In this week's edition:
· U.S. Equities Closed Last Week Lower for the Fifth Consecutive Week as Escalating Middle East Tension and Surging Energy Prices Intensify Broad-Based Sell-Off.
· Gold Tips up Marginally by 0.04% W/W, Amid High Volatility Related to the Middle East War.
· Ghana’s Treasury Auction Undersubscribed for Third Consecutive Week as Yields Continue to Climb Across the Curve.
· GSE Records Sharp Pullback as Profit-Taking Deepens; GSE-CI Drops 17.22% w/w to 48.11% YTD, while GSE-FSI Drops to 80.20% YTD.
Kindly click to view the full report: Global Market Update - March 30, 2026
AROUND THE GLOBE
· UK Inflation Holds Steady at 3% in February
o The UK’s annual inflation rate remained unchanged at 3% in February 2026, in line with expectations. Price increases were driven by clothing and housing and utilities, while inflation eased in transport, food, and services. Petrol prices declined, contributing to softer transport costs. On a monthly basis, consumer prices rose by 0.4%, rebounding from a 0.5% drop in January. Meanwhile, core inflation edged up to 3.2%, indicating some underlying price pressures despite the stable headline rate.
· US Current Account Deficit Narrows to Lowest Since 2021
o The United States’ current account deficit narrowed to $190.7 billion in Q4 2025, down from $239.1 billion in Q3, marking the lowest level since early 2021. The improvement was driven by a smaller goods deficit, as imports declined more than exports, partly reflecting tariff impacts. The primary income balance shifted to a $23.9 billion surplus, while the services surplus eased slightly. Overall, the deficit fell to 2.4% of GDP, from 3.1% in the previous quarter, signaling improved external balance.
· US Manufacturing PMI Beats Expectations in March
o The S&P Global US Manufacturing PMI rose to 52.4 in March 2026, up from 51.6 in February and above expectations of 51.3, signaling stronger factory activity. Output and new orders improved, supported by stabilizing export demand and easing tariff pressures. However, employment growth slowed, and supplier delivery times lengthened, indicating lingering supply constraints. Rising input and output costs point to renewed price pressures, while business confidence hit a 13-month high, driven by optimism over domestic demand despite ongoing geopolitical risks.
· Japan Inflation Drops to Near Four-Year Low
o Japan’s annual CPI eased to 1.3% in February 2026, the lowest since March 2022, with food inflation near a 15-month low at 4.0%. Price growth slowed for transport (0.5%) and clothing (2.1%), while energy costs plunged further—electricity -8.0% and gas -5.1%—reflecting subsidies. Core inflation fell to 1.6%, below the Bank of Japan’s 2% target for the first time since March 2022. Monthly CPI declined by 0.2%, marking the third consecutive monthly drop, as household items, communications, and recreation saw modest increases.
· China Industrial Profits Surge in Early 2026
o China’s industrial profits jumped 15.2% year-on-year in January–February 2026, marking the strongest start since 2018 (excluding the 2021 pandemic rebound) and signaling a solid recovery in corporate earnings. Growth was broad-based, with state-owned firms returning to expansion (+5.3%), while private enterprises surged by 37.2%. By sector, manufacturing led with an 18.9% increase, supported by strong gains in electronics and non-ferrous metals. Mining and utilities also posted moderate growth. The data highlights improving industrial momentum, though rising raw material costs from global tensions pose emerging risks.
- GHANA
· Ghana Announces April 2026 Treasury Bond Issuance
o The Republic of Ghana is set to issue 7-year GHS-denominated Treasury Bonds to support government financing and deepen the domestic debt market. The book opens for price discovery today, 30th March 2026, and closes with final pricing and allocation on Wednesday, 1st April 2026. Settlement and the official issue date are scheduled for Tuesday, 7th April 2026. The issuance provides investors with an opportunity to participate in government funding while aiding fiscal management and liquidity in the local market.
- AFRICA
· South Africa Holds Rates Amid Rising Inflation Risks
o The South African Reserve Bank kept its repo rate unchanged at 6.75% on March 26, 2026, marking a second consecutive pause as policymakers flagged upside inflation risks from the Middle East conflict. While inflation eased to the 3% target in February, rising energy costs—particularly fuel inflation above 18%—are expected to push headline inflation to around 4% in Q2. The bank raised its 2026 inflation forecast to 3.7% and now expects only one rate cut, citing heightened uncertainty and potential prolonged geopolitical pressures.
· South Africa PPI Falls to Seven-Month Low
o South Africa’s producer price inflation (PPI) eased to 1.8% in February 2026, down from 2.2% in January, marking the lowest level since July. The decline was driven largely by falling costs for coal and petroleum products, particularly diesel and fuel-related inputs. Price growth also softened across categories such as food, beverages, paper, and furniture, indicating easing upstream cost pressures. On a monthly basis, producer prices were unchanged, following a 0.2% decline in January.
· Nigeria Manufacturing Investment Plunges Amid Surge in Overall Capital Inflows
o Foreign investment in Nigeria’s manufacturing sector plunged by 51.4% over the past two years, falling to $772.45 million in 2025 from $1.59 billion in 2023, highlighting weakening investor confidence in the real economy. The sector’s share of total capital inflows shrank from 49.7% in 2023 to just 3.3% in 2025, even as overall capital importation surged to $23.22 billion, nearly doubling from $12.32 billion in 2024. Analysts say the trend reflects a growing preference among foreign investors for short-term financial instruments over long-term productive investments like manufacturing.
Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics