 miles (160 kilometers) from New York Harbor, the delivery point for gasoline and diesel futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Delta imported about 140,000 barrels of crude a day to feed the plant in April, mostly from Nigeria and Norway.

     

     

  • Burkina Faso: Opposition, U.S, AU reject army’s seizure of power

    Burkina Faso: Opposition, U.S, AU reject army’s seizure of power

    Burkina Faso’s opposition parties, the United States and the African Union rejected the army’s seizure of power in the West African country on Saturday after the resignation of President Blaise Compaore, setting the stage for fresh street protests.

    The military top brass named Lt. Col. Isaac Zida, deputy commander of the elite presidential guard, as head of state on Saturday. A power struggle within the armed forces was resolved by sidelining the chief of staff.

    Zida, who has operational control over the army’s best trained and equipped unit, had declared himself interim president in an early morning radio address, overruling military chief, Gen. Honore Traore’s claim to lead a transitional government following Compaore’s departure, Reuters reports.

    One of Africa’s long-serving rulers, Compaore stepped down on Friday after two days of mass demonstrations against his attempts to change the constitution to extend his 27 years in power. At least three people were killed after protesters stormed the parliament building and set it on fire.

    On the dusty streets of Ouagadougou, the capital, protesters voiced anger that they had driven out Compaore – who seized power in a 1987 military coup – only to have another soldier imposed on them.

    “This transition should be democratic and civilian in character,” said a statement from a coalition of opposition parties and civil society groups, which called a demonstration in the vast Place de la Nation for Sunday morning.

    “The success of the uprising – and therefore the leadership of the transition – belongs to the people and should not be confiscated by the army,” it said.

    The unfolding crisis in the poor, landlocked nation is being closely watched by the U.S and former colonial power France, which were close military allies of Compaore. Under his rule, Burkina Faso became a key ally in operations against al Qaeda-linked groups in West Africa.

    The U.S State Department on Saturday condemned the military’s seizure of power and urged it to transfer power immediately to civilian authorities.

    Washington could freeze military cooperation if it judges a coup has taken place.

    The AU in a strongly worded statement also called for the military to hand power over to civilian authorities.

    It said the Peace and Security Council, the arm of the 54-nation bloc that imposes sanctions for violations of democratic process, would discuss the situation on Monday.

  • Nigeria to lift trade frontier in U.S. -Africa Relations

    Nigeria to lift trade frontier in U.S. -Africa Relations

    President Barack Obama deserves commendation for instituting a new engagement with Africa. Bringing trade relations to the fore, even if the traditional concerns for security and good governance remain on his agenda, is especially laudable. For some, the recently concluded U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit represents a fitting recovery from what had appeared as general apathy towards Africa. When finally he decided to broadly engage with African leaders, President Obama looked beyond the traditional model that has been criticized as paternalistic. In the past, the focus was on dolling out U.S. aid to Africa, in a relationship in which the hand of the giver was always on top. Even more commendable is that, as the U.S. contemplates deepening commercial relationship with Africa, it looked beyond the traditional sector of trading oil and few other extractive commodities.

    Nevertheless, Africa commands this new attention. In the last ten years, Africa has significantly shed the image of war and deprivation. Economic growth has been steady, averaging estimated 5 per cent annually, according to the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Constitutional democracy has taken root in most African countries. Evidence of improved governance is seen across Africa, and economic reform initiatives — like the ones enunciated in the Transformation Agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria — have improved market performance, unlocked private sector resources and, consequently, helped to expand the middle class.

    Africa remains resource-rich. But the new attraction for the continent, especially from China, recognizes so much that Africa has to offer and what it needs for further progress. Africa has become more aspirational than it had ever been or even taken to be, aware it has the capacity to give even as it takes from development partners. As a result, a win-win approach is being realized in engaging the African continent.

    China has gained the head start advantage over the United States and Europe in commercial relations with Africa this new term. Indeed, as the West loses the momentum for trade with Africa, even so has China pushed its appetite for African economic engagement.  It is an open secret; China’s trade with Africa has been on the increase. It rose from $166 billion in 2011 to $210 billion in 2013. In the same period, U.S. trade with Africa dwindled from $125 billion to $85 billion. Africa has opened the door to China’s knock on the door of African opportunities. While this is happening, for debatable reasons, the U.S. beats a retreat. The policy justification for U.S. exit cannot be because of the traditional concerns of insecurity and bad governance. These issues have improved significantly over the past decade. Perhaps, the changing structure of U.S. trade interest, because of increased energy security at home, provides an explanation.  Nevertheless, the $33 billion investment commitment by the Obama administration and U.S. investors in power and other industries during the recent meetings in Washington DC is a commendable reawakening.

