US-Africa Business Summit in Marrakech Seeks to Create Sustainable Partnerships

Marrakech will host the US-Africa Business Summit 2022 next week. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Marrakech will host the US-Africa Business Summit 2022 next week. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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US-Africa Business Summit in Marrakech Seeks to Create Sustainable Partnerships

Marrakech will host the US-Africa Business Summit 2022 next week. (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Marrakech will host the US-Africa Business Summit 2022 next week. (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Morocco’s Marrakech city is scheduled to host the US-Africa Business Summit 2022 between July 19 and 22.

The event, which will be held under the patronage of King Mohammed VI, will bring together more than one thousand participants, including entrepreneurs and prime ministers.

It aims to create resilient and sustainable partnerships among key decision makers in the public and private sectors in the United States and Africa.

It is expected to provide an opportunity for various organizations to explore new horizons to enhance the economic partnership, while underlining the next phase of the partnership, which mainly concerns US-African regional trade, energy, digital transformation, and trade finance.

The summit, themed “Building Forward Together” will explore a renewed commitment by both public and private sector stakeholders to building stronger US-Africa trade, investment, and commercial ties as they emerge from unprecedented health and economic challenges.

Its highlights will include plenary sessions and sector-focused panels as an exceptional line up of more than 100 business and government leaders will discuss industry-tested solutions to today's business challenges in agribusiness, finance, energy, health, infrastructure, ICT, security, and more.

Session topics will include “Building a Just Transition to Net Zero in Africa,” “Innovation for Agriculture Transformation,” and “SMEs: Fueling the Recovery and Economic Growth,” to name few.

It will also include an opening session, public meetings and dialogues.



Gold Hits Three-week Peak on Softer Dollar and Safe Haven Inflows

Gold bullion displayed in a store in the German city of Pforzheim (dpa)
Gold bullion displayed in a store in the German city of Pforzheim (dpa)
TT

Gold Hits Three-week Peak on Softer Dollar and Safe Haven Inflows

Gold bullion displayed in a store in the German city of Pforzheim (dpa)
Gold bullion displayed in a store in the German city of Pforzheim (dpa)

Gold prices touched their highest level in three weeks on Friday supported by a softer dollar and safe-haven buying, while markets braced for potential economic and interest rate changes from US President-elect Donald Trump's proposed policies.

Spot gold was little changed at $2,658.11 per ounce, as of 1115 GMT, hitting its highest level since Dec. 13. Bullion is up about 1.5% for the week so far.

US gold futures were steady at $2,672.20.

The dollar index fell 0.3% from over a two-year high hit in the previous session, making dollar-priced bullion more affordable for holders of other currencies, Reuters reported.

"Gold bulls are setting the tone early doors this year, enjoying the lift from safe haven bids while riskier equities struggle to hold on to nascent gains," said Exinity Group Chief Market Analyst Han Tan.

On the geopolitical front, in Gaza Israeli airstrikes killed at least 68 Palestinians, Gaza authorities said. While, Russia launched a drone strike on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv on Wednesday, city officials said.

Trump's inauguration on Jan. 20 has heightened uncertainty, with his proposed tariffs and protectionist policies expected by many economists to be inflationary and potentially spark trade wars.

"Markets are aware that Trump's policies risk reawakening US inflationary impulses, which should be a boon for gold so long as markets adhere to the precious metal’s role as an inflation hedge," Tan added.

Bullion, which is considered a hedge against economic and geopolitical uncertainties, tends to thrive in lower interest rate environment.

After delivering three consecutive interest rate cuts in 2024, the US central bank now projects only two reductions in 2025 due to due to stubbornly high inflation.

Spot silver rose 0.6% to $29.75 per ounce.

"Lower real US yields and stronger global industrial production should favor the metal in 2025," UBS said in a note, adding that they see silver to trade between $36-38/oz in 2025.

Platinum added 0.8% to $930.09, and palladium gained 1.2% to $922.58. Both metals were on track for weekly gains.