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Ali expresses interest in developing ties with Djibouti

By - Apr 25,2016 - Last updated at Apr 25,2016

AMMAN — Economic growth rates in Djibouti constitute a good opportunity for Jordanian businesspeople to invest in the industrial, agricultural, housing and service sectors, Industry, Trade and Supply Minister Maha Ali said on Monday. 

At a meeting the Jordan Chamber of Industry organised between the industrial sectors in Jordan and Djibouti, Ali added the Kingdom is "very keen" to enhance economic relations with Djibouti.

She also referred to a previous meeting with Ilyas Dawaleh, Djibouti's minister of economy and finance in charge of industry and head of the delegation, when it was agreed to increase Jordanian exports to the African country, especially  pharmaceuticals, phosphate, potash, electric devices and Dead Sea products.

Djibouti agreed to provide necessary facilities to establish a Jordanian logistic village in its free zone to store Jordanian goods and re-export them to African markets, Ali continued.

Both countries also decided to embark on talks to sign bilateral agreements on commercial preferences, investment encouragement and protection, agriculture, exchanging expertise on standards and metrology, and industrial property protection, the minister elaborated. 

Transport Minister Ayman Hatahit said Aqaba Port is connected with Djibouti through four maritime routes, noting that shipping between Aqaba and Djibouti is the cheapest, where the cost of one 20-cubic feet container costs between $500 and $600.

Dawaleh said the visit to the Kingdom is aimed at developing commercial ties, and facilitating the Jordanian trade movement into Africa.

At another meeting, Dawaleh met Sunday night with local private sector industrialists.

Jordanian Businessmen Association (JBA) President Hamdi Tabbaa said Jordan is about to establish a maritime transport route between Aqaba and Turkey's Iskenderun Port, with a possibility to extend the route to Jeddah and Djibouti. 

Tabbaa encouraged Djibouti's businesspeople to invest in the Kingdom which offers good opportunities to reach US, European, Canadian, Turkish markets thanks to bilateral free trade agreements, according to a JBA statement. 

Tabbaa, who is also the honorary consul of Djibouti, highlighted the importance of cooperation in the service sector, mainly because Jordan enjoys "good reputation" in the health, pharmaceutical, and higher education fields. 

 

Dawaleh praised JBA's mission and invited a JBA delegation to Djibouti to check on cooperation means and investments in the country, which can serve as a hub to reach eastern African countries, added the statement.

Gov't, USAID to help exporters tap African markets

By - Apr 25,2016 - Last updated at Apr 25,2016

AMMAN — Jordanian exports to African markets constitute only 2.2 per cent of the overall exports, Industry, Trade and Supply Minister Maha Ali said Monday. 

Speaking at a meeting organised by the Jordan Small and Medium Enterprises Industrial Association (JSMEI), Ali described the exports as minimal because African markets "are a mystery" to Jordanian companies, in addition to the existence of many marketing and financing challenges. 

During the meeting, held to raise awareness of services offered by the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa, Ali indicated that African markets cover a billion people with an economic growth rate of 5 per cent in average, in addition to a large consumption base of many tastes, seasons and income levels. 

This, she remarked, opens exporting opportunities for Jordanian products in many sectors that have not yet been well exploited.

Ali said the ministry, in cooperation with the USAID, prepared a study on the possibilities and opportunities to export local products to five African markets, noting that the study is in its final phase and that the private sector will get to view it once it is done.

JSMEI President Nidal Samain called for intensifying bilateral visits, stressing that the Jordanian industry has developed and now holds a competitive edge in many industries, most importantly in pharmaceuticals. 

 

Fathi Jaghbeir, member of the Amman Chamber of Commerce, said the Jordanian exports to African markets did not exceed $600 million annually in the past five years, noting that pharmaceuticals, fertilisers, chemical ingredients, plastics, seeds and paper constituted 77 per cent of the total exports last year.

Germans flock to property as interest rates fall and rents rise

By - Apr 24,2016 - Last updated at Apr 24,2016

Apartment buildings with the Saint Michael Church (centre) are pictured at Berlin’s Kreuzberg district, Germany, March 1 (Reuters photo)

BERLIN — Unlike his parents who rented their whole life, Berlin resident Sebastian lives in his own apartment and is considering buying a second property in the German capital as an investment to top up his pension one day.