    There is no doubt that Africa’s trade with the West, particularly the United States, has important and unique values. Well-recognized is sharing of best practices. Even if African leaders had been reticent towards policy prescriptions, the evidence now is that the continent shares the values of representative government, open and transparent policy and economic freedom for the private sector to drive growth and prosperity. Moreover, the riches of Africa’s diversity accommodate multiple, external players, on the basis that Africans themselves are also investing in the continent and are establishing functional commercial partnerships. Yes, we have abundant natural resources. But even more importantly, we have the population to support production of consumer products. Africa’s demography — about one billion people which comprises a higher youth population — tells that long-term viability of investments cannot be in doubt. In Nigeria, the services sector is now the biggest contributor to our Gross Domestic Product. The opportunities seem boundless.

    Because U.S. businesses have largely overlooked African opportunities, and the U.S. press have yet to shed the old stereotypes in reporting the continent (although the European press have made better progress with objective and balanced reporting of Africa), it will be useful to highlight some of the attributes of the African growth story and the investment opportunities. Nigeria is a fitting example, because of scale, homogeneity of policy around private sector development and commonality of Africa’s aspirations. The Nigerian government protects private investment. One of the ways this is affirmable is respect for contract. Competitive bidding has been the hallmark of licensing and sales of public assets in the country after the last of the military interregna 15 years ago. This ensures deals are transparent and valid. The reform of the legal and regulatory frameworks has been pursued with vigour since 1999, helping to define engagement, making contracts binding and making rules clearer and less whimsical.

    As we affirm at the Nigerian Export-Import Bank, the Nigerian opportunities are not concentrated in oil and gas. At NEXIM Bank, we have identified manufacturing, agro-processing, solid minerals and services as areas of big opportunities; not just for commercial profit, but also for socially impactful businesses through local employment and empowerment. In these sectors, Nigeria seeks to create opportunities for a vibrant youth population with realistic wage structures. Broader investment in these high growth and job-rich sectors will enhance wealth creation, broader base prosperity and increase demands, in a virtuous cycle.

    General Electric is one of the U.S. major businesses that have recognized the business potentials in the infrastructure gap in Nigeria and the bright policies of the Jonathan Administration to harness the potentials. GE is investing in the Nigerian power sector where we intend to increase output five folds over the next decade. The ripples of substantial progress in meeting Nigerian power sector demands will prove that the country is very well able to grow in double digits for a long time, given current 7 per cent GDP growth at a time industrial activities and enterprises are stifled by power shortage from the national grid. But in pursuing progress, public investments in infrastructure have been substantial even as private sector investment in power generation and distribution has towered, in contradistinction to when it was zero up till a few years ago. However, more private sector investment is necessary in infrastructure and power to accelerate progress.

    Partnerships are working in Nigeria. Public-private partnerships have delivered projects and unlocked potentials. Similarly, private sector partnerships are thriving. GE has been operating in Nigeria through business partnerships with local investors, who themselves are successful, savvy and understand the local environment. In Washington DC this past August, GE and Heirs Holding led by Nigerian Mr. Tony Elumelu, further demonstrated the working of private sector partnerships by deepening relationship with the new deals they announced. Similarly, Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote entered project partnership with Blackstone-backed Black Rhino, in a $5 billion investment in infrastructure development. With policy support from the administration of President Jonathan, Nigerian small and medium scale businesses are growing. They are viable prospective partners to U.S. SMEs who want to invest abroad to generate new businesses and develop new markets.

    It is in the area of private sector partnerships that Nigeria will provide the lift for the new commercial engagement of the United States with Africa. Using the familiar proclivity of the Nigerian diaspora to succeed, and the achievements of those in the U.S., the average Nigerian at home is self-motivated to succeed. We have embraced the principle for self-actualization in business. Nigerian businesses are successfully raising capitals in the international markets. A number of Nigerian banks and non-financial services providers are multinationals in their own rights, having subsidiaries in several countries in Africa. A few are listed in the London Stock Exchange, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and in Canada, closer to the United States. These vibrant businesses will help U.S. businesses to quickly gain traction and gain market share as partners.

