Weekly Market Update - Monday, October 13, 2025

In this week's edition:

·        U.S. Stocks Fell as President Donald Trump’s New Tariff Threat Shook Markets

·        Gold Gained 3.38% W/W, Marking an Eighth Straight Rise on Safe-Haven Demand

·        Ghana’s Treasury Auction Records 20.26% Oversubscription, with Mixed Yield Movements Across the Curve

·        Ghana Stock Market Extends Rally for Fifth Consecutive Week as GSE-CI Gains 0.93% w/w, YTD Return Reaches 73.65%

 AROUND THE GLOBE   

·        US Moves to Impose 100% Tariffs on Chinese Imports Starting November

o   The White House announced plans to apply a sweeping 100% tariff on all Chinese imports beginning November 1, amid escalating tensions over China’s new rare-earth export restrictions. Beijing blasted the measure as a trade escalation and promised “resolute measures” in response. The decision sent markets reeling—U.S. equity indices fell sharply as investors braced for global supply chain and inflationary disruptions.

·        ECB Sees Policy as Appropriate Amid Balanced Risks

o   The European Central Bank (ECB) judged its current policy stance as consistent with its 2% medium-term inflation goal, minutes from the September meeting showed. While views on inflation risks were mixed, officials agreed rates are sufficiently restrictive to manage potential shocks. Policymakers noted growth remains weak despite a resilient economy, with risks from geopolitical tensions and rising defense spending. The ECB has cut rates by 200 bps since mid-2024.

·        US 1-Year Inflation Expectations Edge Lower in October 

o   The University of Michigan’s preliminary survey for October 2025 shows that year-ahead inflation expectations eased for the second consecutive month, declining to 4.6% from 4.7% in September. Meanwhile, the five-year inflation outlook held steady at 3.7%, signaling that long-term inflation expectations remain anchored despite short-term fluctuations.

·        China’s Exports Surge to 6-Month High in September

o   China’s exports rose 8.3% year-on-year to $328.6 billion in September 2025, the strongest growth since March and well above market expectations of 6%. The rebound reflected improved demand from key Asian and European markets, offsetting a 27% slump in shipments to the U.S. amid ongoing trade tensions. Export gains were led by cars, integrated circuits, and fertilizers, while rare earth exports declined by 7.6%. Year-to-date exports grew 6.1%, reaching $2.78 trillion.

·        Canada’s Jobless Rate Holds at 7.1% as Employment Rebounds

o   Canada’s unemployment rate remained unchanged at 7.1% in September 2025, slightly below expectations of 7.2%. Despite coming in below expectation, the unemployment rate is at its highest level since Agust 2021. Employment rebounded by 60,400 jobs (+0.3%), driven by a strong gain of 106,100 full-time positions that offset a 45,600 drop in part-time work. The employment rate edged up to 60.6%, while labor force participation rose to 65.2%, signaling modest improvement in labor market conditions after two months of declines.

  • GHANA

·        Moody’s Upgrades Ghana’s Credit Rating; Assigns Stable Outlook

o   Moody’s has upgraded Ghana’s long-term foreign currency rating to Caa1 from Caa2, citing improved debt sustainability and macroeconomic stability under the IMF-supported reform program. The outlook was revised to stable, reflecting stronger fiscal discipline, successful debt restructuring, and rising reserves. The upgrade underscores Ghana’s economic recovery, with lower inflation, a firmer Cedi, and improved investor confidence, enhancing market sentiment.

·        IMF Staff Reach Agreement on Ghana’s Fifth Programme Review

o   The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has reached a staff-level agreement with Ghana on the fifth review of its $3 billion programme, paving the way for a $385 million disbursement pending Executive Board approval. This will bring total disbursements to over $2.8 billion, supporting Ghana’s ongoing recovery efforts. The IMF said macroeconomic stabilization is strengthening, with stronger-than-expected growth in H1 2025 driven by services and agriculture. The external sector has also improved on the back of robust gold and cocoa exports. The Fund projects growth of 4.8% in 2026, with inflation expected to stay within the Bank of Ghana’s target band.

·        BoG Gold Reserves Rise to 37.06 Tonnes, up 21.3% YTD

o   Ghana’s gold reserves increased to 37.06 tonnes in September 2025, up 21.3% since January, according to the Bank of Ghana. The steady buildup, driven by the Domestic Gold Purchase Programme (DGPP), aims to strengthen FX reserves, stabilize the Cedi, and boost investor confidence. The BoG noted that the initiative diversifies reserve assets, reduces global market exposure, and enhances FX liquidity while lowering reliance on external borrowing. 

