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China Plans $12bn Aviation Investment in 2O16

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The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) reported that this year China is planning to invest $11.9 billion into country’s aviation infrastructure.

According to Feng Zhenglin, Head of CAAC, the money will be spent mainly on airport constructions, including 11 new projects and renovation of 52 existing facilities.

“The general aviation sector, especially aircraft research and manufacturing, has become a hot spot of both industrial upgrading and social concern,” said Feng Zhenglin, Head of the CAAC.

CAAC also stated that China has been putting a lot of effort into improving transportation and increasing employment rates in the service sector.

$7m Prize to Fund African Renewable Energy Projects

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Access power

Access Power, a developer, owner and operator of power projects in emerging markets, today kicked off the countdown for applications to the ACF 2016, the second edition of its successful Access Co-Development Facility (ACF) for renewable energy projects in Africa.

Renewable energy developers have less than one month left to submit their applications for a chance to win US$7million in ACF prize funding. The deadline for applications is the 20st May 2016.

ACF 2016 is a competition dedicated to finding local power project developers with credible renewable energy projects in Africa who need access to funding, technical experience, and expertise to bring their plans to life.

Following the competition’s successful launch last year, the ACF increased its funding from US$5m in 2015 to US$7m for this year’s winners. Up to three successful projects will be selected by a panel of expert judges whose decision will be based on commercial, technical and environmental merits, the local regulatory environment, and capability of the project team.

The winners of ACF 2016 will be announced on Tuesday 22nd June 2016 before a live audience during the Africa Energy Forum in London. The winners will enter a Joint Development Agreement with Access Power, which will take an equity stake in the winning projects and fund third-party development costs such as feasibility studies, grid studies, environmental and social impact assessments and due diligence fees. Access Power will also provide technical support, financial structuring and development process management.

Nasir Aku, ACF Program Manager at Access Power commented: “With just one month to go until the application deadline, we want to make sure that all local developers across the African continent are aware of this fantastic opportunity to secure valuable funding and expertise that can turn an idea for a renewable energy project into reality.”

ACF 2016 is leading the way in demonstrating and supporting the type of renewable energy projects that will help meet Africa’s massive and urgent need for electrification.

“Through this unique facility, we hope to encourage innovation and support companies in their efforts to deliver power to places that desperately need it. Last year we received a total of 55 submissions from 18 countries across Africa, including solar, wind, hydro, hybrid and bio-mass projects. The applications are coming in fast so 2016 looks set to build on that success.”

The inaugural ACF in 2015 was won by Quaint Solar Energy from Nigeria and Flatbush Solar from Cameroon. Other competing projects hailed from Cape Verde, Kenya, Madagascar, South Africa, Morocco, Ghana, Rwanda and Tanzania.

One project has already pre-qualified for ACF2016. A 25MW solar project being developed in Sierra Leone by Africa Growth and Energy Solutions (AGES) won the Solar Shark Tank competition at the Making Solar Bankable conference in Amsterdam on 18th February.

In a keenly fought contest, three emerging markets developers competed for a US$100,000 grant to support the development of their solar projects, funded by Access Power and Dutch development bank FMO. Part of the prize, subject to terms and conditions, was pre-qualification for ACF2016.

Global Passenger Traffic Rose 5.3% in March

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Aeroplane

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced global passenger traffic results for March showing that demand (measured in revenue passenger kilometers, or RPKs) rose 5.3%, compared to the same month last year.

Capacity grew slightly faster at 5.9% which pushed the average load factor down by half a percentage point to 79.6%.

March performance shows a moderate slowdown on the year-on-year growth rates recorded in January (7.2%) and February (8.6%) even after adjusting for the leap-year impact in February. Demand for international traffic grew significantly more quickly (6.2%) than that for domestic travel (3.7%).

“While in line with long-term trends, demand growth in March represented a slow-down compared to January and February. It is premature to say whether this marks the end of the recent very strong results. We do expect further stimulus in the form of network expansion and declines in travel costs.

However, the wider economic backdrop remains subdued,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.

March 2016 
(% year-on-year)
World share¹

RPK

ASK

PLF 
(%-pt)²         
PLF 
(level)³  
Total Market
100.0%
5.3%
5.9%
-0.5%      
79.6%
Africa
2.2%
9.7%
8.2%
1.0%
68.2%
Asia Pacific
31.5%
5.1%
6.7%
-1.2%
78.3%
Europe
26.7%
5.3%
4.6%
0.5%
80.2%
Latin America
5.4%
3.8%
2.8%
0.7%
78.3%
Middle East
9.4%
11.5%
13.4%
-1.3%
76.7%
North America
24.7%
3.0%
3.5%
 -0.4%
83.6%

International Passenger Markets

March international passenger demand rose 6.2% compared to March 2015, which was a decline compared to the 9.1% increase in February. Airlines in all regions recorded growth. Total capacity climbed 6.9%, causing load factor to slip 0.5% percentage points to 78.5%.

