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'Potash' reports net profit of JD153m in Q3 2024

By - Oct 30,2024 - Last updated at Oct 30,2024

Flags with the logo of German chemical giant BASF are pictured at its headquarters in Ludwigshafen, western Germany, on February 24, 2023 (AFP photo)

AMMAN — The Arab Potash Company announced on Wednesday that it achieved a net profit of JD153 million by the end of the third quarter of 2024, after accounting for income tax, provisions, and mining fees, reflecting the company’s strong performance amid increasing global economic challenges and political fluctuations.

Financial data showed that the net sales revenues achieved by "Potash" and its subsidiaries reached approximately JD509 million by the end of the third quarter, while pre-tax profits amounted to JD212 million, highlighting the company’s efficiency in maintaining its position in the global fertiliser market, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported. 

The company's investments in affiliated companies contributed to profit growth, with "Potash’s" share of earnings from these investments reaching about JD26 million by the end of the third quarter.

Company's Chairman of the Board Shihadeh Abu Hudaib emphasised that the company, through implementing a flexible strategy focused on expense control and enhancing operational efficiency, overcame challenges posed by geopolitical events and the Red Sea crisis affecting supply chains and global trade.

He noted that the company and its subsidiaries and affiliates contributed approximately $996 million to Jordan's foreign currency reserves during the first nine months of 2024, strengthening its position as a supportive partner for the national economy.

Abu Hudaib praised the government’s efforts in creating a favorable investment environment for the fertiliser and chemical sectors through the enforcement of laws regulating investment in the Kingdom.

He added that potash production reached a record level of approximately 2.2 million tons by the end of the third quarter, and the company succeeded in selling its entire production by the end of September. 

He pointed out that the company managed to reduce the production cost per ton by 5 per cent compared to the same period last year by implementing innovative strategies and improving production efficiency, which are part of the company’s efforts to boost its competitiveness in the global market.

Global stock markets diverge with eyes on megatech results, rates

By - Oct 30,2024 - Last updated at Oct 30,2024

Investors are waiting for the third quarter earnings report from Google-parent Alphabet after Wall Street closes on Tuesday (AFP photo)

LONDON — Global stock markets diverged on Tuesday as many investors sat on their hands ahead of a slew of US economic data releases and tech earnings, and as bond yields rose.

In  midday  trading in New York, the Dow was lower, the wider S&P little changed, and the techheavy Nasdaq higher. Shares closed mostly lower in Europe. Alphabet   reports earnings after the market closes and many investors are awaiting to hear what the Google parent has to say before taking any bets.

"When a megacap stock reports earnings, the stock market pays extra attention not only to the report itself, but also to any guidance," said  Patrick  O'Hare, an analyst at Briefing.com.

In total, five of the "Magnificent  Seven" US tech giants will report over the next three days, including Amazon, Apple, Facebook-parent Meta and Microsoft.

On  the  economic front, the US government will release third quarter GDP growth estimate Wednesday, as well as inflation data on Thursday and the closely watched monthly labour market report Friday.

Together, they should provide  more  clues about the health of the world's largest economy and the direction of the Federal Reserve's interest rate policy.

Meanwhile, yields on 10-year US Treasuries have inched up to above 4.3 per cent this week, the highest since early July, indicating that some market participants are increasingly counting on more limited rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.

The  higher  rates, which hurt company earnings and deter investors  from  taking money out of savings accounts to invest in the stock market, could also  reflect  unease about the deficit spending plans of both candidates in next Tuesday's presidential elections, said Joe Mazzola, a strategist at Charles Schwab.

"The relentless climb in Treasury yields continues and threatens to overshadow any news, good or bad, on the earnings front," he said. Boeing was up almost 2 per cent after reporting that its stock  offering  was oversubscribed.

The London, Paris and Frankfurt stock markets all closed lower Tuesday while Asian markets ended mixed.

London shed 0.8 per cent as investors awaited the first budget of Britain's new Labour government on Wednesday, expected to include tax rises on businesses.

Adidas shares were up almost 4 per cent in Frankfurt after the sportswear giant again raised its full-year revenue outlook.

Oil prices initially recovered some of Monday's losses after the US government said it would add to its Strategic Petroleum Reserve, but then resumed their recent slide on expectations of a coming oversupply.

Bitcoin rose above $72,000 to levels last seen in June and close to its record highs on expectations that Donald Trump, who has sought the support of the cryptocurrency world, will win next week's elections.

"Trump's  campaign appears to be building upside momentum, and that's going down well with the crypto bros," said David Morrison, analyst at Trade Nation. In Asia, Tokyo and Hong  Kong  stocks climbed but Shanghai and Singapore retreated.

Investors are awaiting the Bank of Japan's rate decision later this week, with the central bank expected to stand pat following two hikes earlier this year.