For decades a nation largely of tenants and prudent savers, growing numbers of Germans are buying property, not just to own their homes but also in search of investment returns they can no longer earn on their bank savings.

This shift to a more US or British approach to property is being encouraged by the European Central Bank's (ECB) cheap money policies and rising rents, especially in German cities.

A growing urban population and unexpectedly high immigration are pushing up a housing market where construction rates had been low for years.

"I've a private pension scheme, but despite diligent saving, it hardly yields anything due to the ultra-low interest rates," said Sebastian, a 38-year old management consultant, who asked not to be named in full because he does not want clients to know about his personal financial affairs.

While Sebastian bought his first apartment six years ago to escape rising rents, he now wants to buy a second property as a private retirement fund.

In the years that followed the fall of the Berlin Wall, property prices in the city were significantly lower than in the likes of London or Paris. But the German capital is no longer a cheap place to live.

"The problem now is: it's really difficult to find an apartment in Berlin which is not totally overpriced," added Sebastian.

Figures from the European Union's (EU) statistics agency show 52.5 per cent of Germans lived in their own home in 2014, well below the EU average of around 70 per cent. But this is sharply up from 2006 when, according to separate data from the German Federal Statistics Office, the level was about 42 per cent.

Strong demand for homes is fuelling a construction boom that is helping to support the German economy while exporters, who traditionally drive growth, struggle due to a slowdown in some of their major markets such as China.

In the last three months of 2015, construction was one of the biggest growth contributors while net trade was a drag. In the first two months of 2016, building investment further increased, raising hopes of a strong first quarter.

However, concerns are growing that a property bubble may be inflating at least in some cities. If it bursts one day, a scenario that could be created by rising interest rates, higher unemployment and changing demographics, owners and lenders alike could be hurt, posing a risk to medium-term growth.

A shortage of affordable housing is also forcing poorer families out of cities, widening the social gap in one of Europe's richest societies and raising tensions after a record 1 million migrants arrived last year alone.

Benefitting from the boom

So far, Sebastian has benefited from the boom. After studying in London and Boston where rent ate up a large part of his scholarships, he returned to buy a 100-square-metre apartment in Berlin's then up-and-coming Wedding district. For the 120,000-euro ($135,000) purchase, he borrowed  100,000 euros in 2010 on an interest rate of 3.8 per cent.

"From today's point of view, this was a bargain," Sebastian said, adding that he could now probably sell the flat for twice the price, if not even more.

Many others have followed suit. Comparing prices on property websites has become a hobby for many Germans and real estate is a frequent topic of conversation at parties.

"The demand for owner-occupied flats in Berlin has been booming since 2010 and it has increased in the last two years," indicated Christian von Gottberg, a real estate agent at the Engel and Voelkers.

First-time buyers tell Gottberg how landlords are raising rents for a third time within a couple of years. "So whoever can afford it, and has the financial means to meet the bank requirements for the deposit, opts for their own apartment."

Rates of owner occupancy remain modest by EU standards. "But for Germany, it's a radical change. And it's the ECB's record-low interest rates that are driving this," indicated Steffen Sebastian, head of real estate finance department at the University of Regensburg.

Strict standards

Construction firms and real estate groups are naturally benefitting from the boom.

For instance, shares in Patrizia Immobilien, which is building 4,000 new flats on top of the 80,000 homes it already owns, rose about 35 per cent in the past 12 months.

Hochtief, which focuses on public construction projects but also builds homes, has risen nearly 60 per cent over the same period.

Perhaps the biggest beneficiaries are thousands of small- and medium-sized firms that dominate residential building, and the banks which hand out ever more loans.

According to the Bundesbank, the overall volume of real estate loans rose by 3.5 per cent, the strongest annual rate in more than a decade, to a record 1.23 trillion euros in 2015.

This has led Bundesbank board member Andreas Dombret to warn of an overheating property market, at least in some cities, and urge banks to stick to their credit criteria which have so far been strict.

