Egitto 6.875% 30.04.2040 ISIN XS0505478684

bloomberg.com


Egypt’s Gas Shortage Brings New Risks After Massive Bailout​


Salma El Wardany, Anna Shiryaevskaya

5-7 minuti


A $50 billion bailout has helped ward off a worsening of Egypt’s economic crisis. Now, a growing energy shortage risks draining the vital foreign currency reserves it needs to pull off a recovery.
The Arab world’s most populous nation is in the fragile early stages of an economic turnaround after massive funding pledges handed the country’s leadership prospects of a fresh start. President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi’s next challenge is to tackle the power blackouts that gripped Egypt last year and caused widespread public discontent.
Once an exporter, Egypt is no longer producing enough gas to keep electricity systems afloat during increasingly hot summers. Last year was the hottest on record, necessitating rolling blackouts lasting up to two hours and forcing Egypt to halt liquefied natural gas exports during the season. Experts predict 2024 will be even worse.
Bloomberg News reported last week that the country has started buying LNG cargoes — which it uses to produce electricity for air conditioning — unusually early in the year to avoid chronic interruptions. Another summer of massive rolling outages would pile pressure on a population that is already grappling with high inflation, a substantially devalued currency and a hike in domestic fuel prices.
The flip side is that heavy purchases threaten to sap foreign currency reserves just as Egypt faces strains from the war in Gaza and dried up revenues from Suez Canal crossings
, a result from attacks on Red Sea shipping by Houthi militants.

Egypt's LNG Exports Have Been Dwindling​

Country has started to import cargoes to avoid blackouts
Source: Ship-tracking data on Bloomberg
“Becoming a gas importer adds to Egypt’s costs,” said Ziad Daoud, chief emerging-markets economist for Bloomberg Economics. “Besides securing energy, authorities need to provide dollars to clear an import backlog, settle arrears with international companies, and ease capital restrictions.”

The LNG purchases mark a major shift for the country, which largely stopped importing the fuel in 2018 after the discovery of the massive Zohr gas field boosted domestic production and turned the country into an exporter.

Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Co. is currently aiming

to import at least one shipment a month through July or August, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who requested anonymity to discuss private details. Egypt will need at least five cargoes for the summer, one of the people said.

As recently as 2022, at the height of Europe’s energy crisis, Egypt sold record quantities on international markets, providing a welcome source of revenue at a time when it was struggling with soaring food costs. It was one of the suppliers that helped Europe keep the lights on after Russia throttled pipeline flows, bolstering ambitions that it might transform into a key energy hub.

Surging Energy Needs​

Local gas output, however, has dropped to the lowest level in years recently, which Oil Minister Tarek El-Molla has linked to a natural decline at its fields. Domestic production in Egypt and pipeline imports from Israel will be insufficient to cover the country’s gas needs this summer, according to Jacopo Casadei, an analyst at consulting firm Energy Aspects Ltd. in London.

Temperatures in Cairo are already forecast to be above seasonal norms later this month. On top of fulfilling stronger demand for cooling, gas is needed to feed energy-intensive industries such as fertilizer producers. For now, at least, global gas prices have eased significantly — making it easier for price-sensitive customers in emerging markets to secure cargoes.

“In the short term, Egypt will struggle to achieve its vision of becoming an energy hub. It clearly lacks sufficient domestic production to meet internal demand and export commitments,” said Riccardo Fabiani, project director for North Africa at the Brussels-based Crisis Group. “In the long run, Egypt will need to increase its exploration efforts to boost production and bet on renewable energy.” Neither task is easy, he added.

One factor that may limit how much LNG Egypt has to purchase is the steady flows it has been receiving via pipeline from Israel. Jonathan Stern, a distinguished research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, says other discoveries that have yet to come online might see Egypt swing “between being an LNG exporter and importer” in coming years.

The country is in a better position now that it has received external financing, spearheaded by a $35 billion investment pledge by the United Arab Emirates, according to Omar Monieb, a senior analyst for Middle East & North Africa at Eurasia Group. That will allow authorities to avoid the massive blackouts of the previous summer, while implementing shorter strategic power cuts.