Lebanon added to money laundering 'grey list'

By - Oct 28,2024 - Last updated at Oct 28,2024

PARIS — Global anti-money laundering watchdog FATF on Friday added Lebanon, which is currently being pummelled by Israeli air strikes, to its "grey list" of nations that are subject to increased monitoring of financial transactions,

The Paris-based Financial Action Task Force said it also added Algeria, Angola, and Ivory Coast.

"Of course, we recognize the extremely grave situation that Lebanon is currently facing," said Elisa de Anda Madrazo of Mexico, which currently holds the organisation's rotating presidency.

Lebanon's being put on the grey list "should not impede relief efforts... and we are working to ensure that channels of humanitarian aid remain open", she added.

De Anda said that being put on the grey list was not a "punitive measure" and was part of the process of helping nations develop action plans to make improvements.

"I can tell you that there was a degree of flexibility granted to Lebanon as it relates to the deadlines set in the action plan," she said.

Senegal was removed from the grey list and the FATF noted improvements, including in its ability to investigate and prosecute money laundering cases linked to corruption.

The FATF made no changes to its "black list" of nations against which countermeasures should be taken to protect the international financial system from money laundering and terrorist financing risks emanating from those countries.

Iran, Myanmar and North Korea are on the black list.

Phosphate profits before tax reached JD490.4m in Q3

By - Oct 28,2024 - Last updated at Oct 28,2024

Jordan. Phosphate Mines Company achieved a total profit before tax of 490.4 million dinars (Petra photo)

AMMAN — Jordan Phosphate Mines Company achieved a total profit before tax of JD490.4 million, and a net profit after tax of 316.6 million by the end of the third quarter of this year, the Jordan News Agency, Petra, reported 

During the third quarter of this year alone, the company achieved a total profit before tax of about JD182 million, and a net profit after tax of 114.7 million, an increase of nearly 4 per cent compared to the third quarter of last year.

The consolidated data showed that the group's net sales by the end of the third quarter of this year amounted to JD857.8 million.

ISSF announces $5m investment in 'Rua Growth I LP' fund

By - Oct 27,2024 - Last updated at Oct 27,2024

AMMAN — The Innovative Startups and SMEs Fund (ISSF) has announced a $5 million investment in "Rua Growth I LP" fund, aligning with its goals to empower promising Jordanian companies by providing capital for investment in local businesses.  

The "Rua Growth I LP" is a venture capital fund focused on supporting early-stage startups.

ISSF CEO Mohammed Muhtaseb emphasised that the inclusion of "Rua Growth I LP" in the fund's investment portfolio reflects a balanced investment strategy and contributes to their shared goal of enabling emerging Jordanian companies by supplying the necessary venture capital for their growth and expansion in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf region, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra. 

The structure of "Rua Growth I LP" fund includes experienced partners from both Saudi Arabia and Jordan, highlighting the deep historical and economic ties between the two kingdoms. 

Turki Aljoaib , managing partner at "Rua Growth I LP" fund, confirmed that this strategic partnership with the ISSF will bolster collaborative efforts, explaining the fund's role in enhancing innovation and supporting entrepreneurial ventures in Jordan. 

"We will leverage the strengths of Jordan's entrepreneurial environment, represented by its skilled workforce and dynamic startups, to bridge the gap between the markets in Jordan and Saudi Arabia," he said. 

Aljoaib noted that the collaboration between the two funds aims to create growth opportunities, advance technology, and generate new job prospects in Jordan while supporting the expansion of Jordanian companies in Saudi Arabia and other countries. 

Volume of Jordan-Qatar trade is $189.5m in Q3 2024

By - Oct 27,2024 - Last updated at Oct 27,2024

The trade balance between Jordan and Qatar grew by 6.1 per cent by the end of the third quarter of 2024. (Petra photo)

AMMAN — The trade balance between Jordan and Qatar grew by 6.1 per cent by the end of the third quarter of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023.

According to recent statistical data from the Qatar Planning and Statistics Authority, the volume of trade exchanges between Jordan and Qatar during the first nine months of 2024 reached approximately $189.5 million, up from $178.5 million in 2023 and $ 164.8 million during the same period in 2022.

Jordan's exports to Qatar include a variety of consumer and food products such as fresh and processed food, vegetables and fruits, meats, dates, dairy products, poultry and derivatives, grains, sweets and cakes, rice, juices, nuts, oils and ghee, pickles, herbs, honey, frozen birds, eggs, and Jordanian coffee.

Qatar’s exports to the Jordanian market consist of various chemical products, including motor oils, sulfonic acid, lutrine, aluminum molds, paraffin, polyethylene, iron rods, various types of chemical fertilisers, plastic bags, engine oils, organic fertiliser, and medical solutions.