While some blame speculation for part of the price rises, others point out that housing remains in short supply due to a lack of construction in 2001-2009 when borrowing costs were much higher and tax incentives were scaled back.

Also, German home buyers still finance nearly a third of their property purchases with cash. The average debt ratio has risen only slightly from 70.3 per cent in 2010 to 71.7 per cent in 2015, according to Interhyp, Germany's biggest mortgage distributor.

"Talk about a nationwide housing bubble is surely exaggerated," Interhyp Chief Executive Officer Michiel Goris said.

The structure of loans has even become more conservative as clients are locking in record-low borrowing costs of below 2 per cent for a period of up to 15 years, he added.

For Sebastian, German banks are still too strict. Since he opened his own consultancy firm with no steady income on paper, lenders have hesitated to give him a second property loan. 

 

"That's absurd. But due to standardised processes, the banks are not flexible, no matter how cheap the ECB is making money," he said.

‘Severe criminal justice policies hurt US economy’

By - Apr 24,2016 - Last updated at Apr 24,2016

WASHINGTON — Longer prison sentences for non-violent criminals and crowded prisons are hurting the American economy more than they are helping it, economists in US President Barack Obama's administration said in a report released on Saturday.

The prison population in the United States is 4.5 times larger than it was in 1980, primarily driven by longer sentences and higher conviction rates for nearly all offences, according to the report.

Economists are "of one mind" that packed prisons, excessively long sentences, and insufficient reentry programmes "are counterproductive to our economy as a whole in addition to hurting the people involved", Jason Furman, the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, told reporters in a call on Friday.

Administration officials, economists, business leaders, and scholars will discuss on Monday the council's findings at an event hosted by the White House, the American Enterprise Institute think tank, and New York University's Brennan Centre for Justice.

The United States can reap greater economic benefit through investments in police, prisoner education and job opportunities for ex-prisoners than it can from putting additional funding towards prisons, the council's report said.

The council's report was based on a review of existing economics research, and does not estimate the indirect costs borne by the US economy as a result of its current criminal justice policies.

Later this year, the Brennan Centre will unveil a study quantifying how much the US criminal justice system costs Americans in terms of employment, wages and gross domestic product, said the centre's director of justice programmes, Inimai Chettiar.

Previous administrations have not brought the same focus to how criminal justice policies affect the US workforce, said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, who led the Congressional Budget Office from 2003-05 and is now president of the American Action Forum think tank.

Since the recession of the late 2000s, "every aspect of the workforce has been scrutinised more closely, and this sort of popped out", he told Reuters. 

Separately, a major study of income and life expectancy found that the richest Americans tend to outlive the poorest by almost 15 years, and that gap has grown since 2001.

The findings, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, were based on more than 1 billion tax records from 1999 to 2014, as well as government mortality statistics.

The gap in life expectancy between the richest 1 per cent and the poorest 1 per cent was 14.6 years for men and 10.1 years for women, indicated the study led by Raj Chetty, an economics researcher at Stanford University.

"For example, men in the bottom 1 per cent of the income distribution at the age of 40 years in the United States have life expectancies similar to the mean life expectancy for 40-year-old men in Sudan and Pakistan," it said.

The inequality in life expectancy also increased over time.

"There was a larger increase in life expectancy for higher income groups during the 2000s," added the study.

The rich tended to live even longer, by more than two years for men and almost three years for women between 2001 and 2014.

"Life expectancy did not change for individuals in the bottom 5 per cent of the income distribution," it continued.

According to researchers, factors found to affect life expectancy among the poor included smoking and obesity.

Where people lived also made a difference.

The shortest life expectancies in the lowest income groups were seen in Nevada, Indiana and Oklahoma — 77.9 years — while the longest-lived among the poorest Americans were in New York, California and Vermont — 80.6 years.

 

The average life expectancy in the United States is 78.8 — 81 for women and 76 for men, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

Ali discusses economic cooperation with Djibouti delegation

By - Apr 24,2016 - Last updated at Apr 24,2016

AMMAN —  Industry, Trade and Supply Minister Maha Ali on Sunday discussed economic cooperation with Djibouti's minister of economy and finance in charge of industry, a ministry statement said.

