
ECB's Vujcic Says Current Tariffs Not Worst Scenario for Europe
Levies imposed by the US and China on each others' products are 'prohibitive,' while Europe is still able to trade with both countries, Vujcic said on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund's spring meetings in Washington. Some of the recent developments on financial and commodity markets are also working in its favor, he said.
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Business Insider
a day ago
- Business Insider
Senegal targets $10 billion in revenue to escape debt crisis
Senegal will raise nearly $10 billion over the next three years through tax increases, renegotiations of energy contracts, and spending cuts as part of a comprehensive plan to stabilise public finances and restore investor confidence. Senegal aims to mobilize $10 billion over three years by increasing taxes, renegotiating energy contracts, and reducing spending. Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko emphasized prioritizing domestic resource mobilization to reduce dependency on external aid. The fiscal plan emerges as Senegal confronts debt challenges revealed by an audit indicating a debt-to-GDP ratio increase. Senegal will raise nearly $10 billion over the next three years through tax increases, renegotiations of energy contracts, and spending cuts as part of a comprehensive plan to stabilise public finances and restore investor confidence, Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko announced on Friday. Speaking in Dakar, Sonko stated that the government will prioritise domestic resource mobilisation to reduce its dependence on external aid. The measures follow the discovery of $7 billion in previously undisclosed borrowing by the former administration, which pushed Senegal toward a debt crisis, Bloomberg reported. Under President Bassirou Diomaye Faye, the government plans to fund 90% of its economic recovery plan through domestic revenue, including new taxes on goods, services, and mobile money transfers. The aim is to generate 5.7 trillion CFA francs ($9.9 billion) throughout the period. The fiscal misreporting prompted the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to suspend a $1.8 billion loan program last year, while S&P Global Ratings downgraded Senegal's credit rating further into junk status. The government's new fiscal strategy is designed to reassure investors and restore credibility. The IMF announced last week that it will begin discussions with Senegal in September toward a new financing arrangement, contingent on the country presenting a credible path back to fiscal sustainability. However, financial markets remain cautious. Senegalese Eurobonds due in 2033 fell 0.7% to 73.98 cents on the dollar by Friday afternoon in London trading. Rebasing GDP Senegal's statistics agency is also working on rebasing the nation's gross domestic product (GDP), a move that could improve the country's debt metrics. Following an audit, Senegal's debt-to-GDP ratio surged to 99.7% in 2023 from a previously reported 74.4%. Economy Minister Abdourahmane Sarr stated that the country's debt obligations stood at 119% of GDP last year. A new IMF program, aimed at financing the recovery plan and regaining investor confidence, will depend on Senegal's ability to demonstrate fiscal discipline. Sarr said the government's roadmap includes improving the efficiency of public spending, prioritising high-impact investments, and reducing the budget deficit to 3% by 2027. While the government is considering debt reprofiling, extending maturities to ease repayment pressures, it remains committed to avoiding a full debt restructuring.


Bloomberg
2 days ago
- Bloomberg
IMF Relaxes Argentina's Reserves Target by $5 Billion in 2025
The International Monetary Fund gave Argentina breathing room on a key benchmark after it missed the target this month, making it easier for the country to continue with its $20 billion funding program. Argentina will now need to raise net hard-currency reserves to negative $2.6 billion by the end of this year to unlock the next tranche of IMF funds, about $5 billion lower than the earlier target. The figure is currently at negative $6.4 billion, in part because of a sovereign bond payment last month.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
EU banks can weather recession driven by global trade war, stress test shows
By Valentina Za and Balazs Koranyi MILAN (Reuters) -Banks across the European Union are strong enough to weather an economic shock driven by geopolitical and trade tensions, the European Banking Authority said on Friday as it presented the outcome of its latest health check of the sector. The EBA tested how 64 European banks, including 51 euro zone lenders, would react to a prolonged recession across the EU and other advanced economies, finding none would breach their core capital requirement, and only one would breach its leverage requirement. "The results indicate that the EU banking system could withstand a severe but plausible macroeconomic scenario, reflecting the resilience built up by banks in recent years," the EBA said, urging lenders to maintain adequate capital. European and U.S. banking authorities introduced formal, comprehensive stress tests after the global financial crisis of 2008 led to costly state bailouts of banks. Some elements of this year's adverse scenario had begun to materialise, the EBA said, pointing to U.S. trade tariffs and escalating tension in the Middle East. Lenders accounting for three quarters of EU banks' total assets took part in the exercise, which simulates the losses banks would incur by analysing their performance over a three-year period under a baseline and an adverse scenario. Under the adverse scenario, worsening geopolitical tensions and protectionist trade policies lift energy and commodity prices, disrupt supply chains and hurt consumption and investment, driving a cumulative 6.3% contraction in EU economic output over 2025-2027. That would translate into combined losses of 547 billion euros for the sampled banks, the EBA said, higher than the 496 billion euros envisaged in its 2023 stress test. While the hit to capital reserves is particularly severe for some European subsidiaries of major U.S. banks, all the lenders remained able to meet core capital requirements, the EBA said, although one would breach the requirement on the leverage ratio. For 17 lenders, the adverse scenario would entail limits or adjustments to bonus and dividend payments for at least one of the three years. In terms of capital reserves - calculated using the current 'transitional' regime that tightens progressively through 2033 - the adverse scenario would knock 3.7 percentage points off the sample's aggregate core capital ratio, pushing it to 12.1% in 2027 from 15.8%. When looking at individual countries, Irish, Danish, French, German and Belgian banks experienced the biggest capital impact, EBA data showed. For individual banks, Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg and two other German regional banks, as well France's Credit Agricole and La Banque Postale, saw the largest capital depletion effect. While there is no pass/fail threshold in the EU-wide stress test, its outcome feeds into the risk assessment of lenders carried out by supervisors every year, setting bank-specific capital requirements and guidance known as 'Pillar 2'.