The trade balance between Jordan and Qatar has witnessed significant and rapid growth in recent years, driven by a continuous increase in Qatar's imports of Jordanian food and consumer products, which have surged notably over the past two years.

Russia hikes interest rates to 20-year high

By - Oct 26,2024 - Last updated at Oct 26,2024

A giant screen set on the facade of a sports and a concert hall in Moscow shows a picture of Russian President Vladimir Putin delivering a speech at the BRICS summit, held in Kazan, and reading 'Russia proposes to create a system of equal and indivisible security in Eurasia', on Thursday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Russia's central bank hiked interest rates to 21 per cent recently, taking borrowing costs to their highest level in more than two decades as Moscow's Ukraine offensive has triggered rapid price rises at home.

The increase takes rates above an emergency level introduced in February 2022 — just after Moscow ordered troops into Ukraine — to their highest since 2003, with the regulator battling to stem the economic fallout of the conflict.

But despite the high inflation and Western hopes sanctions would cripple the Russian economy, the Kremlin is set to ramp up military spending yet again next year and analysts say Moscow has enough money to keep fighting in Ukraine for the foreseeable future.

Governor Elvira Nabiullina said the pace of price rises — running at an annual rate of 8.6 per cent in September — was not slowing and that further rate rises may be necessary.

"Firstly, inflation. In general, we do not see any signs of it slowing down," she told reporters in Moscow.

"To contain accelerating price growth, we will need much tighter monetary policy over the next year," she added.

Without mentioning the Ukraine offensive, the bank directly blamed high government spending for pushing inflation higher.

"Additional fiscal spending and the related expansion of the federal budget deficit in 2024 have pro-inflationary effects," it said in a statement announcing the rate rise.

The bank also said it would not be able to bring inflation back to its 4 per cent target until at least 2026.

Stubborn inflation, a volatile currency and historically high borrowing costs over the last two years have not deterred the Kremlin from ramping up spending on the military campaign.

Russia has more than $300 billion in reserves that have not been frozen by the West, a low debt-to-GDP ratio of around 15 per cent and is pushing through major tax rises next year to help cover a deficit.

Lawmakers voted on Thursday to increase military expenditure by almost 30 per cent to around $145 billion in 2025.

Combined spending on defence and security is set to account for 40 per cent of Russia's total budget.

The spending boom has powered the economy, with the International Monetary Fund this week raising its growth forecast for Russia in 2024 to 3.6 per cent.

But it has also triggered domestic headwinds.

Hundreds of thousands of men have been called up to fight, fled the country or been recruited by the booming domestic arms industry — leading to a cycle of spiralling wages and prices that the central bank has warned undermines stability.

Nabiullina acknowledged Friday that higher interest rates were having a less "pronounced" impact in cooling the "overheating" economy, in part due to the government's spending boom.

The Kremlin tasks the central bank with managing the domestic fallout of the Ukraine offensive, and permits it a degree of operational independence.

Nabiullina, a former Putin aide who is highly respected in Moscow and had won plaudits in the West before the conflict, has softly criticised the government's economic policies, while being cautious not to comment on the offensive itself.

Russia's official borrowing costs have not been above 20 per cent since 2003.

They regularly topped 100 per cent throughout the 1990s, a decade of economic volatility and hardship following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The first years of President Vladimir Putin's rule in the 2000s saw an oil-led boom and rising wealth.

But his conflict in Ukraine has threatened Moscow's future prosperity, cutting it off from lucrative Western export markets and much of the global financial system.

Putin had hoped to advance plans for alternative international payment systems at the BRICS summit in Kazan this week, the largest diplomatic gathering in Russia since the start of the offensive.

But speaking at the summit Thursday, he indicated international payments were one of the "key problems" Russia faced and said the group was not creating an alternative to the Belgium-based SWIFT financial messaging system.

The exclusion of some Russian banks from SWIFT due to Western sanctions has made it difficult for Russia to conduct trade.

IMF chief seeks more details on BRICS payments system plans

By - Oct 24,2024 - Last updated at Oct 24,2024

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva speaks during a briefing on the IMF's Global Policy Agenda during the International Monetary Fund/World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington, DC on Thursday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — The IMF wants to know more about a cross-border payments system discussed by the BRICS group of countries this week and aimed at boosting non-dollar transactions, the Fund's managing director said Thursday.

The meeting of the BRICS — meaning Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — took place in the Russian city of Kazan at the same time as the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank in Washington.

The BRICS group has expanded significantly since its inception in 2009, and now includes countries such as Iran, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. Altogether the BRICS coalition accounts for a significant minority of the world's economic output.

At the Kazan summit, Russia secured a joint declaration encouraging the "strengthening of correspondent banking networks within BRICS and enabling settlements in local currencies in line with BRICS Cross-Border Payments Initiative (BCBP)".

