Showing posts with label Market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Market. Show all posts
The West African Capital Markets Integration Council has organised a series of workshops, signalling the commencement of the planned integration of capital markets in West Africa.
West African Capital Market Integration programme, which has linkages to the West African Monetary Institute, was established in 2001 by the heads of state in the West African Monetary Zone.
According to the Chairman, WACMIC, Mr. Oscar Onyema, the market integration will take place in three phases.
In the first phase, trading is expected to commence among WACMI members through sponsored access.
The second phase will involve the introduction of membership privileges, while the third phase will mark the full integration, meaning all markets will be accessible by qualified West African brokers.
While the first phase is scheduled to be completed at the end of March 2014, the third phase is expected to be completed in 2015.
Two different workshops organised by WACMIC in Lagos and Abuja last week to enable stakeholders to learn more about the programme and provide feedback ended with many participants expressing support for the project.
Onyema, who is also the Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Stock Exchange, expressed confidence about the programme, adding that the first phase will be completed before the end of March 2014.
He, however, stressed that the success of the project depended largely on the participation of key market stakeholders conducting transaction within the sub-region.
“We have set for ourselves a very ambitious target of completing the first phase of integration by the end of March 2014, and commencement of implementation by April 1, 2014; and we believe it is achievable having carefully mapped out our implementation strategies,” Onyema was quoted as saying at the first workshop in Lagos.
The exchanges involved in the programme are the NSE, Ghana Stock Exchange, Sierra Leone Stock Exchange and The Bourse Regionale des Valeurs Mobilieres, which covers eight francophone countries.
At the second workshop in Abuja, it was gathered that the planned integration received the backing of the National Assembly with the Senate Committee on Capital Market expressing support for the programme.
The Chairman of the Senate committee, Ayoade Adeseun, said the Nigerian parliament and ECOWAS parliament were fully in support of the integration process.
Adeseun, who was represented by Mrs. Halima Mohammed, explained that the integration of the capital markets would lead to the economic growth of the region with many benefits.
He said, “I wish to assure the council of the support of the committee of the capital market in the Nigerian Senate as well as the ECOWAS parliament that the creation of the necessary and enabling framework, (that will engender economic growth), whether legal or otherwise, will be vigorously supported.”
Also, the Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission, Suleyman Ndanusa, expressed the confidence that all regulators in West Africa would support the project.
He said, “The initiative will clearly broaden the capital raising space for listed companies with positive impact on industrial development.
“I believe that access to a wider market, which integration provides, could encourage more companies to embrace the capital market funds and listing and further deepen the regional markets.”
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World stocks climbed for an eighth straight session on Friday on signs of a gradual improvement in euro zone growth and the euro rose to its highest level in almost three weeks, while gold climbed above $1,300 an ounce.
On Wall Street, stock gains put the S&P 500 index on track for its first two-week winning streak of the year and the Nasdaq on track for a seventh session of gains, despite more weak data on the US economy. Investors again appeared to blame the data on bad weather.
Reuters reported that US factory production fell 0.8 per cent in January, the biggest drop in more than four-and-a-half years. The report from the Federal Reserve follows an unexpectedly weak US retail sales report Thursday that stock investors also discounted because of the weather.
“The fact the market has not been adversely affected by the weaker numbers, any of the recent numbers that have fallen short, (means) the smart market money believes it is in fact the weather, and the economy has not fallen off the tracks here,” said Andre Bakhos, managing director at Janlyn Capital LLC in Bernardsville, New Jersey.
Investors also gave a cautious thumbs up to political changes in Italy.
Italy’s center-left leader, Matteo Renzi, forced out Prime Minister Enrico Letta on Thursday after Letta failed to pass major reforms. The new government will be Italy’s third in a year, but the hope is that Renzi can revive efforts to streamline the euro zone’s third-largest economy.