During the meeting attended by a Djibouti delegation and Jordanian officials, Ali stressed the importance of joint work to raise the level of economic cooperation, especially with regard to two-way trade.

She also highlighted the importance of benefitting from available opportunities in both countries, especially Jordan's location, considered a gate to the region's markets and Djibouti's location as an entrance to African markets.

Ali urged businesspeople from both countries to benefit from available investment prospects and to explore more the export potentials  and the needs of both markets.

At the end of the meeting, it was agreed to prepare a record of the accords  and memoranda of understanding between the two countries to enhance economic cooperation and take practical steps in the coming period. 

Housing Bank ups pretax profit by 20.1% during first quarter of 2016

By - Apr 24,2016 - Last updated at Apr 24,2016

AMMAN — Pretax profit generated by the Housing Bank for Trade and Finance (HBTF) during the first quarter of 2016 increased by 20.1 per cent to JD50.5 million from JD42.1 million posted the same period of 2015.

An HBTF statement revealed Sunday that profit after tax in the January-March period of 2016 stood at JD34.6 million, 10.2 per cent higher than the JD31.4 million registered in the first three months of 2015.

HBTF Director General Ihab Saadi underlined the bank's financial strength and soundness indicating in the statement that assets at the end of March 2016, totalled JD7.7 billion and that customers' deposits amounted to JD5.7 billion.

The portfolio of credit facilities reached JD3.9 billion, he said, and shareholders equity amounted to JD1.1 billion.

The results reflected positively on HBTF's main performance indicators which showed that return on assets after tax rose from 1.6 to 1.8 per cent, and return  on shareholders equity after tax increased from 12 to 13.2 per cent, the statement said.

Capital adequacy ratio stood at 16.8 per cent, higher than the 12 per cent minimum required by the Central Bank of Jordan. The liquidity ratio came in at 144 per cent.

Housing Bank to distribute 32% cash dividends

By - Apr 23,2016 - Last updated at Apr 23,2016

HBTF Chairman Michel Marto (2nd from right) presides over the general assembly meeting of shareholders on Saturday (Petra photo)

AMMAN — The Housing Bank for Trade and Finance (HBTF) announced on Saturday in a press statement that it will be distributing cash dividends at a rate of 32 per cent as endorsed by the shareholders during an ordinary general assembly meeting. 

HBTF Chairman Michel Marto said in the statement that HBTF's pretax profit amounted to JD177 million last year, the highest since its establishment in 1973 and 9.2 per cent higher than the JD162.1 million generated during 2014.

Net profit after tax stood at JD124.7 million, JD0.8 million higher than the amount at the end of 2014, when profits reached JD123.9 million, Marto added.

He attributed the limited increase in profit after tax to the increase in income tax from 30 per cent in 2014 to 35 per cent as of the beginning of 2015.

He indicated that the bank's assets went up by 4.3 per cent reaching JD7.9 billion at the end of last year and that customers' deposits totalled JD5.8 billion, 6.4 per cent higher than the total at the end of 2014.

Marto revealed that credit facilities surged by 28.6 per cent to JD3.5 billion.

 

At the end of the meeting, the board elected Abdul Ilah Khatib as a free-time chairman of the board and Abdullah Mubarak Al Kahlifah as vice chairman, and confirmed Ehab Saadi as director general of the bank, the statement concluded.

Arab Potash Co. to distribute 120% cash dividend

By - Apr 23,2016 - Last updated at Apr 23,2016

AMMAN —  Arab Potash Company (APC) will be distributing JD100 million in cash dividends to shareholders at a rate of 120 per cent, as authorised by shareholders during an ordinary general assembly meeting.  

APC Chairman Jamal Sarayrah told the shareholders that the company's net profit after tax, provisions and mining fees amounted to JD131 million last year, 31 per cent higher than the JD99.7 million generated during 2014.

He said the company paid about JD90 million to the state treasury in 2015 and spent around JD10 million in social donations to develop local communities. 