· African airlines continued to enjoy strong demand, with traffic up 11.2% compared to March 2015. The turnaround after several difficult years coincides with expansion of long-haul networks by the region’s carriers. Capacity rose 9.7%, and load factor strengthened to 66.6%, up 0.9 percentage points.

The Bottom line
“In just under a month Dublin will become the focus of the global air transport industry, when the 72nd IATA Annual General Meeting and World Air Transport Summit takes place there, 1-3 June. Europe is the world’s largest international market in terms of traffic flown by its carriers. And aviation supports 12 million European jobs and 4.1% of the continent’s GDP. But aviation could do much more if governments would address the triple whammy of high taxes, overly-complex and punitive regulations, and inadequate and inefficient infrastructure. Making Europe an easier place to do business will help aviation deliver even greater benefits to the economy,” said Tyler.

Zain Launches LTE Services in Sudan

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Zain

Zain says that it has launched 4G LTE services in Sudan. The launch of the 4G network was announced at a press conference last week in Khartoum.

In the first stage 4G coverage will be extending to the capital Khartoum; Medani; Port Sudan and El Obeid with these central and populated areas being launched in cooperation with Ericsson.

4G services will be extended to other regional centers across the country gradually with the additional cooperation of Huawei.

Zain Sudan initially launched 4G services with nearly 300 sites that are on air now, with 21 other cities in the regions set to gain coverage by the end of 2016, with 15 of them by the end of June. The population coverage of the 4G network will reach over 20% in the first stage of roll out.

Managing Director and CEO, Elfatih Erwa affirmed that the introduction of 4G places Sudan at the forefront of countries providing mobile data services on the continent, and features Sudan in an advanced position technologically. Zain is keen to transport its customers on a journey towards the cutting edge digital world, with 4G also set to bolster the mobile experience of 2G and 3G services by adding additional network capacity.

“Zain remains committed to delivering the highest quality of service to its customers in all the markets in which it operates, and highly appreciates the opportunity to introduce 4G into Sudan. The authorities in Sudan showed wisdom and foresight in granting a 4G licence to Zain at a sensible fee amount, as it allowed Zain to invest more in technology and infrastructure, as well as to offer competitive pricing for 4G services. The Sudanese people are ultimately the beneficiaries of this wisdom.”

IMF: Credit to Private Sector Slows in sub-Saharan Africa

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IMF

In its global economy outlook published on May 3, 2016, the International Monetary Fund noticed a slowdown in growth of bank loans to private sector in most sub Saharan African nations since the beginning of the year.

“The recent phenomenon is analyzed using the 2010-13 rapid credit growth as a reference, as at the time, commodities were up and financing conditions more favorable,” the institution said in its report.

To be more precise, IMF points out three cases. First, it talks about nations such as Senegal, Kenya, Togo, and Mozambique, who do not export natural resources, showing risks associated with credit’s rapid growth which exceeded what structural considerations seem to explain and which, at term, could weigh on these countries’ financial stability. In Kenya, the banking system has been experimenting shocks as margins reduced due to saturated market and persisting increase in bad debts.

In most natural resources’ exporting countries, credit’s rapid growth was linked to a recovery process. Most concerned nations moved from a low banking credit to better results. In two of these countries (Mali, Niger), this credit was greater than what structural characteristics should have justified.

Next are some countries where progress in terms of financial deepening is insufficient and where credit’s growth is lower than average and fitting what structural characteristics would recommend.

Things are not likely to improve in the short-term seeing how IMF forecast a growth of 3% for 2016, against 3.4% at the end of 2015. As for oil exporters, they should record a 2.2% growth. Countries with low revenues, poor states excluded, will record 5.8% of GDP. Poor nations will record a 4.8% growth.

IMF believes this trend could be reversed, but before this occurs, sub Saharan African governments should change direction, mobilizing local resources and being more efficient in terms of allocation of collected resources.

However, challenges and needs are many. Sub Saharan Africa which focuses most of its population (1.2 billion) still has a weak productive fabric, mainly dominated by foreign capitals, and a low level of regional integration reducing opportunities for scale profits.

In this context, growth points are driven by a consumption that depends mostly on imports. This translates into a low growth in per capita GDP (+0.6%), gross domestic savings falling to 13.4%, a negative average balance budget of -4.6%, and strengthening of negative goods trade deficit of -3.4%.

Presented this way, GDP does not indicate quality of products, environment or type of goods that characterize economies in the region.

-Idriss Linge

Bribery Soars in Middle East & North Africa

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bribery

Nearly one in three citizens who tried to access basic public services in the Middle East and North Africa paid a bribe, a Transparency International report said today, showing that governments across the region have failed to hear their citizens’ voices against corruption.