  • AFRICA

·        S&P Upgrades Egypt’s Rating to ‘B’; Fitch Maintains Outlook

o   S&P Global raised Egypt’s sovereign credit rating to ‘B’, citing sustained reform momentum and a sharp recovery in GDP growth. The move marks S&P’s first upgrade since Egypt began receiving international financial support in March 2024. Meanwhile, Fitch affirmed its ‘B’ rating, underscoring Egypt’s robust growth prospects and strong backing from global and Gulf partners. Both agencies kept a ‘stable’ outlook, while Moody’s maintained its ‘Caa1’ rating with a positive outlook.

·        Kenya Delivers 8th Consecutive Rate Cut

o   The Central Bank of Kenya lowered its policy rate by 25 bps to 9.25% in October 2025, marking the eighth straight cut since April 2024. Governor Kamau Thugge said the move supports credit expansion and economic growth, with GDP projected to rise by 5.2% in 2025 and 5.5% in 2026. The decision reflects stable inflation expectations, a stronger shilling, and improved foreign inflows from Kenya’s recent $1.5bn eurobond.

·        Kenya to Resume IMF Talks for New Loan Programme

o   Kenya will resume negotiations with the IMF next week in Washington to secure a new loan programme, according to Central Bank Governor Kamau Thugge. The talks follow the expiry of the country’s $3.6 billion IMF programme earlier this year, with authorities seeking a renewed deal that includes a funded component. Thugge expressed optimism about reaching an agreement soon, underscoring the programme’s role in maintaining macroeconomic stability.

·        Nigeria Plans $2.3 Billion Eurobond Issuance

o   Nigeria plans to raise $2.3 billion from the Eurobond market before year-end to help finance its 2025 budget and refinance a $1.1 billion bond maturing in November, according to the Debt Management Office. The government is also considering a $500 million sukuk issuance to diversify funding sources. The move underscores renewed investor confidence following recent fiscal reforms and improved macroeconomic conditions.

Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics

Weekly Market Update - Monday, September 23, 2025

In this week’s edition: 

·                  US Equities Close at New Highs as Investors Digest Upbeat Corporate Earnings, the Fed’s First Rate Cut of 2025, and Signs of Progress in US-China Relations 

·                  Gold Rises by 1.16%, Gaining from its Safe-Haven Appeal Following the Fed’s Policy Cut 

·                  Ghana’s Treasury Auction Records 13.71% Oversubscription, with Yields Trending Down Across the Curve 

 Kindly click to view the full report: Global Markets Update - September 23, 2025

AROUND THE GLOBE    

·                  Fed Cuts Rates by 25bps, Signals More Easing 

o        The Federal Reserve lowered the federal funds rate by 25bps to 4.00%–4.25% in September 2025, its first cut since December. Governor Stephen Miran dissented, favoring a larger reduction. Updated projections showed another 50bps of cuts in 2025 and a quarter point in 2026. Growth forecasts were revised higher, while inflation projections for 2026 rose. The Fed maintained a 4.5% unemployment outlook for 2025, edging lower in 2026. 

·                  BoE Holds Rate at 4%, Slows Gilt Sales 

o        The Bank of England (BoE) kept its key rate at 4% in September 2025, with a 7–2 vote as two members favoured a 25 bps cut. The MPC also voted to slow quantitative tightening, reducing gilt holdings by £70 billion to £488 billion over the next year. Policymakers cited easing wage growth and disinflation progress but flagged lingering inflation risks. With GDP growth subdued, the BoE emphasized a cautious, data-dependent stance.. 

·                  BoJ Holds Rate at 0.5%, Starts ETF and REIT Sales 

o        The Bank of Japan kept its benchmark rate at 0.5% in September 2025, the highest since 2008, in a 7-2 vote. Alongside the hold, it announced annual sales of ETFs (JPY 330 billion) and REITs (JPY 5 billion), signaling further policy normalization. The board said Japan’s economy is recovering moderately, with consumption supported by income gains. However, exports and output remain weak, while inflation stays between 2.5% and 3%, led by food prices. 

·                  Eurozone Manufacturing PMI Falls Back Into Contraction 

o        The Eurozone Manufacturing PMI slipped to 49.5 in September 2025 from August’s 50.7, missing forecasts of 50.7 and signaling renewed contraction. New orders posted their steepest decline since February, while output growth slowed to near stagnation. Employment continued to fall, extending a trend since June 2023. Input costs dropped for the first time in three months, alongside lower output charges. Business confidence also weakened, hitting its lowest point this year. 