Sarayrah added that the profit reflected an increase in potash production, efficiency in cost management and good administrative policies.

He indicated that positive developments in 2015 included an increase in potash prices from $299 to $305, whereas negative factors showed mainly in the 3.7 per cent raise in electricity charges which contributed to lifting the power bill by 6 per cent compared to 2014.

To counter the energy challenge, the company is planning to replace heavy fuel with the cheaper and more environment-friendly natural gas, and also will proceed with generating energy through solar cells at a capacity of 33 megawatts, in addition to using diesel generators to provide 15 megawatts of electricity, the chairman continued.

APC President/Chief  Executive Officer Brent Heimann said the company's top priorities is to provide a safe working environment for employees, noting that APC in 2015 completed four million working hours without lost time injuries, which require the absence of injured employees for treatment. 

APC's future plans include boosting the handling capacity at the export terminal to cope with the company's production hike, he added, noting APC started the implementation of a new industrial terminal in Aqaba at an preliminary cost of JD118 million, equally funded by APC and the Jordan Phosphate Mines Company.

 

The general assembly also elected a new board of directors for a four-year term consisting from the Government Contributions Directorate, PCS Jordan LLC, Arab Mining Company, Social Security Corporation, Kuwait Investment Authority, Iraqi government, Islamic Development Bank – Jeddah, Libyan Foreign Investment Company. 

JIEC promotes industrial estates to Arab delegation

By - Apr 23,2016 - Last updated at Apr 23,2016

AMMAN — An Arab industrial delegation on Saturday had a first-hand look at the Jordanian experiment of industrial estates and efforts exerted by the Jordan Industrial Estates Company (JIEC) in providing an investment-attracting environment.

The delegates, taking part in the 6th Jordan International Exhibition for Chemical Industries, praised the investment achievements at the King Abdullah II Industrial Estate (KAIE) in Sahab. KAIE, established in 1984, houses  458 entities whose total investment volume stands at around JD1,376 million and provides more than 15,000 jobs, said Issam Mubaidin, KAIE director.

The head of JIEC's investment directorate said the investment environment in industrial estates and the incentives provided to industries are top factors that contribute to attracting projects in Jordan. The Kingdom's trade agreements with Arab and foreign countries benefit investors and enhance Jordan's status in attracting industrial investments, the director added.  

Egyptian currency traders shrug off black market crackdown

By - Apr 21,2016 - Last updated at Apr 21,2016

An employee counts Australian dollar banknotes at an exchange office in downtown Cairo, Egypt, on Tuesday (Reuters photo)

CAIRO — Egypt's war on black market currency traders is not going to plan. One month after a devaluation that was supposed to ease an acute dollar shortage in the banking system, clandestine business is booming in cafés, shops and flats.

The central bank, which hoped the 13 per cent devaluation would relieve downward pressure on the Egyptian pound, has cracked down on exchange bureaux trading far outside its set range.

And yet the gap between the official and black market rates, which briefly narrowed with the devaluation, is now wider than ever, with dealers buying and selling dollars for 20 per cent or more above the official rate of 8.78 pounds.

Traders say the crackdown has only exacerbated the crisis. People with dollars are shunning the official financial system, starving it of foreign currency. This is putting yet more pressure on the pound, with potentially dire consequences for inflation, investors' confidence and economic growth.

"No one sells dollars to the banks any more. They all prefer to go to the black market which will pay them more," said one banker who asked to remain anonymous. "The dollars don't come into the banking system any more and the central bank's dollar reserves are not enough to support the country's import needs," he added.

Egypt has struggled to restore growth since the 2011 uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak and scared away tourists and foreign investors, vital sources of the foreign currency it needs to import everything from fuel to food.

Eradicating the black market is essential to restoring investors' confidence, easing the risk that the pound's volatility will erase their profits.

Already, foreign investors are struggling to repatriate earnings because the central bank's reserves have more than halved since 2011 to about $16.5 billion in March. This has made it hard for them to convert pound earnings into foreign currency through the banking system.

Even before last month's devaluation, which was accompanied by the launch of financial instruments aimed at attracting hard currency to the banks, the central bank had resorted to legal force. In February, it revoked the licences of four exchange companies with 27 offices.