According to a public opinion survey by the international anti-corruption group of nearly 11,000 adults in 9 countries and territories, the majority of people (61 per cent) across the region think that the level of corruption has gone up over the last 12 months. The 30 percent who paid a bribe for a basic service represent the equivalent of nearly 50 million.

“It’s as if the Arab Spring never happened. Leaders who fail to stop secrecy, fail to promote free speech and fail to stop bribery also fail to bring dignity to the daily lives of people living in the Middle East and North Africa. Peoples’ human rights are seriously affected,” said José Ugaz, Chair of Transparency International.

Public dissatisfaction with corrupt leaders and regimes was a key catalyst for change in region, notably with Arab Spring protests. Five years on, the survey finds governments have done little to enforce laws against corruption and bribery, nor have they done enough for transparency and accountability through the promotion of freedoms of the press, civil society and for individuals.

In Lebanon, numbers are alarming as nine in ten people (92 per cent) say that they think corruption has increased.

Government officials, tax officials and members of parliament are perceived to be the most corrupt groups in the region.

Based on the findings of the survey, here are our four top recommendations:

· Governments in the region must speak out immediately and publicly about their commitment to end corruption. They must also finally deliver on their anti-corruption commitments made globally and regionally, such as under the United Nations Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) and the Arabic Convention for Combating Corruption.

· Governments must eradicate impunity and bring the corrupt to justice so they can take responsibility for the consequences of their acts.

· Governments must create a safe and enabling environment for civil society and the media to fight and report corruption.

· Governments must involve their citizens in the fight against corruption and create the space to hold institutions to account and to help law enforcement institutions. This is especially important when the majority of citizens (58 per cent) believe they have the power to make a difference.

WSIS Unveils 18 2016 Prize Winners

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ITU

ITU Secretary-General, Houlin Zhao yesterday announced the 18 winners of the WSIS Prizes 2016 at the WSIS High-Level Opening Segment, which was held at the Geneva International Conference Centre (CICG).

The WSIS Prizes 2016 contest provides a platform to identify and showcase success stories across the 11 WSIS Action Lines defined in the Geneva Plan of Action.

The awards are conferred through an open online voting process, which this year engaged over 245,000 stakeholders from around the world. A total of 311 projects were nominated for the 2016 contest, a significant increase on the number of nominated submissions in 2015, reflecting both the prestigious nature of the award and the growing importance of ICTs in national development strategies.

In line with the inclusive, multi-stakeholder character of the WSIS Process, the prizes recognize the outstanding achievements of a wide range of organisations in strengthening implementation of the vision and targets set by the World Summit on the Information Society in 2003 (Phase 1) and 2005 (Phase 2).

“ITU and its WSIS partners strongly believe in the critical importance of ICTs in achieving the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals,” said ITU Secretary-General Houlin Zhao.

“The WSIS Prizes recognise all players in the effort to improve global connectivity, from governments and global ICT companies to grassroots NGOs leading innovative ICT-oriented projects at the local level. All of these stakeholders are equally vital to the success of the WSIS Process.”

WSIS Project Prize winners include government departments, international organizations, private sector companies, NGOs and academia. An innovation in the WSIS Prizes contest this year is the nomination of 70 ‘WSIS Prize Champions’.

This new award category recognises outstanding projects that were among the most-voted entries and which also received the best reviews by the members of the Expert Group.

Of these 70, 18 winners were selected to receive the coveted WSIS Prize, with the remaining projects to be celebrated at a special event to be held on Wednesday 4 May entitled: Implementing Best Practices and Addressing Challenges: Meet the Winners and Champions.

This year’s 18 winners are:

Action Line C1 The role of government and all stakeholders in the promotion of ICTs for development
Winner: Fostering integration of Argentine Academia in the activities of ITU, Ente Nacional de Comunicaciones (ENACOM), Argentina
Action Line C2 Information and communication infrastructure
Winner: Data Centres for Government Agencies, National Information Technologies JSC, Kazakhstan
Action Line C3 Access to information and knowledge
Winner: Connected Homes, Presidential Social Council, Costa Rica
Action Line C4 Capacity building
Winner: Smart Online SMEs (S.O.S.) by Thaitrade.com, Department of International Trade Promotion (DITP), Thailand
Action Line C5 Building confidence & security in the use of ICTs
Winner: Certification Programme for Better ICT Services, Office of Electronic Communications, Poland
Action Line C6 Enabling environment
Winner: Life Long Learning and Employment for People with Disabilities, Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, Egypt
Action Line C7 E-government
Winner: e-National Judicial System, Ministry of Justice of Turkey, Turkey
Action Line C7 E-business
Winner: ATTA’A System, Atta’a for Helping Charity Organizations, Saudi Arabia
Action Line C7 E-learning
Winner: MexicoX-Platform of Massive Open Online Course (MOOCS), National Digital Strategy, Mexico
Action Line C7 E-health
Winner: Informatization of the Public Health System, SOFTEL, Cuba
Action Line C7 E-employment
Winner: Technology for Education, Employment, Entrepreneurs, and Economic Development Project, Information and Communications Technology Office, Philippines
Action Line C7 E-environment
Winner: Asia Pacific Green Data Center Farm, Green Data Center LLP, Malaysia
Action Line C7 E-agriculture
Winner: Harmonized Information of Agriculture, Revenue and Irrigation for a Transformation Agenda – Precision Technology for Agriculture, Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, India
Action Line C7 E-science
Winner: R-package to compute confidence intervals for heritability, reliability, and heterogeneity, Ilia Vekua Institute of Applied Mathematics (VIAM) of Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University (TSU), Georgia
Action Line C8 Cultural diversity & identity, linguistic diversity
Winner: Connectivity is Productivity, Bridge Africa, United States of America
Action Line C9 Media
Winner: Youth Women in Community Media and Journalism – the beginning of a new era in rural broadcasting journalism, Bangladesh NGOs Network for Radio and Communication, Bangladesh
Action Line C10 Ethical dimensions of the Information Society
Winner: EmpoderaLive, Cibervoluntarios Foundation, Spain
Action Line C11 International & regional cooperation
Winner: ICT Development in Arab Region, ICT Development in Arab Region, United Arab Emirates

Background
WSIS Project Prizes is an international contest developed in response to requests from WSIS stakeholders to create an effective mechanism to evaluate and recognise individuals, governments, civil society, local, regional and international agencies, research institutions and private sector companies for outstanding success in implementing development-oriented strategies that leverage the power of ICTs.

The WSIS Project Prizes contest is an integral part of the WSIS stocktaking process.

The contest was held for the first time in 2012, and rapidly gained attention and popularity within the ICT for Development (ICT4D) community.

IATA Holds 72nd AGM in Dublin June 1

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IATA

The 72nd IATA Annual General Meeting (AGM) and World Air Transport Summit will take place in Dublin, Ireland, from Wednesday, 1 June to Friday, 3 June 2016.

This year’s AGM takes place against a backdrop of generally rising industry financial health but also a growing regulatory burden. Security, safety, and environment issues, however, remain top of the industry agenda.

The long-term trend shows safety is steadily improving, but recent tragedies reinforce the importance of working together to fully understand and reduce the risk of future occurrence.

The industry also faces a vital year at ICAO with the decision in September on whether to implement a global market-based measure for aviation.

These issues will be addressed by the industry’s top leaders at the IATA AGM, which is open to accredited media.

Program highlights will include:

• The IATA Director General’s Report on the Industry
• Updated Economic Outlook
• CEO Insight Panel
• Panel Discussions on Cyber Security and the Environment
• Media Briefings on key industry topics

The IATA Annual General Meeting (AGM) and World Air Transport Summit is the world’s largest gathering of airline leaders.

The 71st AGM in Miami in June 2015 attracted close to 800 attendees including CEOs from 85 airlines, as well as high level executives from OEMs, airports, governments, ANSPs, IT providers and other stakeholders.

In 2016, the 72nd AGM will be hosted by Aer Lingus and will take place in one of Europe’s most welcoming cities, Dublin, Ireland.

Air transportation plays a vital role in the social and economic life of Ireland and the Irish have a proud history of contribution to the development of aviation.

The IATA AGM and World Air Transport Summit is a unique opportunity to hear first-hand the views of the industry’s top chief executives and leaders.

CTO Unveils Plan of Action to Promote ICTs for Dev

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The Secretary-General of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO), Mr. Shola Taylor, has outlined how the Organisation plans to aid the development of ICTs in the Commonwealth and beyond.

Speaking at a moderated high-level panel session on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development taking place at the World Summit on the Information Society Forum 2016 (WSIS), Taylor outlined the CTO’s plans work to promote broadband, ICT applications and cybersecurity to deliver the benefits of ICTs to peoples around the world.

“The CTO’s new strategic plan for 2016 to 2020 seeks to contribute to the promotion of ICTs for development by prioritising its interventions in key areas,” Taylor said.

“In addition to working on broadband, applications and cybersecurity, we will also assist our members to create forward-looking regulatory environments that will encourage investment, facilitate innovation and maximise resources.”

As the Organisation mandated by ICT Ministers to coordinate Commonwealth engagement in international ICT fora, the CTO will work with international and regional stakeholders in pursuit of the common goals of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

“We, the ICT stakeholders, need to work collectively and collaboratively to ensure that the benefits of ICTs are maximised and equitably distributed,” Taylor said.

