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South African rand stable as traders wait for interest rate decision

South African rand stable as traders wait for interest rate decision

Reuters6 days ago

JOHANNESBURG, May 28 (Reuters) - The South African rand was flat in early trade, as traders held off from big bets before the central bank's interest rate decision on Thursday.
At 0645 GMT, the rand traded at 17.9725 against the dollar , a whisker away from Tuesday's closing level.
The South African Reserve Bank will announce its latest monetary policy decision at around 1300 GMT on Thursday.
The majority of economists polled by Reuters expect the bank to trim its main lending rate (ZAREPO=ECI), opens new tab by 25 basis points, though a significant minority think the rate could be left unchanged.
Inflation (ZACPIY=ECI), opens new tab is currently below the central bank's target range, though policymakers have stressed risks from U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war and domestic politics.
South Africa's benchmark 2030 government bond was slightly weaker in early deals, with the yield up 2 basis points to 8.86%.

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Reckitt eyes new options to advance Air Wick unit sale, sources say
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Reuters

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  • Reuters

Reckitt eyes new options to advance Air Wick unit sale, sources say

LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) - Britain's Reckitt (RKT.L), opens new tab is considering new options to advance a sale of its Essential Home business, home to Air Wick fresheners and Cillit Bang cleaners, after bids came in below expectations, two people with knowledge of the process said. The company still plans to pursue a sale, the people said, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are private. Private equity firm Advent remains in talks for the assets, one of the people and a third person said. Reckitt, which also makes Mucinex cold medication and Durex condoms, said in July it was looking to offload a portfolio of homecare brands by the end of 2025. The proposed sale comes at a challenging time for businesses with factories around the world as they navigate U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs, which are roiling supply chains, boosting costs and dampening shopper sentiment. Reckitt could keep a stake in the business or structure a sale another way to bridge a gap in valuations, one of the people said, adding that some of the bids came in below its hopes of over 4 billion pounds ($5.4 billion). Reuters could not determine if other bidders remained in the process. Reckitt and Advent declined to comment. Bankers and CEOs have hit the brakes on mergers and acquisitions since Trump launched his trade war, with fewer deals getting signed than during the bleakest days of the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2008-2009 global financial crisis. Reckitt said in April that it was "continuing to progress" the sale of the Essential Home business but that market conditions might affect the time frame. Consumer staples companies are considered relatively resilient to economic downturns, but big brands like Reckitt, P&G (PG.N), opens new tab and Unilever (ULVR.L), opens new tab increasingly face competition from cheaper private label brands that gained popularity during the pandemic. Reckitt's Essential Home business has struggled for several quarters, with sales falling 7% in the first quarter of this year to 482 million pounds, about 13% of total revenue for the quarter. Reckitt has been undergoing a turnaround under CEO Kris Licht, who has sought to reassure shareholders concerned about the strength of the company's brands in North America and Europe, where consumer confidence has been dwindling. ($1 = 0.7397 pounds)

Truth is revealed — How Trump posts to his social site a whopping 17 times a day as he governs by social media
Truth is revealed — How Trump posts to his social site a whopping 17 times a day as he governs by social media

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Truth is revealed — How Trump posts to his social site a whopping 17 times a day as he governs by social media

Nearly a decade after his twitchy Twitter fingers helped him shock the world by defeating Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, Donald Trump 's social media habit is playing an even larger role in his messaging and governing during the opening months of his second term. Since returning to the White House on Jan. 20, Trump has taken to the social media site he owns, Truth Social, for a total of 2,145 original posts, which he has used to announce hirings and firings, launch an unprovoked trade war with China (and most of the world), roll out policy changes and threaten friend and foe alike, often with the curt sign-off: 'Thank you for your attention to this matter!' Over his first 100 days, The Independent found he had posted to his site more than 1,600 times, or at least 15 times a day on average through the end of April with the most frequent subject being illegal immigration. 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He most recently added to the ranks of this set of posts last week on Memorial Day with a 172-word, all caps rant: 'Happy Memorial Day to all, including the scum that spent the last four years trying to destroy our country through warped radical left minds, who allowed 21,000,000 million people to illegally enter our country, many of them being criminals and the mentally insane.' But it's the reposts that often raise eyebrows as Trump shares content from any of his millions of followers on the Truth Social platform, some of which crosses into the conspiratorially bizarre. In one repost last weekend, he shared a post from a follower who claimed that his successor turned predecessor, former president Joe Biden, had actually been replaced by a 'soulless mindless' robot clone because the real Biden — according to the user — was put to death in 2020. 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Local debt markets could shield Africa as funding sources shrink, Moody's says
Local debt markets could shield Africa as funding sources shrink, Moody's says

Reuters

time42 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Local debt markets could shield Africa as funding sources shrink, Moody's says

LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) - African countries should focus on developing liquid local debt markets in their home currencies to protect them from global volatility and fickle foreign investors, said Moody's global head of sovereign and sub-sovereign risk, Marie Diron. Credit ratings for some countries on the continent have begun climbing after a rough cycle of cuts and outlook downgrades spurred by the stress the COVID-19 pandemic put on sovereign balance sheets. But as trade wars and geopolitical risks roil global markets, the countries that are faring the best, such as Benin and Ivory Coast, are the ones that have beefed up local funding, Diron said. "Domestic funding - I think that has to really bridge that gap," she told Reuters in an interview on the sidelines of an event by the Mo Ibrahim Foundation in Marrakech, Morocco. Diron said deep and liquid domestic debt markets had in part shielded South Africa's rating, and borrowing costs, from the turmoil of President Donald Trump's adversarial approach to President Cyril Ramaphosa's government. Using revenue efficiently, lowering exposure to foreign currency debt and lengthening maturities were also key factors supporting African countries' credit ratings and market access, she said. Moody's research shows the median interest rate on local currency debt in Africa stands at roughly 12%, compared with 8% in Latin America and 5.5% in Asian emerging markets, highlighting cost savings African sovereigns could achieve with deeper, more developed local markets. Diron said that in the previous decade, African governments had access to more diverse financing sources - from the World Bank to comparatively affordable international bond market lending. Now, sources are more limited - and conditional - with rich nations cutting aid and concessional finance shrinking. Flows from China, a key source for countries such as Angola and Zambia, are turning net negative as repayments come due and fresh lending slows, she said. "We're looking at a few years where the net flows are likely to be negative, because the repayments are likely to be more significant," Diron said of China. Declining oil prices have also squeezed crude exporters' revenues, notably in Angola, and Diron said Moody's expects Brent futures to remain close to $65 per barrel, a drop of roughly $10 from their previous forecast. Multilateral development banks are stepping in to fill gaps, Diron said, but the amounts were in the "tens of billions," not enough to close the annual financing gap that the African Development Bank has estimated at $400 billion. Moody's was also monitoring any further cuts in U.S. funding of such international institutions as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank or the AfDB, Diron said. "It would be a risk if then multilateral development banks concluded that they cannot lend as much as they have, especially at a time when the borrowing needs are, if anything, rising," she said.

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