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Find all the economic and financial information on our Orishas Direct application to download on Play StoreDue to the magnitude of the pandemic (4.5 million cases including more than 3 million active cases) and especially
 the rapid expansion of the virus, we have witnessed since the beginning of the year a progressive containment
 economies globally. This has a direct impact on international trade and commerce and
 therefore gives us a glimpse of a huge economic impact with a drop in global GDP of 7%
 during the first quarter of 2020 and 3% over the year 2020 according to some experts, i.e. three times more than
 when the global financial crisis of 2008.
 According to the World Bank, growth in sub-Saharan Africa is expected to contract sharply between 2019
 and 2020 from +2.4% to -5.1%, plunging the region into its first recession in over 25 years.
 Production losses linked to the Covid-19 pandemic are estimated at between 37 and 79 billion dollars in
 2020, under the combined effect of several factors: the disorganization of trade and value chains
 that penalizes commodity exporters and countries that are highly integrated into global value chains;
 the reduction of foreign financing flows (remittances from migrants, tourist receipts,
 foreign direct investment, foreign aid) and capital flight; the direct impact of the pandemic on
 health systems; and the disruptions resulting from containment measures and the reaction of the
 population.
 African countries are also significantly impacted by the fall in commodity prices, including
 in particular, oil, the price of which has fallen by nearly 54% in the last three months and which affects
 both directly and indirectly our economies. Another challenge at the level of Africa is linked to the fragility of
 our entrepreneurial fabric which is still mostly informal and which is not so financially equipped
 only operationally to be disrupted by shocks of this nature. The real impact on the economy remains
 uncertain and will depend on the speed of the return to normality
 Let us first analyze globally. The Covid-19 has led since the beginning of the year to a fall in the markets
 financial assets overall of more than 16,000 billion US dollars, i.e. nearly 120 times the GDP of the zone
 Uemoa. A logical fall in view of the rise in investor pessimism in connection with the
 short and medium term economic outlook.
 The MSCI World Index (measuring the stock market performance of economically
 developed) experienced a fall of 21.44% in the first quarter of 2020 after an increase of more than 25% on
 the year 2019. 30 countries have seen a drop of more than 20%, including in particular Russia and Australia with
 more than 30%, the United States 19% and the UK 26%.
 All the main European indices are in the red by more than 25%. Now about the area
 Africa. At the regional level, our main stock exchanges recorded sharp declines in
 their indexes (stock exchanges in South Africa, Nigeria, Casablanca and Egypt all fell more
 about 20%). Paradoxically, the sub-regional financial market (the Brvm which brings together the eight countries of
 UEMOA) is doing relatively well.
 Indeed, the technical indicators for the first quarter of 2020, compared to those for the same period of the year
 last, are on the rise. The same is true for securities traded in volume and value. This factor is
 in particular due to a certain lack of informational efficiency at the level of the Brvm and that the evolution of the
 market is not directly correlated to the evolution of GDP in the area.
 However, we must be prepared for drops in the coming months as the
 companies will adjust their forecasts in line with the impact of Covid-19. We should therefore attend a
 growing risk aversion among investors which will cause a fall in prices which will
 could create opportunities for sophisticated investors.
 We have seen strong positions taken by our regional financial institutions and
 international organizations which very quickly put in place substantial funds with a view to stemming the impact of the
 crisis in our economies. The AfDB has notably mobilized social bonds to the tune of three billion
 dollars on the international financial markets, a record for social bonds.
 The operation was a huge success with subscription intentions exceeding more than one and a half times
 the objective of mobilization, and this in record time. Similar initiatives have been undertaken by the Ifc
 (International finance corporation) and Inter American Development Bank with similar success. Those "
 success stories” show us the role of financial markets in mobilizing resources
 funds in the service of both social and economic causes. Our regional market is no exception.
 The UEMOA States have set up a public securities issuance program of 846 billion F Cfa
 since April 27.
 The success of the first tranches issued suggests another clear success. The financial markets have
 therefore a key role to play in structuring operations capable of financing high-impact projects
 able to minimize the economic and social impact of such a crisis. The BCEAO has implemented measures
 to stimulate the participation of institutional investors in issues of public and private securities in
 the occurrence of refinancing at floor rates.