“This is of particular importance to the Commonwealth, a unique collective of 53 countries with a combined population of 2.2 billion, whose membership includes both well-endowed and less-endowed countries, in various stages of ICT development.”

About the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation
The Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO) is the oldest and largest Commonwealth intergovernmental organisation in the field of information and communication technologies.

Although our history can be traced back to 1901 with the establishment of the Pacific Cable Board, the organisation has only existed in its present form as an intergovernmental treaty organisation since 1967.

With a diverse membership spanning developed and least developed countries, small island developing states, and more recently also the private sector and civil society, the CTO aims to become a trusted partner for sustainable development for all through ICTs.

FOR THE RECORD: Weakening Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa Calls for Policy Reset

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Growth lowest in 15 years, with significant variation across region
Severe shocks: weak commodity prices, tight external financing, drought
Urgent need to reset policies to secure growth

After a prolonged period of strong economic growth, sub-Saharan Africa is set to experience a second difficult year as the region is hit by multiple shocks, the IMF said in its latest Regional Economic Outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa

The steep decline in commodity prices and tighter financing conditions have put many large economies under severe strain, and the new report calls for a stronger policy response to counter the effect of these shocks and secure the region’s growth potential.

The report shows growth fell to 3½ percent in 2015, the lowest level in 15 years. Growth this year is expected to slow further to 3 percent, well below the 6 percent average over the last decade, and barely above population growth.

Hit by several shocks
The commodity price slump has hit many of the largest sub-Saharan African economies hard. While oil prices have recovered somewhat compared to the beginning of the year, they are still more than 60 percent below 2013 peak levels—a shock of unprecedented magnitude.

Monique Newiak
IMF African Department

NIGERIA: Preparing for Post-2020 Global Economic Stature

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Roberts Ungwaga Orya
Roberts Ungwaga Orya

– Robert Orya

Year 2020 is forty-four months away. According to the 2009 perspective planning of the National Planning Commission, the Vision 20:2020, the country’s GDP is projected to reach $900 billion by 2020.

That would rank Nigeria as one of the top 20 economies of the world.

My estimate is that Nigeria’s GDP reached $588 billion in 2015, based on the World Bank estimate of $569 billion in 2014 and 3.3% growth rate of 2015. This already makes Nigeria the world’s 21st largest economy. From its 22nd position in 2014, Nigeria leapfrogged Sweden last year.

But I’m afraid, the current GDP growth estimate of 5 percent average between now and 2020 would not see Nigeria rise above Switzerland (the world’s 20th largest economy) whose GDP was $701 billion in 2014, and growing at around 1.9 percent.

With that, Nigeria’s sceptical brigade would like to sound the death knell of another economic target which the government had dared to enact but became unrealisable. But Nigeria’s economic potential has not diminished.

With a longer time horizon, Nigeria’s economic stature would confound the sceptics.

PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) has just released a report that projects Nigeria to become one of the 10 largest economies of the world by 2050. Economic diversification and high growth rate would accelerate the GDP to $6.4 trillion by 2050, according to PwC’s The World in 2050: Will the shift in global economic power continue?

This means Nigeria would ultimately leapfrog United Kingdom and France – the current fifth and sixth world’s largest economies, respectively. UK’s GDP was estimated at $2.99 trillion in 2014, while France was $2.83 trillion. Both countries are likely to continue to grow at less than half the rate of Nigeria’s expansion.

This might sound outlandish at the moment, but that would be to those who have not been keenly observing the shift that had begun to take place in the world economy before the last global financial meltdown and in its aftermath.

Collectively, the traditional economic powerhouses have been growing at a very slow pace. The emerging economies, notably China, had plugged the global growth gap until recently. The next decades would see the frontier markets – chiefly Nigeria, Indonesia, South Korea and Mexico – and the next emerging market giant, India, intensify the shift in the global economic power.

Nigeria’s place amongst the world’s biggest economies is affirmed by the breadth and depth of economic potentials of the country. It is instructive that PwC’s radical projection of Nigeria’s economy came at a period of low oil prices.

This confirms the open secret that Nigeria is far more than an oil economy. The potentials of the country actually lie in the non-oil sectors, which remain largely untapped.

President Muhammadu Buhari recently identified to the meeting of the National Economic Council the sectors that his Administration would be focusing on for the transformation of Nigeria’s economy. These are agriculture, manufacturing, power, healthcare and housing. He also mentioned the transformational impact of education, science and technology.

These sectors spell out the key role of government in Nigeria’s economic transition, from potentials to greatness.

A direct interventional role by government, and Nigeria’s ability to attract private investment, are critical to the realisation of the potentials across what could be classified as the key business and social sectors of focus by President Buhari. Therefore, certain policy imperatives immediately come into reckoning.

