Tag: reserves

  • Afreximbank-backed “gold bank” initiative takes shape with Egypt partnership

    Afreximbank-backed “gold bank” initiative takes shape with Egypt partnership

    2025-12-31 08:35:00

    In coverage from PUNCH, Afreximbank is moving toward a pan-African “gold bank” concept via a formal partnership with Egypt’s central bank, aimed at building structured value chains around Africa’s gold sector.

    The initiative is being framed as an institutional push to formalise gold trade, strengthen reserves management options, and reduce fragmentation that often leaves value outside producer economies.

    For African commodity strategy, the bigger idea is shifting from “raw export” to financeable, standardised flows that can support industrial policy, reserves, and cross-border trade.

    Validation: Afreximbank said “Memorandum of Understanding… for the Establishment of a Gold Bank programme in Egypt.” and Egypt Today reported “to establish a gold bank aimed at transforming Africa’s gold industry.”

    Echotitbits take: If executed well, this could be a template for commodity-backed trade finance that keeps more value within Africa. Watch for governance details, bullion standards, custody frameworks, and how smaller producer states are brought in.

    Source: Tanzaniatimes — 31 December 2025 (https://tanzaniatimes.net/egypt-and-afreximbank-to-establish-a-pan-african-gold-bank/)

    Tanzaniatimes 31 December 2025

    Photo Credit: Tanzaniatimes

  • Nigeria’s Capital Importation Drops to $1.13bn in August as Portfolio Inflows Cool

    Nigeria’s Capital Importation Drops to $1.13bn in August as Portfolio Inflows Cool

    Photo Credit: Vanguard
    2025-12-23

    A new update from Vanguard says Nigeria’s capital importation fell 62% month-on-month to $1.13 billion in August 2025 from $2.98 billion in July.

    The update indicated foreign direct investment improved from the prior month, while portfolio flows softened, suggesting more cautious foreign appetite.

    For policymakers, the signal is mixed: better FDI optics, but shrinking total inflows that can pressure FX liquidity and sentiment.

    New Telegraph reported: “Consequently, overall capital importation decreased to $1.13 billion, from $2.98 billion in the preceding month.” Vanguard similarly stated: “Nigeria’s capital importation… fell… to $1.13 billion…”.

    Echotitbits take: This is where FX stability meets credibility. Watch Q4 data for whether longer-term inflows start replacing hot money—and whether policy consistency improves investor comfort.

    Source: Vanguard — December 23, 2025 (https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/12/capital-importation-declines-62-to-1-13-bn/)
    Vanguard 2025-12-23