    Nigeria is not just the biggest economy in Africa; it is the regional hub for West Africa. For businesses looking at Africa, Nigeria provides the base for further outreach to cover West and Central Africa. The two sub-regions account for over 400 million population. Intra-regional trade amongst these two sub-regions is significant when we consider Africa’s trade without factoring in extractive commodities. The traditional trade relation is receiving a boost by the efforts of NEXIM Bank to facilitate a private sector shipping company to provide maritime trade links between West and Central Africa. The Sealink project is coming to financial close, following investment interests by African investors. This initiative will help remove non-tariff barriers to intra-Africa trade. Moreover, the past five years have witnessed NEXIM Bank’s funding interventions in Nigerian SME manufacturers who now export to West Africa and beyond.

    In the short term, a security challenge exists with the insurgency in the North Eastern part of the country. Efforts are being made to contain the threats. Longer-term, the efforts of the Federal Government will come into fruition with its recognition that a society that promotes prosperity through the right combination of investments in its people and infrastructure will remove the desperation and some of the other incentives that drive criminal activities.

    Lastly, Nigeria recognizes the importance of civil society engagement. Civil engagement has been the hallmark of the administration of President Jonathan which promoted the national conference that recently concluded. Under the Administration, elections have become more transparent, conclusive and less acrimonious. Opposition parties freely engage, and have criticized the government without any untoward consequences. It is this civility and democratic ethos that further assures that Nigeria is the place to do business, even as Africa is ready for business.

    –  Orya is Managing Director / Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Export-Import Bank

  • U.S, allies seek end to violence in Libya

    U.S, allies seek end to violence in Libya

    The United States and four European countries jointly called on Saturday for an end to violence in Libya.

    The governments of France, Italy, Germany, Britain and the United States said in a statement that they “agree that there is no military solution to the Libyan crisis” and expressed dismay that calls for a ceasefire had not been respected.

    Dozens of people have been killed in Benghazi in days of fighting between Islamic militant groups, including Ansar al-Sharia, and pro-government forces led by former General Khalifa Haftar, who began an offensive on Wednesday.

    The joint statement voiced concern over Haftar’s offensive and said Libya’s “fight against terrorist organizations can only be sustainably addressed by regular armed forces under the control of a central authority.”

    Reuters says Libya has failed to build up state security forces and disarm former rebels who helped remove Muammar Gaddafi, who ruled the country for 42 years until his downfall in 2011.

    The U.S and its four European allies also condemned Ansar al-Sharia and said “Libya’s hard fought freedom is at risk if Libyan and international terrorist groups are allowed to use Libya as a safe haven.”

    The statement threatened sanctions against individuals who “threaten the peace, stability or security of Libya or obstruct or undermine the political process.”

     

  • U.S. Existing-Home Sales Fall 1.8% in August

    UNited States existing-home sales fell for the first time in five months in August, a sign the housing market hit a soft patch after a brisk summer.

    Sales of previously owned homes fell 1.8% in August from July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million, the National Association of Realtors said Monday. Compared with a year earlier, sales declined 5.3%.

    Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had forecast sales to reach a 5.2 million annual rate in August.

    Sales in July reached 5.14 million instead of the initially reported 5.15 million, Monday’s report showed.

    Last month’s decline largely reflected fewer investor purchases, which fell to the lowest level since 2009, said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist. He said investors may be getting skittish about the prospect of rising interest rates as the Federal Reserve reduces its support for the economy.

    Mr. Yun said he believes tight underwriting standards are a major factor holding back purchases by the broader public.

    Home sales rose sharply in 2012 and the first half of 2013 before losing momentum due to a run-up in interest rates and prices. But the sector regained traction this year, thanks to a retreat in interest rates and robust job growth. Mortgage rates have hovered just above 4%, a historically low level, for much of the summer before clicking up to 4.23% last week.

    Sales still haven’t returned to their July 2013 level of a 5.38 million pace.

    The market faces challenges as the Federal Reserve winds down a bond-buying program that was intended to keep interest rates low, and as lenders keep credit standards tight.

    For now, stronger sales have prompted more homeowners to put their homes on the market, boosting inventories. The number of for-sale homes climbed 4.5% last month from a year earlier. At the current pace, it would take 5.5 months to exhaust the supply of homes for sale. Still, Mr. Yun said inventory remains tight.