“They are working on different fronts, working on the technical side too to gradually solve the issue of gas shortages,” he said. “They don’t want public discontent over this issue. The socioeconomic situation is already tense. The summer is starting and it will get hotter and hotter.”
 
bloomberg.com


Egypt’s Gas Shortage Brings New Risks After Massive Bailout​


Salma El Wardany, Anna Shiryaevskaya

5-7 minuti


A $50 billion bailout has helped ward off a worsening of Egypt’s economic crisis. Now, a growing energy shortage risks draining the vital foreign currency reserves it needs to pull off a recovery.
The Arab world’s most populous nation is in the fragile early stages of an economic turnaround after massive funding pledges handed the country’s leadership prospects of a fresh start. President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi’s next challenge is to tackle the power blackouts that gripped Egypt last year and caused widespread public discontent.
Once an exporter, Egypt is no longer producing enough gas to keep electricity systems afloat during increasingly hot summers. Last year was the hottest on record, necessitating rolling blackouts lasting up to two hours and forcing Egypt to halt liquefied natural gas exports during the season. Experts predict 2024 will be even worse.
Bloomberg News reported last week that the country has started buying LNG cargoes — which it uses to produce electricity for air conditioning — unusually early in the year to avoid chronic interruptions. Another summer of massive rolling outages would pile pressure on a population that is already grappling with high inflation, a substantially devalued currency and a hike in domestic fuel prices.
The flip side is that heavy purchases threaten to sap foreign currency reserves just as Egypt faces strains from the war in Gaza and dried up revenues from Suez Canal crossings
, a result from attacks on Red Sea shipping by Houthi militants.

Egypt's LNG Exports Have Been Dwindling​

Country has started to import cargoes to avoid blackouts
Source: Ship-tracking data on Bloomberg
“Becoming a gas importer adds to Egypt’s costs,” said Ziad Daoud, chief emerging-markets economist for Bloomberg Economics. “Besides securing energy, authorities need to provide dollars to clear an import backlog, settle arrears with international companies, and ease capital restrictions.”

The LNG purchases mark a major shift for the country, which largely stopped importing the fuel in 2018 after the discovery of the massive Zohr gas field boosted domestic production and turned the country into an exporter.

Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Co. is currently aiming

to import at least one shipment a month through July or August, according to people with knowledge of the matter, who requested anonymity to discuss private details. Egypt will need at least five cargoes for the summer, one of the people said.

As recently as 2022, at the height of Europe’s energy crisis, Egypt sold record quantities on international markets, providing a welcome source of revenue at a time when it was struggling with soaring food costs. It was one of the suppliers that helped Europe keep the lights on after Russia throttled pipeline flows, bolstering ambitions that it might transform into a key energy hub.

Surging Energy Needs​

Local gas output, however, has dropped to the lowest level in years recently, which Oil Minister Tarek El-Molla has linked to a natural decline at its fields. Domestic production in Egypt and pipeline imports from Israel will be insufficient to cover the country’s gas needs this summer, according to Jacopo Casadei, an analyst at consulting firm Energy Aspects Ltd. in London.

Temperatures in Cairo are already forecast to be above seasonal norms later this month. On top of fulfilling stronger demand for cooling, gas is needed to feed energy-intensive industries such as fertilizer producers. For now, at least, global gas prices have eased significantly — making it easier for price-sensitive customers in emerging markets to secure cargoes.

“In the short term, Egypt will struggle to achieve its vision of becoming an energy hub. It clearly lacks sufficient domestic production to meet internal demand and export commitments,” said Riccardo Fabiani, project director for North Africa at the Brussels-based Crisis Group. “In the long run, Egypt will need to increase its exploration efforts to boost production and bet on renewable energy.” Neither task is easy, he added.

One factor that may limit how much LNG Egypt has to purchase is the steady flows it has been receiving via pipeline from Israel. Jonathan Stern, a distinguished research fellow at the Oxford Institute for Energy Studies, says other discoveries that have yet to come online might see Egypt swing “between being an LNG exporter and importer” in coming years.

The country is in a better position now that it has received external financing, spearheaded by a $35 billion investment pledge by the United Arab Emirates, according to Omar Monieb, a senior analyst for Middle East & North Africa at Eurasia Group. That will allow authorities to avoid the massive blackouts of the previous summer, while implementing shorter strategic power cuts.

“They are working on different fronts, working on the technical side too to gradually solve the issue of gas shortages,” he said. “They don’t want public discontent over this issue. The socioeconomic situation is already tense. The summer is starting and it will get hotter and hotter.”


...ma non sono pieni di gas petrolio e,quant'altro?
 