 Excellent question! First of all, it should be noted that the debt situation in Africa is
 contrasted with a debt of less than 40% of GDP in West Africa and nearly 75% of GDP in
 North Africa. It is undeniable that the measures mentioned above as well as the important lines of
 financing granted on favorable terms by the IMF and the World Bank will have an impact
 directly on the level of indebtedness of African countries and even more directly on the capacity of States to
 in the face of debt service in a context of falling budgetary revenues and growth in
 expenses related to the fight against Covid-19.
 The decline in oil export revenues is estimated at $100 billion in 2020 and
 the increase in public spending on health is estimated at 11 billion dollars over the
 continent in 2020. Thus, several States will face the risk of default on their maturities
 repayment of sovereign debts. As a result, several Heads of State have advocated either cancellations of
 debt, i.e. moratoriums on the service of the bilateral public debt of African countries in order to release the
 necessary resources.
 Indeed, these are measures that may prove necessary in the short term for some States. Each
 year, Africa devotes more than 365 billion dollars to the repayment of its debt. Moratoriums and
 debt cancellations will therefore release a substantial and immediate financial windfall to enable
 Africa to face the pandemic and reconnect with growth.
 However, these measures risk tarnishing the image and credit quality of countries in the zone as perceived
 by international donors. The resulting interest rate increases could thereby
 be detrimental to the growth of our States in the medium term. I believe that a solution
 sustainable is a responsible indebtedness ideally in resources at concessional rates.
 We are witnessing not only a slowdown in foreign direct investment but also a
 unprecedented capital flight. Indeed, IMF indicators show that 83 billion dollars have
 already been withdrawn from emerging markets by investors since the onset of the crisis. The evolution of
 fundraising transactions and mergers and acquisitions is directly linked to the outlook
 of businesses in the area and will most certainly be negatively impacted by the uncertainty
 caused by Covid-19.
 Indeed, financing institutions are less likely to grant financing to
 companies whose economic prospects are difficult to anticipate. After a record year 2019 which
 seen more than 1.3 billion investment by investment funds in more than 400 transactions, we
 are very pessimistic regarding our expectations for the year 2020. Some sectors are
 more impacted than others, including infrastructure, trading and tourism.
 On the other hand, certain sectors such as health and public services have a growing need for
 funding in the implementation of emergency plans to deal with the pandemic. What offers
 fundraising opportunities for investment banks who will be able to identify priority projects and
 put in place rapid and effective strategies for resource mobilization.
 In the medium term, during the recovery, we will however be able to observe a strong increase in transactions
 of mergers and acquisitions linked to a wave of restructuring and consolidation of companies weakened by the
 global situation, including in particular in the financial sector or several banks and institutions
 financial institutions will have to recapitalize to cope with the deterioration of their portfolio.
 First of all, it will be necessary to support the banking system by strengthening bank liquidity and setting up
 refinancing schemes that will allow them to extend maturities and restructure credit lines
 financing granted to companies in difficulty. We also need an economic counter-offensive without
 precedent if we want to avoid lasting damage to our economies and our social safety net.
 Admittedly, the massive investments in infrastructure will enable the economy to restart, but this
 will not be enough, we must seize this opportunity to accelerate the structural transformation of our
 savings. We need to move towards the massive transformation of our raw materials, particularly with regard to
 concerns agriculture by ensuring that the added values generated directly impact the base of
 the population, starting with the producers who represent more than 70% of our working population. He
 must also seize this opportunity to accelerate the operationalization of the Free Trade Area
 African continent by stimulating intra-regional trade and promoting intra-regional value chains
 to increase the resilience of our economies.
 It is at this level that investment banks like Sirius Capital must more than ever play their role in
 structuring financial instruments that will facilitate access to financing for both actors
 public than private. At the level of the public sector, we are already engaged with States in
 their efforts to raise capital on regional and international markets both in the form
 bond issues than in the form of bilateral loans.
 We can also cite, for example, “blended finance” type structures which consist of the
 mobilization of capital jointly at the level of development institutions and the private sector,
 relying on the funds made available by development partners to limit the risks
 related to investments at a level acceptable to private lenders.
 This type of financing could have a multiplier effect on the resources allocated by DFIs
 (Finance and Development Institutions: Editor's note), and make it possible to fill the financing gap at
 short term estimated at several hundred billion dollars.
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