  • Investors bet on Asia despite U.S. rate threat

    A consensus is emerging among investors that some Asian markets can do well even with the prospect of higher U.S. interest rates on the horizon.

    Fund managers see stepped-up corporate and economic overhauls by leadership in China and India this year, combined with relatively strong growth in Asian economies compared with the rest of the world, as reasons to be bullish. Investors choosing Asia have been rewarded in the past three months. The MSCI Asia ex-Japan index is up 2.4%, topping the 0.4% gain in emerging markets globally and comparable to the 2.6% increase in the S&P 500.

    Last week was a bumpy one for some Asian markets, starting out with bad economic news from China early in the week and anxiety over a Federal Reserve meeting and the Scottish independence vote later in the week. At the same time, investors were selling shares of Asian stocks to fund their purchases of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. shares in its big U.S. initial public offering, traders said. For the week, the MSCI Asia ex-Japan was off by 1.1%, compared with a 0.7% drop for the MSCI Emerging Markets Index and a 1.3% gain in the S&P 500.

    The Fed said  that it remains on track to end its bond-buying stimulus program in October. It is widely expected to raise interest rates next year. Higher interest rates in the U.S. can hurt Asian assets by drawing investment money into U.S. assets and away from Asia’s markets.

    Despite the concerns over U.S. interest rates, investors say they are selectively investing in Asian markets that they see as cheap and where economic fundamentals have improved or where they believe reforms are on the way.

    Investors continued putting money into Asian emerging markets last month, according to the latest data on money flows from the Institute of International Finance. Stocks and bonds in Asian emerging markets received $9.7 billion in August. While that is down from $23.3 billion in July, Charles Collyns, chief economist at the institute, said last month’s inflows were comparable to the average $15.3 billion that the region  received each month between May and July. In contrast, emerging markets in Europe, the Middle East and Africa saw investors pull out money in August. Data for September are due next week.

    “Flows [to Asia] look more robust because these economies are generally doing quite well and [their] exports [are] benefiting from the recovery of countries tightly linked to the global supply chain,” said Mr. Collyns. “We expect capital flows to Asia to remain solid,” unless the market starts expecting the Fed to raise rates sooner than it does now, he added.

    Still, within Asia, investors are getting pickier. As the time for a likely U.S. interest- rate increase approaches, “we are seeing money be more selective,” says Petr Kocourek, senior portfolio manager of multi-asset solutions at First State Investments.

    Ajay Argal, head of Indian equities at Barings Asset Management, says India is in a better position to withstand higher U.S. interest rates now that it has cut its current-account deficit to less than 2% of gross domestic product.

    “India had quite a big scare last year” with its current-account deficit rising to more than 4.5 per cent of GDP as the prospect of the Fed winding down its stimulus program was announced.

    “We still believe in the long-term fundamentals in India,” and increased investments in its infrastructure should help boost economic growth, says Pruksa Iamthongthong, Asian equities investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management.

    The firm is still overweight Indian stocks even after taking some profits as the market has outperformed its counterparts in the region this year. India’s S&P BSE Sensex index is up 28% for the year.

    Also looking past the Fed’s tighter monetary stance, asset managers such as Edinburgh-based Standard Life Investments and New York-based AllianceBernstein are investing more in China. The country’s capital accounts are closed, helping protect the domestic economy from the potential impact of a U.S. rate increase.

    AllianceBernstein’s director of research for Asia ex-Japan equities, Rajeev Eyunni, says while a U.S. rate rise might weigh on Chinese sectors like property, which are sensitive to borrowing costs, it hasn’t stopped the firm from building up its exposure there.

    Chinese stocks are cheap and Chinese company profits will benefit from lower commodity prices and increased consumer demand due to higher wages, as well as opportunities for firms to gain market share in still fragmented industries, said Stuart Rae, the firm’s chief investment officer.

    The MSCI Asia ex-Japan index has gotten cheaper on a price-to-book basis compared with the MSCI World Index, suggesting there is “no argument for overheating” in Asia, Mr. Rae said.

    Fund managers in China have also been able to focus on fundamentals in the country, including improvements at its big state-owned enterprises.

    “We’ve generally been underweight SOEs, but now we’re adding,” says Alistair Way, investment director of emerging markets at Standard Life. He cited China’s largest oil refiner, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp., as an example.