The system is designed to rival the European-headquartered SWIFT payments system, from which Russia was barred following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Speaking to reporters at the IMF's headquarters in Washington on Thursday, IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva said the Fund wanted additional information about the proposed payments system before taking a firm stance on it.

"The idea of having a payments system of a group of countries is not new," she said.

"What we need to see is more details," she added. "What is it in this idea? How that may translate into reality? And then we will be able to assess it."

Decline in Suez revenues 

During her press conference, Georgieva said the Fund was focused on two main objectives going forward: Ensuring inflation rates return to central bank targets without spurring a deep recession; and fixing the current "low growth, high debt path" that many countries are on.

She also addressed what she called the tragedy in the Middle East, which she said was affecting both citizens and regional economies.

"Egypt is losing 70 per cent of the revenues it used to collect from the Suez canal because of the impact of the conflict," she said, adding that the IMF had downgraded the MENA region by 0.6 percentage points since April.

Earlier this month, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi said the country had lost "$6-7 billion" this year, in an apparent reference to Suez Canal revenues.

Georgieva also welcomed the progress made in helping countries facing debt crises, notably via the Global Sovereign Debt Roundtable (GSDR) forum for dialogue between creditors and countries in debt distress.

While the GSDR was helping to make the process of debt restructuring "more predictable and efficient," there was more work to do, she said.

"We need to do more to help countries in debt distress get back on their feet faster," she added.


JSC approves JD350m Issuance of Treasury Securities for 2024

By - Oct 23,2024 - Last updated at Oct 23,2024

The Jordan Securities Commission on Wednesday approved the Central Bank of Jordan’s request to register two new issuances of government debt securities for 2024 (Petra photo)

AMMAN — The Jordan Securities Commission (JSC) on Wednesday approved the Central Bank of Jordan’s (CBJ) request to register the 27th tranche of Jordanian Treasury bonds for 2024.

The first issuance, amounting JD150 million, carries a five-year maturity, with a maturity date of October 13, 2029, and a weighted average interest rate of 6.25 per cent. 

While the second is the 6th issuance of Treasury Bills for 2024, valued at JD200 million, with a maturity date on December 22, 2024, and an average annual yield of 6.502 per cent.


Both issuances are open for purchase by individuals and institutions, both residents and non-residents, through underwriting banks, according to the Jordan News Agency, (Petra). 

These securities will be listed on the Amman Stock Exchange and are tradable in the secondary market, as well as the over-the-counter trading.

UK govt borrows more ahead of first budget

By - Oct 22,2024 - Last updated at Oct 22,2024

LONDON — UK public borrowing rose more than expected in September, official data showed on Tuesday, as the new Labour government prepares for its first budget next week that is expected to include tax rises.

Public sector borrowing stood at £16.6 billion ($21.5 billion) last month, up £2.1 billion from September 2023, the Office (OVS) for National Statistics said in a statement.

It marked the third highest September borrowing figure since records began, the ONS added.

The figure was £1.5 billion higher than the amount expected by government watchdog the Office for Budget Responsibility.

However, it came in lower than the amount forecast by economists.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has warned Britons that the budget announcement on October 30 will be "painful", with spending cuts also expected.

Government finances last month suffered from "increased spending, partly due to higher debt interest and public sector pay rises", said Jessica Barnaby, ONS deputy director for public sector finances.

Tuesday's data also showed total state debt at 98.5 per cent of UK gross domestic product, remaining at levels last seen in the 1960s.

The ONS added that net social benefits decreased by £2 billion last month, partly owing to a controversial Labour policy to reduce spending on winter fuel payments for pensioners.

 

'Iron discipline'

 

Finance minister Rachel Reeves has pledged to impose "iron discipline" over public finances to claw back what she says is a £22 billion black hole inherited from the previous Conservative government.

Labour won a landslide election in early July, ending 14 years of Tory rule.

"Resolving this black hole at the budget next week will require difficult decisions to fix the foundations of our economy," senior Treasury official Darren Jones said in a statement following Tuesday's data.

Labour has pledged not to hike taxes on "working people", which would appear to rule out raising income tax, other social security and VAT rates.

But there is growing speculation that other taxes, like capital gains, could be targeted.

"Although Rachel Reeves has promised that the UK will not see a return to austerity, a series of tax increases in one form or another are all but guaranteed at next week's budget," said Lindsay James, a strategist at Quilter Investors.

The government, however, has been boosted by some positive data over the past month.

The UK economy bounced back in August after two months of stagnation and inflation has fallen below the Bank of England's (BoE's) 2 per cent target.

These figures have added to analysts expectations that the BoE will cut its key interest rate in November, easing the burden on borrowers.

Elsewhere Tuesday, the UK government announced a new loan of nearly £2.3 billion for Ukraine, allowing it to buy military equipment in its ongoing war with Russia.

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