Egypt’s Gas Shortfall Will Shake Up Sleepy Markets​


Anna Shiryaevskaya

5-6 minuti



Welcome to Energy Daily, our guide to the energy and commodities powering the world economy. Today, reporter Anna Shiryaevskaya looks at Egypt’s emerging shortage of natural gas and what that means for global markets. To get this newsletter in your inbox, sign up here.
Natural gas bulls are getting support from an unlikely corner of the market.
Egypt, typically an exporter of the fuel, has started snapping up cargoes of liquefied natural gas to ward off a deepening energy shortage.
The problem is, demand is picking up in other parts of the world, too, after prices tumbled from 2022 highs, and that’s increasing pressure on supply.
Egypt may find itself in a scramble for shipments in the coming months, especially if summer temperatures there soar as they did last year and more energy is needed to run air conditioners.
Pylons in El-Shorouk city last July, when Egypt introduced power cuts amid a brutal heat wave.Photographer: KHALED DESOUKI/AFP via Getty Images
“Egypt switching to a net LNG importer will tighten the Atlantic LNG market,” Energy Aspects Ltd. analyst Jacopo Casadei said.
While the Northern Hemisphere is heading toward summer, when demand for heating fuel falls, Egypt’s gas purchases coincide with the start of winter in South America, where countries including Argentina
import LNG.

Gas is also used by industries from chemical producers to fertilizer makers, and Europe has firmly established itself as a key buyer of the liquefied fuel after Russian pipeline flows mostly came to a halt.

Egypt’s gas output has shrunk to the lowest level in years, something the government has linked to a natural decline at its fields. The country also partially depends on piped supplies from Israel — which are being closely watched as the war with Hamas rages.

The North African nation hasn’t exported cargoes since mid-March and likely won’t ship any over the summer. That will squeeze a global market already forecast to tighten this month, according to BloombergNEF

.

Such short-term supply crunches will probably occur until new LNG plants under construction in the US and Qatar start up — but that won’t be before 2026.

In the meantime, any disruption to supply risks inflating prices and distorting the market’s fragile balance.

--Anna Shiryaevskaya, Bloomberg News

Chart of the day​

Tight Copper Ore Supply Drove Treatment Charge in China to More Than Five-Year Low​

China copper concentrate treatment charge and monthly copper ore imports
Source: BloombergNEF, Shanghai Metals Market, China Customs
Note: TC is treatment charge, the amount paid by miners to smelters to convert copper concentrates into refined copper. Values updated to April 1, 2024. Copper imports updated to February 2024.
China’s copper treatment charge

— the fee paid by miners to smelters for refining copper concentrate — plummeted to $20.78 a metric ton by the end of the first quarter, the lowest in more than five years. Smelters in the country may reduce their total refined output by 5%-10% in a synchronized move to cope with tightening ore supply, especially following the shutdown of First Quantum Minerals Ltd.’s Cobre Panama project in November.
 
bloomberg.com


Egypt In Talks With Domestic Creditors to Extend Debt Maturities​


Mirette Magdy

5-6 minuti



Egypt is trying to push back the date on which some of its domestic debt comes due, part of efforts to ease a burden on its finances even further after securing more than $50 billion in global aid this year.
Talks with public entities such as the central bank, pension funds and the main state health insurer are focusing on extending the maturities of domestic obligations owed to those institutions, Finance Minister Mohamed Maait said in an interview.
The purpose is to reduce Egypt’s gross financing requirements for the coming years, Maait said in Washington, where he’s attending the spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank
The discussions reflect challenges for a government that spends about half its revenue on interest payments alone, despite the unprecedented global bailout led by a $35 billion deal with the United Arab Emirates.
The debt plans should help the Finance Ministry reach a target of pushing the average maturity of total debt to between 4.5 and five years by June 2028, compared with 3.3 years at the end of this fiscal year, Maait said.
Egypt is one of the emerging world’s most indebted countries and the IMF’s second-biggest borrower after Argentina. The Middle Eastern nation aims to reduce its ratio of debt to gross domestic product to 80% by June 2027, from 96% in fiscal year 2023.
Maait didn’t specify the amount of debt that may be subject to any new terms and said eurobonds wouldn’t be affected. The Finance Ministry had the equivalent of about $100 billion in outstanding local-currency bonds and bills as of Jan. 31.
The Egyptian pound erased its daily losses against the dollar after Maait’s comments were published, trading little changed following declines of as much as 0.5% earlier on Wednesday.
Egypt is searching for a longer-term fix after staving off the immediate threat of a currency meltdown, a result of years of trade imbalances and borrowing made worse by the outbreak of the wars in Ukraine and Gaza.
The urgency of stabilizing the economy of the Middle East’s most populous nation eventually led to a landmark deal with the UAE, the largest inward investment in Egypt’s history. That allowed authorities to enact a long-awaited currency flotation, causing a one-time depreciation of around 40% against the dollar that was accompanied by Egypt’s biggest ever hike in interest rates.
Other commitments soon followed, including an expanded $8 billion IMF program. Though the new funding from donors is helping eliminate dollar shortages in the domestic economy, Egypt’s $35 billion of international reserves is mostly borrowed money that makes it largely unusable, according to Bloomberg Economics
...
 