  • Nigeria to lift trade frontier in U.S.-Africa relations

    Nigeria to lift trade frontier in U.S.-Africa relations

    President Barack Obama deserves commendation for instituting a new engagement with Africa. Bringing trade relations to the fore, even if the traditional concerns for security and good governance remain on his agenda, is especially laudable.

    For some, the recently concluded U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, represents a fitting recovery from what had appeared as general apathy towards Africa. When finally he decided to broadly engage with African leaders, President Obama looked beyond the traditional model that has been criticised as paternalistic.

    In the past, the focus was on dolling out U.S. aid to Africa, in a relationship in which the hand of the giver was always on top. Even more commendable is that, as the U.S. contemplates deepening commercial relationship with Africa, it looked beyond the traditional sector of trading oil and few other extractive commodities.

    Nevertheless, Africa commands this new attention. In the last ten years, Africa has significantly shed the image of war and deprivation. Economic growth has been steady, averaging estimated five per cent yearly, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. Constitutional democracy has taken root in most African countries. Evidence of improved governance is seen across Africa, and economic reform initiatives — like the ones enunciated in the Transformation Agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria — have improved market performance, unlocked private sector resources and, consequently, helped to expand the middle class.

    Africa remains resource-rich. But the new attraction for the continent, especially from China, recognises so much that Africa has to offer and what it needs for further progress. Africa has become more aspirational than it had ever been or even taken to be, aware it has the capacity to give even as it takes from development partners. As a result, a win-win approach is being realised in engaging the African continent.

    China has gained the head start advantage over the United States and Europe in commercial relations with Africa this new term. Indeed, as the West loses the momentum for trade with Africa, even so has China pushed its appetite for African economic engagement.  It is an open secret; China’s trade with Africa has been on the increase. It rose from $166 billion in 2011 to $210 billion in 2013. In the same period, U.S. trade with Africa dwindled from $125 billion to $85 billion. Africa has opened the door to China’s knock on the door of African opportunities. While this is happening, for debatable reasons, the U.S. beats a retreat. The policy justification for U.S. exit cannot be because of the traditional concerns of insecurity and bad governance. These issues have improved significantly over the past decade. Perhaps, the changing structure of U.S. trade interest, because of increased energy security at home, provides an explanation. Nevertheless, the $33 billion investment commitment by the Obama administration and U.S. investors in power and other industries during the recent meetings in Washington DC is a commendable reawakening.

    There is no doubt that Africa’s trade with the West, particularly the United States, has important and unique values. Well-recognised is sharing of best practices. Even if African leaders had been reticent towards policy prescriptions, the evidence now is that the continent shares the values of representative government, open and transparent policy and economic freedom for the private sector to drive growth and prosperity. Moreover, the riches of Africa’s diversity accommodate multiple, external players, on the basis that Africans themselves are also investing in the continent and are establishing functional commercial partnerships. Yes, we have abundant natural resources. But even more importantly, we have the population to support production of consumer products. Africa’s demography — about one billion people which comprises a higher youth population — tells that long-term viability of investments cannot be in doubt. In Nigeria, the services sector is now the biggest contributor to our Gross Domestic Product. The opportunities seem boundless.

    Because U.S. businesses have largely overlooked African opportunities, and the U.S. press have yet to shed the old stereotypes in reporting the continent (although the European press have made better progress with objective and balanced reporting of Africa), it will be useful to highlight some of the attributes of the African growth story and the investment opportunities. Nigeria is a fitting example, because of scale, homogeneity of policy around private sector development and commonality of Africa’s aspirations. The Federal Government protects private investment. One of the ways this is affirmable is respect for contract. Competitive bidding has been the hallmark of licensing and sales of public assets in the country after the last of the military interregna 15 years ago. This ensures deals are transparent and valid. The reform of the legal and regulatory frameworks has been pursued with vigour since 1999, helping to define engagement, making contracts binding and making rules clearer and less whimsical.

    As we affirm at the Nigerian Export-Import Bank, the Nigerian opportunities are not concentrated in oil and gas. At NEXIM Bank, we have identified manufacturing, agro-processing, solid minerals and services as areas of big opportunities; not just for commercial profit, but also for socially impactful businesses through local employment and empowerment. In these sectors, Nigeria seeks to create opportunities for a vibrant youth population with realistic wage structures. Broader investment in these high growth and job-rich sectors will enhance wealth creation, broader base prosperity and increase demands, in a virtuous cycle.

