
China is trying to win over Africa in the global trade war
At China Mall, a vast supermarket in Kampala, Uganda's capital, Rose Ahurra picks up a small turquoise squirrel. The toy flashes as she puts it in a trolley laden with towels, clothes, containers and an air fryer. The purchases indicate her place in the Ugandan middle class, which has flocked to China Mall since it opened earlier this year. 'The prices are fair and I no longer have to go to lots of individual shops,' she explains.

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Economist
2 days ago
- Economist
China is trying to win over Africa in the global trade war
At China Mall, a vast supermarket in Kampala, Uganda's capital, Rose Ahurra picks up a small turquoise squirrel. The toy flashes as she puts it in a trolley laden with towels, clothes, containers and an air fryer. The purchases indicate her place in the Ugandan middle class, which has flocked to China Mall since it opened earlier this year. 'The prices are fair and I no longer have to go to lots of individual shops,' she explains.


Reuters
22-05-2025
- Reuters
AFRICA-FX-Ghana and Uganda currencies could gain
ACCRA, May 22 (Reuters) - The Ghanaian and Ugandan currencies are expected to strengthen in the next week to Thursday, while Nigeria's could be stable and Kenya's and Zambia's may fall, traders said. Ghana's cedi is expected to firm further, underpinned by strong hard-currency inflows from remittances and continued central bank support. LSEG data showed the cedi trading at 11.70 to the dollar on Thursday, compared to 12.40 per dollar at last Thursday's close. "The cedi continued its appreciation streak against the dollar, breaking the 12.00 key level on the interbank market," said Chris Nettey, head of trading at Stanbic Bank Ghana. "We expect further appreciation in the coming sessions, supported by central bank's ongoing interventions," he added. Uganda's shilling is seen trading with a firming tone, bolstered by month-end foreign-currency inflows from non-governmental organisations. Commercial banks quoted the shilling at 3,646/3,656 to the dollar, near last Thursday's close of 3,645/3,655. "The bias will be on the stronger side mainly from charity flows," a trader said. Charities convert some of their hard-currency holdings around the end of the month to meet operational expenses. Nigeria's naira is seen holding steady after strengthening this week due to foreign portfolio inflows for a central bank auction. The naira was quoted around 1,590 to the dollar in intraday trading on Thursday, compared with last week's quote of 1,596 naira. The unit was sold at 1,620 naira to the dollar in street trading on Thursday. "I expect the naira to trade between 1,585 naira and 1,595 levels next week," one trader said. "The uptick in crude prices and FPIs (foreign portfolio inflows) this week ... helped liquidity in the market." Kenya's shilling is expected to weaken slightly towards the end of May, as a modest increase in foreign exchange demand from the manufacturing sector outpaces inflows from remittances and NGO salaries. LSEG data showed the shilling at 129.00/50 on Thursday, the same level it closed a week ago. "We see the shilling weakening a little towards the end of the month on month-end (FX) demand from importers in the manufacturing sector," a trader said. Zambia's kwacha is likely to remain under pressure as the market continues to experience rising foreign-currency demand and subdued inflows. On Thursday the kwacha was quoted at 27.62 per dollar from 27.00 a week ago. "In the absence of substantial dollar supply, the current trend should continue going into next week," an analyst said.


Reuters
15-05-2025
- Reuters
Ugandan shilling stable; to gain due to FX inflows into bond sale
KAMPALA, May 15 (Reuters) - The Ugandan shilling was little-changed on Thursday although it was expected to strengthen, helped by inflows from offshore investors who participated in this week's Treasury bond auction, traders said. At 0912 GMT, commercial banks quoted the shilling at 3,645/3,655, compared with Wednesday's close of 3,648/3,658.