Marrakesh Conference Calls for More Reforms, Support for Women

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses an IMF economic conference in Marrakesh on January 30, 2018 (AFP Photo/STR)
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses an IMF economic conference in Marrakesh on January 30, 2018 (AFP Photo/STR)
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Marrakesh Conference Calls for More Reforms, Support for Women

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses an IMF economic conference in Marrakesh on January 30, 2018 (AFP Photo/STR)
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde addresses an IMF economic conference in Marrakesh on January 30, 2018 (AFP Photo/STR)

Participants in the “Opportunity for All” Conference in Marrakesh underlined the importance of continuing reforms to promote inclusive growth, empower women and the youth, support the private sector, fight corruption and counter terrorism to create an attractive investment climate.
 
The two-day conference, which was held on Monday, is organized by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Marrakesh in cooperation with the Moroccan Government.
 
During his speech on Tuesday, Saadeddin al-Othmani, Prime Minister of Morocco, emphasized the need to bolster reforms.
 
He said that changes in the global economy have resulted in economic and social challenges in most countries, including demographic transition, changes in population structure and social culture, as well as the higher aspirations of young people and women.
 
This necessitates the development of policies to respond to those aspirations, including raising the quality of education, health services, social coverage and employment opportunities, according to Othmani.
 
IMF Director Christine Lagarde focused on three points needed for the Arab region, which include the necessity for inclusive growth, change and transformation and an agenda for the whole region.
 
She noted that achieving growth should start with creating an active private sector to promote jobs, supporting vulnerable groups, women and the youth, and exploiting financial policies to invest in people and infrastructure.
 
For his part, Dr. Abdulrahman bin Abdullah Al-Humaidi, Director General of the Arab Monetary Fund, stressed three priorities in tackling the challenges of unemployment and growth in the Arab region.
 
He pointed out that the first was the need to achieve economic diversification in the Arab economies, while the second priority is to support entrepreneurs, and the third is to enhance access to financial services.
 
Humaidi explained that only 13 percent of women in the region had access to financial services, compared to 47 percent globally. He stressed the need to exploit modern technologies in financial activities and services.



China Stocks Rally to Decade-high on Easing Tariff Tensions, Fund Rotation

A woman and a girl walk in a park in Beijing, China August 17, 2025. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
A woman and a girl walk in a park in Beijing, China August 17, 2025. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
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China Stocks Rally to Decade-high on Easing Tariff Tensions, Fund Rotation

A woman and a girl walk in a park in Beijing, China August 17, 2025. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov
A woman and a girl walk in a park in Beijing, China August 17, 2025. REUTERS/Maxim Shemetov

China stocks closed at their highest level since 2015 on Monday, extending a months-long rally driven by easing trade tensions and abundant liquidity, while pushing market capitalization to a record peak.

The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.9% to 3,728.03, its strongest close since August 2015. The CSI 300 Index also climbed by 0.9% to a ten-month peak.

The Shanghai benchmark has now advanced some 22% since the low struck in early April, buoyed by the extension of the US-China trade truce, Beijing's crackdown on excessive competition, and a rotation of funds from bonds into equities, which brokers say has flooded the market with liquidity, Reuters reported.

Total market capitalization of over 5,400 China-listed companies has risen above 100 trillion yuan ($13.9 trillion) for the first time, reflecting both price appreciation and a surge in listings over the past decade.

Winnie Wu, Bank of America's chief China equity analyst, said that positive developments on the geopolitical front and clearer policy direction from Beijing have all helped compress the equity risk premium and trigger a re-rating, despite the rally running against fundamentals odds.

"There are renewed hopes on domestic retail flows," she wrote in a note to clients.

In a sign of heightened investor activity, onshore turnover reached nearly 2.8 trillion yuan on Monday, the highest since October when Beijing’s sweeping stimulus measures triggered a sharp rally.

Hao Hong, chief investment officer at Lotus Asset Management, said the market may face near-term resistance due to profit-taking pressure, but added that many remain hopeful the bull run can extend despite headwinds.

Leading the rally on Monday onshore, the rare earth sector surged 5.3% to a fresh high since December 2021. The AI sector jumped 3.8% and the information technology sector rose 2.5%.

In Hong Kong, the benchmark Hang Seng Index closed down 0.4% to give up earlier gains, weighted by the property sectors,.

The Tech Index rallied 0.7%, while the EV sector jumped 1.9%.