    General Electric is one of the U.S. major businesses that have recognised the business potentials in the infrastructure gap in Nigeria and the bright policies of the Jonathan Administration to harness the potentials. GE is investing in the Nigerian power sector where we intend to increase output five folds over the next decade. The ripples of substantial progress in meeting Nigerian power sector demands will prove that the country is very well able to grow in double digits for a long time, given current seven per cent GDP growth at a time industrial activities and enterprises are stifled by power shortage from the national grid. But in pursuing progress, public investments in infrastructure have been substantial even as private sector investment in power generation and distribution has towered, in contradistinction to when it was zero up till a few years ago. However, more private sector investment is necessary in infrastructure and power to accelerate progress.

    Partnerships are working in Nigeria. Public-private partnerships have delivered projects and unlocked potentials. Similarly, private sector partnerships are thriving. GE has been operating in Nigeria through business partnerships with local investors, who themselves are successful, savvy and understand the local environment. In Washington DC last month, GE and Heirs Holding led by Nigerian Mr. Tony Elumelu, further demonstrated the working of private sector partnerships by deepening relationship with the new deals they announced.

    Similarly, Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote entered project partnership with Blackstone-backed Black Rhino, in a $5 billion investment in infrastructure development. With policy support from the administration of President Jonathan, Nigerian small and medium scale businesses are growing. They are viable prospective partners to U.S. SMEs who want to invest abroad to generate new businesses and develop new markets.

    It is in the area of private sector partnerships that Nigeria will provide the lift for the new commercial engagement of the United States with Africa. Using the familiar proclivity of the Nigerian diaspora to succeed, and the achievements of those in the U.S., the average Nigerian at home is self-motivated to succeed. We have embraced the principle for self-actualisation in business. Nigerian businesses are successfully raising capitals in the international markets. A number of Nigerian banks and non-financial services providers are multinationals in their own rights, having subsidiaries in several countries in Africa. A few are listed in the London Stock Exchange, the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and in Canada, closer to the US. These vibrant businesses will help U.S. businesses to quickly gain traction and gain market share as partners.

    Nigeria is not just the biggest economy in Africa; it is the regional hub for West Africa. For businesses looking at Africa, Nigeria provides the base for further outreach to cover West and Central Africa. The two sub-regions account for over 400 million population. Intra-regional trade amongst these two sub-regions is significant when we consider Africa’s trade without factoring in extractive commodities. The traditional trade relation is receiving a boost by the efforts of NEXIM Bank to facilitate a private sector shipping company to provide maritime trade links between West and Central Africa. The Sealink project is coming to financial close, following investment interests by African investors. This initiative will help remove non-tariff barriers to intra-Africa trade.

    Moreover, the past five years have witnessed NEXIM Bank’s funding interventions in Nigerian SME manufacturers who now export to West Africa and beyond.

    In the short term, a security challenge exists with the insurgency in the North Eastern part of the country. Efforts are being made to contain the threats. Longer-term, the efforts of the Federal Government will come into fruition with its recognition that a society that promotes prosperity through the right combination of investments in its people and infrastructure will remove the desperation and some of the other incentives that drive criminal activities.

    Lastly, Nigeria recognises the importance of civil society engagement. Civil engagement has been the hallmark of the administration of President Jonathan, which promoted the national conference that recently concluded. Under the Administration, elections have become more transparent, conclusive and less acrimonious. Opposition parties freely engage, and have criticised the government without any untoward consequences. It is this civility and democratic ethos that further assures that Nigeria is the place to do business, even as Africa is ready for business.

  • UN Security Council to meet on Ebola as Obama gives details on outbreak tomorrow

    UN Security Council to meet on Ebola as Obama gives details on outbreak tomorrow

    A United Nations diplomat says the U.S. is calling an emergency meeting of the U.N. Security Council on the Ebola crisis in West Africa.

    The diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity yesterday ahead of an official announcement, said U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power, who chairs the Security Council this month, has scheduled the meeting on Thursday.

    The diplomat said it would be only the second time the council, which deals with threats to international peace and security, deals with a public health issue.

    The late former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Richard Holbrooke, organized a council meeting in January 2000 on the AIDS pandemic, which was addressed by then vice-president Al Gore.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is expected to detail tomorrow  a plan to boost his country’s involvement in mitigating the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the Wall Street Journal reported.

    The plan would involve a greater involvement of the U.S. military in tackling the worst recorded outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus, the Journal reported, citing people familiar with the proposal.

