Sudan Inflation Spikes to 52%

Shop in Sudan's Khartoum. Via Reuters
Shop in Sudan's Khartoum. Via Reuters
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Sudan Inflation Spikes to 52%

Shop in Sudan's Khartoum. Via Reuters
Shop in Sudan's Khartoum. Via Reuters

Inflation in Sudan surged to 52.37 percent in January from 32.15 percent in December, the state statistics agency said, amid rising food prices that have kindled unrest and a hard currency shortage that has crimped imports.

“This is the highest inflation rate in years,” said Karamallah Abdul Rahman, head of the statistics agency to Reuters.

Sudan’s economy has been struggling since the south of the country seceded in 2011, taking with it three-quarters of its oil output.

But the United States lifted 20-year-old sanctions against Khartoum in October, renewing hope that Sudan could draw foreign investment again and get its economy on track.

The Sudanese pound has plummeted to record lows on the black market in recent months after devaluation to 18 per dollar from 6.7 at the start of 2017, following a call by the International Monetary Fund to let the currency float freely.

The government has ruled out a market-determined exchange rate but allowed the currency to weaken further, to as low as 31.5 pounds to the dollar earlier this month.

Businesses say the pound is largely unavailable at this rate however and that they have been forced to resort to an increasingly expensive black market where the currency hit about 40 pounds to the dollar earlier this month, according to Reuters.

That rate has since strengthened, to about 33 pounds to the dollar on Wednesday according to traders, after the central bank banned hard currency deposits sourced from the black market.

Dollar trading at commercial banks on Wednesday meanwhile ranged from 27.34-29.64 Sudanese pounds per dollar, according to the Sudanese Central Bank website, suggesting the gap between the parallel and official rates has narrowed.

The sharply weaker currency and a cut to bread subsidies last month have pushed prices sharply higher, prompting protests across the large northeast African country.



Türkiye to Crack Down on Market Manipulation by ‘Certain Funds’ 

Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek speaks during a session at the Qatar Economic Forum, Doha, Qatar, May 20, 2025. (AFP)
Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek speaks during a session at the Qatar Economic Forum, Doha, Qatar, May 20, 2025. (AFP)
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Türkiye to Crack Down on Market Manipulation by ‘Certain Funds’ 

Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek speaks during a session at the Qatar Economic Forum, Doha, Qatar, May 20, 2025. (AFP)
Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek speaks during a session at the Qatar Economic Forum, Doha, Qatar, May 20, 2025. (AFP)

Türkiye will crack down on market manipulation by "certain" investment funds with tougher penalties and new regulations, Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said on Tuesday in a stark warning to the country's financial sector.

Addressing a gathering of bankers and investors in Istanbul, Simsek said: "We know these manipulations are being carried out, especially through certain funds, and know there is a lack of regulation in that area. We will address this deficiency."

He did not specify which funds he was referring to in his speech to the Turkish Capital Markets Congress.

"In the fight against manipulation, we will make additional efforts to increase penalties and strengthen the regulatory framework," Simsek said.

Omer Gonul, head of the Capital Markets Board, later told reporters that it is considering raising manipulation-related fines and that one potential punishment is cancelling licenses in portfolio management.

Authorities have sharpened screening for manipulation in the past year. They have also detained dozens of people suspected of causing fluctuations in trading volumes and share prices in capital market instruments.

Years of soaring inflation have pushed Turks to find ways to protect their purchasing power, with some buying hard currencies and others turning to stocks and cryptocurrencies.


Energy Leaders at ADIPEC: Peak in Oil Demand Not Seen Yet  

Delegates are silhouetted against a screen as they attend the inaugural session of ADIPEC in Abu Dhabi on Monday. (AP)
Delegates are silhouetted against a screen as they attend the inaugural session of ADIPEC in Abu Dhabi on Monday. (AP)
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Energy Leaders at ADIPEC: Peak in Oil Demand Not Seen Yet  

Delegates are silhouetted against a screen as they attend the inaugural session of ADIPEC in Abu Dhabi on Monday. (AP)
Delegates are silhouetted against a screen as they attend the inaugural session of ADIPEC in Abu Dhabi on Monday. (AP)

Senior officials in the energy sector agreed Monday during the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference “ADIPEC” that global oil demand has not yet peaked, and that global oil markets are on a positive and stable track.

Leaders attributed this optimism to multiple factors, most notably the balance of supply and demand, the continued growth in global consumption, and the pragmatic policies adopted by major producing countries.

OPEC Secretary-General Haitham Al Ghais said the group was still seeing positive signs for oil demand and did not expect any surprises in the market.

“We are making sure we maintain the supply demand balance,” Ghais added at a panel at ADIPEC, a day after OPEC+ agreed to an additional 137,000 barrels per day (bpd) oil production increase for December and a pause in increases in the first quarter of next year.