The first of three policy imperatives is formalisation of the informal sectors. There remains a lot of work to be done with regard to the formalisation of both production and trade activities in as many as four of the five sectors of focus by the Administration. Top on the list is agriculture, where much of the activities are off the radar of fiscal operations.

In as much as Nigeria’s housing deficit is driven by rural-urban migration, the presence of urban slums and unplanned housing in the suburban and rural areas shows the degree of informalisation in the housing sector. And slow uptick in formal health sector growth, juxtaposed to high population growth rate, is seeing growing informal healthcare provisioning which might not be safe and is also difficult to account for in economic measurement. Informal activities, especially trade, are also very present in the manufacturing value chain.

We have to devise a plan to bring “enlightened capital” to these sectors to overcome the challenge of informality. Here, the planned investment in infrastructure can open the pathway for critical mass skilled human capital and sophisticated finance in these sectors.

This might look straight forward, but definitely it is not a simple solution to come by. Our ability to mobilise enlightened capital into our informal sectors would be proof positive of the adequacy of our strategies and implementation.

Formalisation of the economy is the next step after the rebasing of the GDP in 2014. The rebased GDP has provided a wider economic canvass for engineering growth. Formalisation would help capitalise these sectors and generate tax revenue for government to fund its fiscal operations, including social programmes.

The second imperative is performance of public institutions and public investments. Government parastatals just have to become business-like. This is not limited to adapting private sector ethos of performance engineering and measurement, although it is the less controversial aspect of it.

Without necessarily wanting to stire the hornet’s nest, government’s commercial and revenue-generating institutions have to reach for higher levels of top line and bottom line performances. Whether or not we believe government has any involvement in business, it already does. Therefore, the institutions must operate optimally and support the Government in improving the economy.

Chinese state-owned enterprises have been part and parcel of the country’s growth story. While the Chinese SOEs seem to struggle right now with the transition to a more open and private sector-led growth model, the role they played in revenue mobilisation, local investment finance and overseas investment outreach cannot be easily discountenanced.

With regard to public investment, infrastructure is catalytic. President Buhari has raised hope on this with the size of the capital investment in the 2016 budget.

Infrastructures are ineludible signposts of development. However, in present day Nigeria, they would be a lot more than that. Delivery of key infrastructure would inspire private sector investment and significantly ease the burden of doing business.

The high capital allocation in the budget in an environment of government’s anticorruption agenda can serve as a boon for the development of the infrastructures to propel Nigerian economic growth.

The third imperative is a focus on developing the regulatory institutions. Two reasons for this stand out. One is that rising business sophistication is conterminous with high growth economies. Sophisticated market instruments are increasingly deployed in the local market as foreign investments become part and parcel of the local growth story.

The regulatory agencies cannot operate behind the curve of economic sophistication; ideally, they should provide the lead, or at worse keep pace with market complexities.

The second reason is identifiable in the on-going efforts to have agreement on the fine of MTN Nigeria by the Nigerian Communication Commission.

Nigerian businesses are growing into behemoths, and multinational and transnational corporations are expected to continue to latch on the Nigerian growth in the foreseeable future in which we would attain global economic status.

These large corporations exercise immense power of lobby. They sometimes can out-muscle local regulators. Even the most advanced economies struggle to enact policies and implement them due to the lobby by the big corporations.

To minimise the risk of the corporations overrunning the regulators, we have to start to strengthen our regulatory institutions today.

Years of inadequate policy and governance have only delayed the transformation of Nigeria into a global, top-ranked economy. But this transformation is inevitable, given the consumption capacity of our large population and our human and resource endowments.

From all indications, we are getting closer to the inflection point of this economic destiny. The shift in global economic dynamic is in favour of Nigeria, and we are on our way to the top. We have to believe it and we have to act it.

– Roberts U. Orya, Former Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Export – Import Bank

Google Slashes Political Lobbying to $3.8m

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google

Google slashed spending on lobbying by 25.5 percent in the first quarter of 2016 to $3.80 million, while AT&T reported the highest lobbying outlay at $4.48 million among a group of 16 tech and communications companies monitored by Consumer Watchdog.

Google spent $5.10 million in the comparable 2015 period and AT&T’s spending was up 2.5 percent from $4.37 million in 2015, according to disclosure reports just filed with the Clerk of the House of Representatives.

Facebook, which has been increasing its Washington presence, spent $2.78 million, an increase of 13.9 percent from $2.44 million, in the comparable 2015 quarter.

Microsoft also topped $2 million in lobbying spending. It reported expenditures of $2.02 million, an increase of 6.9 percent from $1.89 million in 2015.

Lobbying spending increased 39 percent at Amazon, to $ 2.65 million from $1.91 million in the first quarter of 2015, the disclosure records show. It was the fourth straight quarter that its spending topped $2 million.

Seven of the companies spent more than $2 million on lobbying, Consumer Watchdog noted. Twelve spent more than $1 million on lobbying in the first quarter.