    The outbreak has now killed upwards of 2,400 people, mostly in Liberia, neighbouring Guinea and Sierra Leone as poorly resourced West African healthcare systems have been overrun.

    The U.S. government has already committed around $100 million to tackle the outbreak by providing protective equipment for healthcare workers, food, water, medical and hygiene equipment.

    Obama could ask Congress for an additional $88 million to fund his proposal, the WSJ reported. Plan details are expected during Obama’s visit Tuesday to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

    The move would come just days after Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf appealed to Obama for urgent aid, saying that without it her country would lose the fight against the disease.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that the epidemic is spreading exponentially in Liberia, where more than half of the deaths have been recorded.

    The U.S. military said recently it would build a 25-bed field hospital in Liberia to care for infected health workers but it would hand it to Liberians to run.

    On Friday, the U.S. Ambassador to Liberia Deborah Malac said Washington would train security forces in isolation operations, after a boy was shot dead last month when Liberian soldiers opened fire on a crowd protesting at a quarantine in a Monrovia neighbourhood.

    Malaysia will send more than 20 million medical rubber gloves to five African nations battling the deadly Ebola virus, addressing a crucial shortage faced by overwhelmed health workers, the country’s Prime Minister Najib Razak announced yesterday.

    The Southeast Asian nation is a leading manufacturer of rubber gloves, producing about 60 percent of the world’s supply of latex medical gloves. Health authorities say that a shortage of rubber gloves in affected African nations has led to more deaths and raised risks that the virus will spread among doctors and nurses.

    The outbreak has now killed upwards of 2,400 people, mostly in Liberia, neighbouring Guinea and Sierra Leone as poorly resourced West African healthcare systems have been overrun.

    “Malaysia can make a unique and vital contribution to the fight against Ebola because we are one of the biggest manufacturers of rubber gloves,” a Malaysian government spokesperson said in a statement.

    “We hope this contribution will prevent the spread of Ebola and save lives.”

    Among the companies supplying the shipment are Sime Darby , Top Glove Corp Bhd, Kuala Lumpur Kepong, and IOI Corp., the Prime Minister’s office said. Top Glove alone has a production capacity of 42 billion gloves a year and exports to 200 countries.

    Shares in the big rubber glove companies have rallied in recent weeks as fears grow that the virus could spread.

    The Malaysian government did not say whether it or the companies were footing the bill for the shipment.

    Malaysia will send 11 containers, each holding 1.9 million gloves, the statement said. Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea will each receive three containers, while Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo will each receive one container.

  • Electrolux takes on Whirlpool in U.S. with $3.3b GE buy

    Sweden’s Electrolux (ELUXb.ST) said it would double United States’ sales by paying $3.3 billion for General Electric Co’s appliances business in its biggest ever deal, giving it the scale to go head-to-head with larger rival Whirlpool (WHR.N).

    GE’s (GE.N) century-old household appliance business, which had $5.7 billion in last year’s revenue, could help the Swedish company expand beyond its core European market where growth has trailed that in North America.

    Electrolux, the world’s second-largest appliance maker by sales, will see its annual sales in North America more than double to over $10 billion, similar in size to Whirlpool’s sales there. It also gets to keep the iconic GE Appliance’s brands.

    “I think it’s a historic event for Electrolux. I’m very excited about it. I think the fit – the strategic fit, the industrial logic – is compelling,” Electrolux Chief Executive Keith McLoughlin told Reuters.

    While the price tag is higher than the $2.5 billion figure people familiar with the deal suggested to Reuters last week, analysts said the company was not overpaying. The deal includes GE’s 48.4 per cent stake in Mexican appliances maker Mabe.

    Electrolux said the price was seven-7.3 times GE Appliance’s estimated this year’s earnings before tax, interest, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), based on an enterprise value (including debt) of $3.45 billion, according to ThomsonReuters data.

    Including expected yearly cost savings of about $300 million, the multiple paid for GE would be much lower at around five times EBITDA, Electrolux Chief Financial Officer Tomas Eliasson, told a conference call.

    “If they manage to realise the synergies, it’s clearly a good multiple,” said Kepler Cheuvreux analyst Johan Eliason, adding the inclusion of the Mabe stake would strengthen Electrolux’s position in Latin America on top of the clout it is gaining in North America.

    “They’re getting access to both North and South America in a very good way, and will become very strong in all of the Americas,” Eliason said.