Since then, the expected influx of dollars has failed to materialise and this month it referred 15 more exchange firms to public prosecutors. Then on Wednesday the central bank said it had revoked the licences of nine more companies for manipulating prices of dollars in the parallel market.

Repeated offences

"The decision ... comes after repeated offences by these companies which distorted the exchange market and has harmed the national economy," said Gamal Negm, deputy central bank governor, in remarks published by the state news agency MENA.

Negm added that the bank is working on a new law that could raise the punishment for violators to a prison sentence.

Bankers say the clampdown has backfired because as it became riskier to deal on the black market, the dollar strengthened against the pound and people began hoarding foreign currency to speculate on the rate. 

This pushed the US currency yet higher, and the pound hit a record low of 11.5 to the dollar this week.

"Traders are speculating on the dollar and those who need dollars for imports can't find the dollars and must buy them from traders and speculators, so the black market rate is putting the Egyptian economy in a tight spot," said Ziad Waleed, an economist at Beltone Financial.

Any further official devaluation would threaten to fuel inflation, a politically explosive development in a country where millions live in poverty. That leaves the central bank with few weapons in its arsenal.

One trader described the situation as a standoff, saying that while the central bank is trying to punish black market dealers, it does not have the resources to fight them.

"We will secure ourselves and we will continue to work and we will do it carefully, as if we were dealing in drugs. We will hoard the dollars and we won't sell. Where will the central bank get dollars from?" he said.

Easy evasion

Just a few blocks away from one Cairo exchange bureau, a trader sipped coffee at a downtown cafe as he closed deals over the telephone away from the prying eyes of the authorities.

"Do you have riyals?" he asked another trader, quoting the black market rate for the Saudi currency. "I will take all of it."

This is one example of how easily traders are adapting to tighter oversight.

They quote official rates at the exchange bureaux, which are closely monitored, without making any deals. Business is then  done at cafes or elsewhere at black market rates, dealers said.

Outside the bureaux, young men puff on cigarettes and whisper to customers: "Dollars? Euros?"

"No one buys or sells at the official rate, so as soon as the customer leaves there are guys standing outside to catch them and deal with the unofficial rates," said another exchange bureau manager in downtown Cairo.

It should be easy to clamp down on these men, but traders say agents of the Interior Ministry's General Department of Public Funds Crime Investigation Unit, which is responsible for tackling illegal trading outside the bureaux, are easily bribed.

Reuters spoke to 10 traders who either work, own, or collaborate with exchange bureaux and all said that their operations run smoothly thanks to bribes and favours that are given to public funds forces and central bank employees.

"It does not put a dent in profits," said one exchange bureau worker, adding that a single branch of the company he works for makes around 6 million Egyptian pounds ($675,680 at the official rate or about $522,000 on the black market) in profit each month on black market trades alone.

The interior ministry spokesman did not respond to requests for comment and officials at the central bank, which does not have a spokesman, were not available for comment.

Exchange bureaus are licensed to operate with a certain amount of funds but most have offices or apartments where business is carried out off the books.

"If they close the exchange bureaux we will continue to work from the streets and this way the dollar price will reach 13 or 15 pounds per dollar," one trader said.

Luggage shops and cars

President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi has made economic revival a priority but is also mindful of protecting the poor, with his government slowing cuts to subsidies which keep down some food and fuel prices but burden the budget.

If the central bank is forced into repeated devaluations to keep up with the black market, this would be a nightmare for authorities trying to stabilise the economy.

But so is the current situation, where the public sector functions at an official exchange rate wholly disconnected from the rest of the economy which has to deal on the black market.

Black market activity is fast and efficient.

In Cairo, a luggage store manager took 20,000 pounds from his wooden desk in return for $2,000, a deal made with a customer who had been turned down at the exchange bureau next door. The operation took under a minute.

 

One trader showed Reuters a car he uses to transfer funds to clients in rubbish bags hidden in the boot. "The largest amount this car carried is the equivalent of 11 million Egyptian pounds," he said proudly.

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