Energy security and clean energy

When asked about the possibility of an oil glut in 2026, United Arab Emirates' Energy Minister Suhail al-Mazrouei said: “I am not going to talk about an oversupply scenario. In my view, what we’re seeing right now is growing demand.”

He said the Emirates is cementing its position as a “key player” by pursuing a balanced path while accelerating clean energy.

Al-Mazrouei said UAE is spending AED189 billion ($51.5 billion) on infrastructure and clean energy to reach net-zero by 2050.

It now has 12.4 gigawatts of clean power (over 30% of electricity), three giant single site solar plants, the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant running at full power and the world’s largest solar plus storage project for 24/7 clean electricity, the minister added.

Pragmatic policies

Delivering the keynote address at the opening ceremony of ADIPEC, Dr. Sultan bin Ahmed Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology and Managing Director and Group CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC), said the UAE’s pragmatic approach proves how policy grounded in reality builds investor confidence and explained that the country is a model for credible, technology-driven, investment-friendly policy solutions.

“The lesson,” he added, “is that policies should be pragmatic, not performative, based on insight, not ideology, built on first principles, not fleeting popularity. Regulation without realism and legislation without logic, will only weaken economies, stunt societies and drive capital away.”

Noting that $4 trillion annual capital investment is needed in grids, data centers and all sources of energy, Al Jaber said “you can’t run tomorrow’s economy on yesterday’s grid” and went on to highlight the major demand-drivers through 2040.

“Here are the facts: electricity demand will keep surging through 2040, as power for data centers grows four-fold, 1.5 billion people move into cities, and more than 2 billion air conditioners come online. Aviation will also take off, with the global airline fleet doubling from 25,000 to 50,000 planes,” he showed.

Washington: No oil glut in 2026

The US Department of Energy’s deputy secretary, James Danly, said that he does not think there will be an oil glut in 2026.

“We have a demand signal for energy that is going up rapidly,” Danly said at the conference.

Meanwhile, TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne said Chinese oil demand growth has slowed since 2020 as the country transitions to greener energy, though he said he was still optimistic long-term due to rising demand in India.

“You have demand growing again steadily, but one thing has changed in the last three or four years: it's the Chinese engine for growth of oil demand, which was really strong between 2000 and 2020,” Pouyanne said. “That engine has slowed down.”


Investcorp to Asharq Al-Awsat: Saudi Arabia Is the Cornerstone of Our Regional Investments

A general view of Riyadh, Saud Arabia. (Reuters)
A general view of Riyadh, Saud Arabia. (Reuters)
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Investcorp to Asharq Al-Awsat: Saudi Arabia Is the Cornerstone of Our Regional Investments

A general view of Riyadh, Saud Arabia. (Reuters)
A general view of Riyadh, Saud Arabia. (Reuters)

Yusef Al-Yusef, Global Head of Distribution at Investcorp, stressed that Saudi Arabia represents the cornerstone of the company’s investment strategy in the Middle East, noting that between 70 and 75 percent of its regional investments are concentrated in the Saudi market.

In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, he attributed this focus to the strong economic momentum driven by the Kingdom’s ongoing transformation under Vision 2030.

Al-Yusef explained that Investcorp currently manages around $60 billion in global assets, distributed across private equity, infrastructure, real estate, and credit management.

He stressed that Saudi Arabia has become one of the company’s key growth destinations, offering a wide range of opportunities across promising sectors.

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat on the sidelines of the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh, Al-Yusef noted that Investcorp’s relationship with Saudi Arabia dates back to the company’s founding in 1982. However, direct investment in the Saudi market began in 2009, particularly in the private equity sector.

“Today, our focus is on two main pillars: private equity and infrastructure investments,” he said.

Headquartered in Bahrain, Investcorp is one of the world’s leading alternative asset managers, with diversified operations spanning private equity, real assets (infrastructure and real estate), and credit. The firm operates 14 offices across the United States, Europe, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), and Asia, including India, China, Japan, and Singapore.

Al-Yusef said Investcorp’s private equity investments target consumer services and technology-related sectors, while its infrastructure investments focus on energy, oil, social infrastructure, and transportation.

“We are active in both areas,” he remarked, “and particularly optimistic about infrastructure, given the vast scale of projects being launched in Saudi Arabia as part of Vision 2030.”

He revealed that Investcorp recently participated in the Al-Fadhili Housing Complex project, developed by Saudi Aramco, and is currently exploring several opportunities in private credit, a sector he described as “among the most promising” in the Kingdom.

Al-Yusef stressed that private credit will play a vital role in supporting Saudi Arabia’s economic transformation, by providing financing solutions to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), boosting innovation and growth, and expanding the base of the national economy.

He disclosed that Investcorp has recently partnered with a Chinese sovereign wealth fund to invest in pre-IPO companies, with the aim of working alongside local and international partners to develop medium-sized and family-owned businesses and prepare them for listing on the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul) within two to three years.