·                  China’s FDI Falls 12.7% Despite Strong High-Tech Inflows 

o        China’s FDI fell 12.7% year-on-year to CNY 506.6 billion in the first eight months of 2025 amid global economic uncertainty. Manufacturing drew CNY 129 billion, while services accounted for CNY 336 billion. High-tech sectors attracted CNY 148.3 billion, with e-commerce up 169.2% and aerospace up 37.5%. Investment from Japan (+58.9%), Switzerland (+37.2%), and the UK (+24.5%) surged, highlighting continued foreign interest in China’s advanced industries despite the overall decline.

GHANA  

·                  Ghana Cuts Policy Rate by Record 350 bps to 21.5% 

o        The Bank of Ghana slashed its benchmark rate by 350 basis points to 21.5% on September 17, the steepest cut on record, citing sustained disinflation, robust growth, and stronger external buffers. Inflation eased to 11.5% in August, the lowest in four years, while Q2 GDP expanded 6.3% and non-oil GDP rose 7.8%, led by agriculture and services. External balances improved, with a $6.2 billion trade surplus and reserves of $10.7 billion (4.5 months import cover). The cedi has gained 21% YTD, ranking among the world’s best performers. Policymakers highlighted anchored inflation expectations and improving confidence despite risks from utility tariff hikes.

AFRICA  

·                  South Africa Holds Repo Rate at 7% Amid Inflation and Growth Trade-offs 

o        The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) kept its key repo rate steady at 7% on September 18, 2025, in line with expectations, as it balances global uncertainty with a pending shift to a 3% inflation target. The vote was split, with four members opting for no change and two preferring a 25 bps cut. Since September 2024, rates have fallen 125 bps. Policymakers noted inflation is rising as projected, averaging 3.4% in 2025, while growth was revised up to 1.2% from 0.9% after stronger Q2 GDP. 

·                  Nigeria Economy Accelerates to 4.23% in Q2 2025 

o        Nigeria’s economy grew 4.23% year-on-year in Q2 2025, up from 3.13% in Q1, marking its fastest pace since Q2 2021. The rebound follows a rebasing of national accounts to 2019 and was fueled by a 20.5% surge in the oil sector alongside a 3.6% expansion in non-oil activities. Industry led growth at 7.45%, supported by services at 3.94% and agriculture at 2.82%. The data signal renewed momentum for Africa’s largest economy, with gains in both resource and non-resource sectors. 

Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics

Weekly Market Update - Monday, August 25, 2025

In this week's edition:

·        U.S. Equity Markets End Steady, Recovering Early-Week Losses After Fed Chair Powell’s Remarks on Friday.

·        Gold Rises by 1.07% on Signs of a Dovish Pivot from the Federal Reserve.

·        Ghana’s Treasury Auction Records Third Consecutive Undersubscription at 10.45%, With Yields Steady Overall but Edging Up at the Short End of the Curve.

·        Ghana Stock Exchange Sees Marginal Retreat; GSE-CI Slips to 50.28% YTD, GSE-FSI Eases to 43.21% YTD.

AROUND THE GLOBE   

 

·        Powell Signals Possible Fed Rate Cut in September

o   Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated the Fed may cut rates in September, citing mounting labor market risks despite persistent inflation. July’s weaker hiring data heightened concerns about potential layoffs, while Trump’s tariffs could sustain price pressures. Powell noted policy remains restrictive but could be eased if risks shift further toward jobs. Markets priced in a 75% chance of a September cut, driving yields lower, stocks higher, and the dollar weaker.

·        US Manufacturing Expands at Fastest Pace Since 2022

o   The S&P Global US Manufacturing PMI rose to 53.3 in August 2025 from 49.8 in July, beating forecasts of 49.5. The reading signaled renewed factory growth after July’s contraction, marking the strongest pace since May 2022. Output rose for a third month, supported by the largest new orders increase since February 2024. Employment rebounded sharply, posting the biggest payroll gain since March 2022, while inventories also surged.

·        Eurozone Inflation Steady at 2% in July

o   Eurozone annual inflation held at 2% in July 2025, matching June figure and the ECB’s target. The data were also in line with flash estimates. Services inflation eased to 3.2%, a three-year low, offset by faster gains in food, alcohol, tobacco (3.3%) and non-energy goods (0.8%). Energy prices remained in deflation at -2.4%. Core inflation stayed at 2.3%, the lowest since January 2022, signaling stable underlying price pressures.