L’Egitto in trattative con i creditori nazionali per estendere le scadenze del debito​

bloomberg.com
Mirette Magdy
[Ottimo Articolo postato sul Forum dall'amico demox000, che ringrazio]

L’Egitto sta cercando di posticipare la data di scadenza di parte del suo debito interno, nell’ambito degli sforzi per alleggerire ulteriormente il peso sulle sue finanze dopo aver ottenuto quest’anno più di 50 miliardi di dollari in aiuti globali.
I colloqui con enti pubblici come la banca centrale, i fondi pensione e la principale assicurazione sanitaria statale si concentrano sull'estensione delle scadenze degli obblighi nazionali dovuti a tali istituzioni, ha detto in un'intervista il ministro delle Finanze Mohamed Maait.
Lo scopo è ridurre il fabbisogno finanziario lordo dell'Egitto per i prossimi anni, ha detto Maait a Washington, dove ha partecipato alle riunioni primaverili del Fondo monetario internazionale e della Banca mondiale.
Le discussioni riflettono le sfide per un governo che spende circa la metà delle sue entrate solo sul pagamento degli interessi , nonostante il piano di salvataggio globale senza precedenti guidato da un accordo da 35 miliardi di dollari con gli Emirati Arabi Uniti.
I piani sul debito dovrebbero aiutare il Ministero delle Finanze a raggiungere l’obiettivo di spingere la scadenza media del debito totale tra 4,5 e cinque anni entro giugno 2028, rispetto ai 3,3 anni alla fine di questo anno fiscale, ha affermato Maait.
L’Egitto è uno dei paesi emergenti più indebitati e il secondo maggiore mutuatario del FMI dopo l’Argentina. La nazione del Medio Oriente mira a ridurre il rapporto tra debito e prodotto interno lordo all'80% entro giugno 2027, dal 96% nell'anno fiscale 2023.
Maait non ha specificato l'importo del debito che potrebbe essere soggetto a nuovi termini e ha detto che gli eurobond non ne risentirebbero.
Al 31 gennaio il Ministero delle Finanze aveva l’equivalente di circa 100 miliardi di dollari in obbligazioni e cambiali in valuta locale.
La sterlina egiziana ha cancellato le sue perdite giornaliere rispetto al dollaro dopo la pubblicazione dei commenti di Maait, scambiando poco dopo i cali fino allo 0,5% di mercoledì.
L’Egitto è alla ricerca di una soluzione a lungo termine dopo aver scongiurato la minaccia immediata di un tracollo valutario, risultato di anni di squilibri commerciali e di indebitamento aggravati dallo scoppio delle guerre in Ucraina e Gaza.
L’urgenza di stabilizzare l’economia della nazione più popolosa del Medio Oriente ha portato alla fine a un accordo storico con gli Emirati Arabi Uniti, il più grande investimento estero nella storia dell’Egitto. Ciò ha consentito alle autorità di attuare la tanto attesa fluttuazione valutaria , provocando un deprezzamento una tantum di circa il 40% rispetto al dollaro, accompagnato dal più grande aumento mai registrato dai tassi di interesse in Egitto.
Seguirono presto altri impegni, compreso un programma ampliato da 8 miliardi di dollari del FMI.
Sebbene i nuovi finanziamenti da parte dei donatori stiano contribuendo a eliminare la carenza di dollari nell’economia nazionale, secondo Bloomberg Economics i 35 miliardi di dollari di riserve internazionali dell’Egitto sono per lo più denaro preso in prestito che lo rende in gran parte inutilizzabile.
 

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