“It’s important to understand just how much money these companies are throwing around in Washington to buy the policies they want,” said John M. Simpson, Consumer Watchdog’s Privacy Project Director. “Policymaking is now all about big bucks, not big ideas.”

Consumer Watchdog, a nonpartisan nonprofit public interest group, monitors the lobbying disclosure reports of 16 tech and communications companies.

Half of the 16 companies increased their first quarter 2016 spending on lobbying and half decreased spending from 2015 first-quarter levels.

Here are lobbying expenditures for the first quarter of 2016 for six other tech companies:

Apple spent $1.13 million, an 8.9 percent decrease from $1.24 million.
Cisco spent $420,000, a 30 percent decrease from $600,000.
IBM spent $830,000 a 17 percent decrease from $1 million.
Intel spent $1.23 million, an increase of 5.1 percent from $1.17 million.
Oracle spent $1.72 million, an increase of 33.3 percent from $1.29 million.
Yahoo! spent $690,000, a 5.5 percent decrease from $730,000.

Here are lobbying expenses for three other communications companies in the first quarter 2016:

Sprint spent $523,041 a decrease of 28.8 percent from $734,927.
T-Mobile spent $1.80 million, an increase of 52.5 percent from $1.18 million.
Verizon spent $3.59 million, an increase of 7.2 percent $3.35 million.

Here are 2016 first quarter lobbying expenditures for two cable companies:

Comcast spent $3.72 million, a 19.5 percent decrease from $4.62 million.
Time Warner Cable spent $1.5 million, an 11.8 percent decrease from $1.7 million.

First Bank Suffers 82% Drop in Profit, To Sack 1, OOO Staff

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first bank

FBN Holdings Plc published its much awaited audited FY:2015 and Q1:2016 results on 26th March, 2016 on the floor of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) with Gross Earnings and Profit After Tax coming much lower than anticipated.

Skewness to Oil & Gas loans impacted on profitability as a monumental N119.3bn was booked in impairment charges for its FY: 2015 dragging profitability by 82.0%.

We present the highlights of the results and our revised 2016 estimates below.

FY: 2015 PAT Slumped 82.0% Y-o-Y on N119.3bn Impairment Charges
Noting the overwhelming pressure in the global and domestic macroeconomic space, FBN Holdings Plc submitted a FY: 2015 gross earnings of N505.2bn, up 4.9% relative to N481.8bn in prior year, driven by growth in interest income which rose 9.3% Y-o-Y as against non-interest income which came in weaker at 12.0% Y-o-Y down.

While this was well below our FY:2015 gross earnings projection of N573.2bn (11.9% variance) for the same period, gross earnings for Q1:2016 came in even lower, down 15.2% Y-o-Y to N107.5bn from N126.8bn in Q1:2015, as both interest and non-interest income plunged 12.4% and 23.7% respectively.

Although the Group had earlier issued an earnings alert stressing that higher loan loss provisioning may weigh heavily on profitability, FY: 2015 PAT tumbled 82.0% Y-o-Y to N15.1bn from N84.0bn in prior year as impairment charges for the period rose 360.6% Y-o-Y to N119.3bn on account of FBNH’s disproportionate exposure to oil & gas sector (39.5% of Gross Loans) and foreign currency loans (65.0% of which relates to Oil & Gas).

This was rather staggering by our assessment given our initial PAT projection of N42.7bn for FY:2015. The Group further booked an impairment charge of N12.8bn in Q1:2016, hence, PAT dipped 8.3% Y-o-Y to N20.7bn in Q1:2016 from N22.6bn in prior period.

Consequently, PBT and PAT margins shrank to 4.3% and 3.0% in FY:2015 from 19.5% and 17.4% in FY:2014 respectively even as ROAE and ROAA eased significantly to 2.7% and 0.4% in 2015 from 16.9% and 2.0% in that order. Performance in 2016 is expected to remain weak as asset quality continues to pressure yields amid soft loan growth outlook.

Thus, we forecast gross earnings growth at 1.5%, however, PAT is expected to surge significantly due to base effect.

CIR to Improve as Management Intensifies Efforts to Control Cost
FBNH’s Cost to Income Ratio (CIR) improved from 65.2% in FY:2014 to 59.8% in FY: 2015, this was largely driven by moderation in operating expenses which declined 5.6% Y-o-Y in 2015. CIR further improved in Q1:2016, settling at 58.0%.

Further scrutiny indicated that net interest income expanded 8.7% Y-o-Y to N265.0bn in 2015 despite 10.5% increase in interest expense during the period. Thus, NIM rose from 7.6% in FY: 2014 to 8.1% in FY:2015 and Q1:2016. With new management in place, we anticipate an improvement in operating efficiency as the Group intensifies effort to contain cost and improve operating margins.