·        UK Inflation Rises to 3.8% in July

o   The UK’s annual inflation rate climbed to 3.8% in July 2025, the highest level since January 2024, up from 3.6% and above forecasts of 3.7%. Transport was the main driver, with airfares surging by 30.2% on summer holiday demand, alongside higher fuel and sea fares. Prices also rose for restaurants, hotels, and food. Housing and household services eased to 6.2%, partly offsetting gains. Monthly CPI rose by 0.1%, while core inflation edged up to 3.8%.

·        Eurozone Private Sector Growth Hits 15-Month High

o   The HCOB Eurozone Composite PMI rose to 51.1 in August 2025 from 50.9, beating forecasts of 50.7 and marking the strongest expansion since May 2024. Growth was underpinned by services (50.7) and the first manufacturing rebound in over three years (50.5). New orders rose for the first time in 14 months, boosting hiring. Still, business confidence slipped on US tariff risks and regional headwinds as input costs and output prices climbed.

·        China’s FDI Falls 13.4%, High-Tech Sectors Shine

o   China’s FDI fell by 13.4% year-on-year to CNY 467.34 billion in Jan–Jul 2025, reflecting global uncertainty. Services led with CNY 336.25 billion, while manufacturing drew CNY 121.04 billion. High-tech investment surged, with e-commerce up 146.8%, aerospace 42.2%, and pharma 37.4%. Inflows from ASEAN countries rose by 1.1%. Similarly, inflows from Switzerland, Japan, and the UK posted strong gains. 

  • GHANA

·        Outstanding Corporate Debt Shrinks by 95% Year-to-July

o   Outstanding corporate debt securities on the Ghana Fixed Income Market (GFIM) plunged by 95% to GH¢44.2m by July 2025, from GH¢919.89m a year earlier, per the GSE Fund Managers Report. The drop stemmed from reduced issuance and retirements, with balances from issuers like Izwe (GH¢75m vs GH¢100m), Cocobod (GH¢7.33bn vs GH¢7.93bn), ESLA and Daakye Trust (all bonds from both issuers have been retired). Conversely, Kasapreko more than doubled its debt to GH¢351.18m, while Federated Commodities debuted with GH¢72.55m. As a result, government instruments continue to dominatd, pushing total GFIM volumes up by 52% to GH¢129.66bn.

·        BoG Halts Unbacked USD Payouts to Corporates

o   The Bank of Ghana has ordered banks to stop foreign currency cash payouts to large corporates unless backed by prior deposits, in a bid to protect reserves and stabilize the Cedi. The directive targets bulk oil distributors, mining firms, and others withdrawing unbacked dollars. Despite a current account surplus of US$3.4bn, reserves of US$11.1bn, and a 40.7% Cedi rally in H1 2025, the BoG said tighter oversight is needed. Non-compliance by banks will attract sanctions. 

  • AFRICA

·        South Africa Inflation Edges Higher to 3.5% in July

o   South Africa’s annual inflation rate climbed to 3.5% in July 2025, a ten-month high and matching forecasts, marking a second straight increase. Price pressures were driven by food & non-alcoholic beverages (5.7% vs 5.1%), alcohol & tobacco (4.6% vs 4.4%), and restaurants & hotels (3% vs 2%). Transport costs fell more slowly (-1.7% vs -3.3%), cushioned by smaller fuel declines (-5.5% vs -11.2%). Core inflation edged up to 3.0%, while monthly inflation surged 0.9%.

·        S&P Upgrades Kenya to B on Improved Liquidity

o   S&P has upgraded Kenya’s long-term sovereign credit rating to B from B- with a stable outlook, citing eased external liquidity pressures from robust exports, remittances, and a $900m Eurobond buyback earlier this year. The liability management operation, alongside lower domestic interest rates, has boosted investor confidence and supported credit growth. S&P expects strong medium-term growth to offset high borrowing costs. The upgrade reverses last year’s downgrade tied to debt risks and stalled tax reforms.

 Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics

Weekly Market Update - Monday, September 15, 2025

In this week's edition:

·        Global Equities Advance Across the Board on Mixed Investor Readings of Central Bank Policy Directions

·        Gold Hits a New High on Expectations of Looser U.S. Policy and Heightened Geopolitical Uncertainty

·        Ghana’s Treasury Auction Records 24.59% Undersubscription, with Mixed Yields Movement Across the Curve

·        Ghana Stock Exchange Ends Three-Week Losing Streak; GSE-CI Inches Up to 48.70% YTD, While GSE-FSI Climbs to 46.10% YTD 

Kindly click to view the full report: Global Market Update - September 15, 2025

 

AROUND THE GLOBE   

·        U.S. Producer Prices Post Surprise Decline in August

o   U.S. producer prices slipped 0.1% in August 2025, the first monthly drop in four months, defying forecasts for a 0.3% rise. The decline was driven by a 0.2% fall in service costs, led by a 3.9% drop in machinery and vehicle wholesaling margins, while goods prices edged up 0.1% on higher tobacco, beef, poultry, and electricity costs. On an annual basis, PPI rose 2.6%, cooling from July’s 3.1% pace and below expectations of 3.3%, while core PPI also eased to 2.8%.

·        U.S. Pushes G7 Tariffs on India, China Over Russian Oil

o   The U.S. is pressing G7 nations to impose steep tariffs—potentially 50–100%—on India and China for buying Russian oil, the Financial Times reports. G7 finance ministers are set to discuss the proposal in a video call as President Trump steps up efforts to push Moscow toward peace talks. While Washington has already raised tariffs on Indian imports and briefly hiked Chinese levies earlier this year, EU officials warn such measures could strain ties with New Delhi and provoke Beijing. Brussels favors alternatives like tighter sanctions and earlier deadlines to phase out Russian energy, though opposition from Hungary and Slovakia persists.

·        ECB Holds Rates Steady, Inflation Seen Near Target

o   The European Central Bank (ECB) left key interest rates unchanged in September 2025, with the deposit facility at 2.00%, the main refinancing rate at 2.15%, and the marginal lending rate at 2.40%, as expected. Staff projections see headline inflation averaging 2.1% in 2025 before easing to 1.7% in 2026 and edging back to 1.9% in 2027. Growth is forecast at 1.2% in 2025, slowing to 1.0% in 2026, and rebounding to 1.3% in 2027. President Lagarde noted risks are more balanced, signaling the disinflationary process has ended.

·        Euro Area Trade Surplus Narrows to €12.4B in July

o   The Eurozone’s trade surplus narrowed to €12.4B in July 2025 from €18.5B a year earlier, though slightly above forecasts of €11.7B. Imports rose 3.1% to €239.1B, led by food, chemicals, and machinery, while exports edged up 0.4% to €251.5B, supported by food and vehicles. The surplus with the US shrank sharply as higher imports and weaker exports reflected ongoing tariff uncertainty.

·        UK GDP Flat in July, Matching Forecasts

o   The UK economy stalled in July 2025 after a 0.4% expansion in June, in line with expectations. Modest gains in services (+0.1%) and construction (+0.2%) were offset by a 0.9% drop in production, led by steep declines in electronics and pharmaceuticals. On a three-month basis, GDP rose by 0.2%, while annual growth held steady at 1.4%, just below forecasts of 1.5%.

·        China Growth Falters as Retail and Jobs Weaken

o   China’s economy lost momentum in August 2025, with industrial production slowing to 5.2% year-on-year—the weakest in a year—while retail sales rose just 3.4%, an eight-month low. The unemployment rate climbed to 5.3%, and property investment kept shrinking under tighter rules, underscoring persistent weakness in the housing sector. Officials pointed to record heat, prolonged rains, and global headwinds as drags, while urging manufacturers to seek overseas markets amid U.S. trade tensions. Beijing pledged measures to steady jobs, businesses, and markets as firms struggle with aggressive price cuts.

  • GHANA

·        Ghana GDP Growth Holds at 6.3%, Near 1-Year High

o   Ghana’s economy expanded by 6.3% year-on-year in Q2 2025, unchanged from Q1 revised figures and the fastest pace since Q3 2024. Services drove growth with a 9.9% rise, led by a 21.3% surge in ICT and strong gains in education (+16.6%), health (+14.6%), and finance (+9.7%). Agriculture grew 5.2% on livestock output, while industry rose 2.3%, though mining and quarrying contracted 1.8% as oil and gas slumped 22.5%. On the demand side, household spending (+12.2%), investment (+17.1%), and net exports (+691.6%) provided strong support, offsetting a small dip in government consumption. Quarter-on-quarter, GDP rose 1.4% after a revised 1.6% gain in Q1.

·        World Bank Disburses $360mn to Ghana in Support of IMF-Backed Reforms

o   Ghana has received $360mn from the World Bank to reinforce fiscal stability and reforms under its $3bn IMF program, Citi News reported. The disbursement, approved June 27, brings World Bank support to $660mn following a $300mn release in 2023. Provided through the IDA’s Resilient Recovery Development Policy Operation (DPO2), the funds aim to strengthen revenue mobilisation, energy governance, and social spending. Finance Minister Ato Forson said the package reflects steady progress in restoring confidence and building a more resilient economy.

  • AFRICA

·        Egypt Inflation Rate at Near 3-1/2-Year Low

o   Egypt’s annual urban inflation eased to 12.0% in August 2025, down from 13.9% in July and below market forecasts of 12.7%, marking the lowest level since March 2022. The slowdown was largely due to softer food inflation, which fell to a four-year low of 2.1%, alongside easing transport (26.8% vs 41.5%), restaurants and hotels (13.8% vs 15.2%), and miscellaneous goods (12.0% vs 13.6%). In contrast, housing (16.2% vs 15.9%) and furnishings (13.4% vs 12.9%) recorded slightly faster price increases, while communications held steady at 12.1%. On a monthly basis, consumer prices rose 0.4%, rebounding from July’s 0.5% drop and ending a two-month streak of declines.

·        South Africa Mining Output Growth Tops Forecasts

o   South Africa’s mining production rose by 4.4% year-on-year in July 2025, beating market expectations of 3.2% and accelerating from an upwardly revised 2.5% in June. It marked the third straight month of growth and the strongest since September 2024, driven by sharp gains in iron ore (+12.2%), Platinum Group Metals, PGMs (+6.2%), and other metallic minerals (+45.8%). On a seasonally adjusted basis, mining output climbed 1% from June and advanced 5.8% in the three months to July compared with the previous three months.

           Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics

Weekly Market Update - Monday, August 18, 2025

In this week’s edition: 

·                  Global Equity Markets Log Second Straight Week of Gains on Sustained Investor Optimism 

·                  Gold Falls by 1.81%, Pressured by Stronger U.S. Inflation Data That Diminished Rate-Cut Expectations 

·                  Ghana’s Treasury Auction Posts Second Consecutive Undersubscription of 35.68% as Yields Continue to Decline 

Kindly click to view the full report: Global Markets Update - August 18, 2025

AROUND THE GLOBE    

·                  US annual inflation stayed at 2.7% in July, below forecasts of 2.8%. Energy costs fell further, led by gasoline (-9.5%) and fuel oil (-2.9%), while shelter inflation eased slightly to 3.7%. In contrast, prices for used cars, trucks, and transportation services picked up. Core inflation accelerated to 3.1%, its highest in five months, with monthly core CPI rising 0.3%, the sharpest increase since January. 

·                  US Business Inventories Up 0.2% 

·                  US business inventories rose 0.2% in June 2025, in line with expectations, after being flat in May. The increase was driven by a rebound in wholesale inventories (+0.1%), stronger manufacturing inventories (+0.2%), and steady retail inventories (+0.2%). Year-over-year, total inventories were 1.6% higher. 

·                  Euro Area GDP Expands by 1.4% in Q2 

·                  The Euro Area economy expanded by 1.4% year-on-year in Q2 2025, easing slightly from 1.5% in Q1 and matching initial estimates. Ireland led with a strong 16.2% growth, while Cyprus (3.3%), Lithuania (3%), and Spain (2.8%) also posted solid gains. Major economies like Germany and Italy grew modestly at 0.4% each. 

·                  Euro Area Trade Surplus Narrows More than Expected 

·                  The Eurozone’s trade surplus narrowed to €7 billion in June 2025 from €20.7 billion a year earlier, below market expectations of €13 billion, as imports rose 6.8% while exports edged up only 0.4%. 

·                  UK GDP Grows by 1.2% in Q2 

 

GHANA  

·                  Weak Jobs Creation and Labor Market Concerns 

 

AFRICA  

·                  Kenya Delivers 7th Straight Rate Cut 

·                  The Central Bank of Kenya lowered its benchmark interest rate by 25 bps to 9.50% in August 2025, marking a seventh straight cut and 350 bps of easing since August 2024. Inflation quickened to 4.1% in July from 3.8% but stayed within the 2.5%–7.5% target band. Governor Kamau Thugge said the move aims to boost private-sector credit and growth while keeping inflation expectations anchored and the exchange rate stable. 

·                  Nigeria Inflation Rate Moderates for 4th Month 

Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters, Trading Economics