NPL Ratio at 18.1% in FY: 2015 from 2.9% in FY: 2014
FBN Holdings loan book contracted 16.5% Y-o-Y in FY:2015 and dipped further by 2.3% in Q1:2016 to settle at N2.2tn.

However, non-performing loan (NPL) ratio jumped dramatically from 2.9% to an alarming 18.1% in FY: 2015 worsening to 21.5% in Q1:2016 as risk environment toughened.

Similarly, Cost of risk rose to 5.7% in FY: 2015 from 1.3% in FY:2014 but eased to 2.6% in Q1:2016 as credit impairment charges expanded 360.6% Y-o-Y to N119.11bn in FY:2015.

We think FBN Holding’s massive exposure to the Oil & Gas Sector (39.5%) as well as foreign currency loans is rather disturbing given that there should have been a structure in place to checkmate uncontrolled exposure to any sector.

Obviously, FBNH needs to overhaul its credit risk management framework as well as review maximum sector allocation to forestall future occurrence. Given the overall outlook of the economy, loan growth is expected to stay modest across the sector, our view is that FBNH will be fixated on improving risk management structure for most of 2016 thus loan growth may be flat or contract

TSA Implementation Leads to Contraction in Deposits
TSA implementation which led to the withdrawal of large institutional funds as well as CBN’s restriction on cash deposits to domiciliary accounts in 2015 pressured total deposits which contracted 3.3% to N3.1tn in FY:2015, slowing further in Q1:2016 by 2.6% to N3.0tn.

Thus, total liabilities declined 6.1% Y-o-Y settling at N3.6tn. Deposit growth may be constrained further in 2016 as poor fiscal and monetary policy responses to recessionary pressures in the economy weaken retail deposits while competition for cheap deposits heightens.

Nonetheless, the Group stays well capitalised with a Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) of 17.1% as at FY:2015, slightly above 16.0% benchmark for Systemically Important Banks (SIBs) in the country.

Rating: Performance to be Pressured by Weak Asset Quality, We maintain our REDUCE” Rating
Against the backdrop of weaker loan growth outlook as driven by unrelenting pressure in the overall macroeconomic environment, we updated our valuation assumptions for FBN Holdings, using a blend of absolute and relative valuation methodologies.

Although we expect the Group to tighten its credit risk management framework going forward, we do not expect this to bring about a significant improvement in its performance metrics in 2016. We are of the view that sentiments on the share price will remain weak in the short to medium term given that indication from the Q1:2016 numbers showing similar trend with that of FY: 2015.

Thus, we imagine that investors will stay wary of the stock until earnings scorecards begin to indicate positive changes.

On the basis of the foregoing, we review our target price for FBNH to N3.25/share (implied P/E and P/BV of 4.6x and 0.4x respectively) from previous N3.88/share. Compared to market price of N3.57, P/E and P/BV of 7.9x and 0.2x as at 27/04/2016, this indicates a downside of 9.1%.

Thus, we maintain our “REDUCE” rating on FBNH Holdings.

-Afrinvest Research

Olam Predicts Biggest Global Cocoa Deficit Since 1980

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Olam

This year, the world will record its greatest cocoa deficit since 1980.

This was revealed by Amit Suri of Olam, who is in charge of the cocoa division of world’s third biggest cocoa processor.

According to the official, the deficit will reach 308,000 tons at the end of September. This estimate, which exceeds January’s 122,000 tons, is based on damages to yields as a result of dry weather in producing countries.

In Cote d’Ivoire, world’s leading cocoa producer, production will fall by 110,000 tons, compared to forecast in January. Ghana, the second top producer, will record a 30% fall in production. Brazil will harvest 60,000 tons less than forecast. Ecuador and Indonesia will also be hit by the production fall. Only Cameroon and Nigeria will have their output increase.

“In my 20 years in the cocoa industry, I have never seen such significant changes in supply and demand occur so late in the year,” said Amit Suri who highlighted that not only volumes would be affected since quality was also affected by weather conditions.

“There is a deficit in cocoa but there is also a deficit in cocoa of quality. We are concerned about physical supply and about how the market will react as it didn’t take it into account,” he told Bloomberg.

ETA-Zuma Plans 300 MW Coal-fired Plant in Nigeria

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Miner ETA-Zuma announced it plans to build a 300 MW coal-fired power plant in Nigeria. The firm which obtained a licence to develop a 1200 MW thermal plant will first build a 300 MW plant due to investment’s size, revealed the company’s chief executive Joseph Avalogu.

The plant is to be built in Itobo, Kogi State. The chief executive told News Agency of Nigeria that construction works would start before the end of 2016 and last 13 months.

Mr Ayalogu highlighted that his firm was aware of the health and environmental issues related to woal and indicated that it took optimal measures regarding the management of the plant’s waste.