Egypt Reinforces Strategic Position as Telecom Hub through Subsea Cable with Greece

Signing ceremony between Telecom Egypt and Grid Telecom to build a subsea system (Egyptian Government)
Signing ceremony between Telecom Egypt and Grid Telecom to build a subsea system (Egyptian Government)
TT

Egypt Reinforces Strategic Position as Telecom Hub through Subsea Cable with Greece

Signing ceremony between Telecom Egypt and Grid Telecom to build a subsea system (Egyptian Government)
Signing ceremony between Telecom Egypt and Grid Telecom to build a subsea system (Egyptian Government)

Egypt concluded an agreement with Greece Tuesday to establish a subsea cable linking the two countries across the Mediterranean.

Telecom Egypt, the first integrated telecom operator, and Grid Telecom, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Independent Power Transmission Operator (IPTO) in Greece, signed a collaboration agreement to build a subsea system connecting the two countries.

Egypt’s Minister of Telecommunications and Information Technology Amr Talaat witnessed the signing ceremony in Cairo.

The Managing Director and CEO of Telecom Egypt, Adel Hamed, and the Chairman and CEO of IPTO, Manos Manousakis, signed the agreement.

The deal is a testimony of the strategic cooperation between Telecom Egypt and Grid Telecom.

It comes in line with Telecom Egypt’s strategy of strengthening its infrastructure, expanding its international network, and increasing its entry points to Europe by providing an eastern gateway via Greece through the new subsea system.

Talaat said that more than 90 percent of the data flow between East and West passes via Egyptian territorial waters and lands, pointing out that the agreement is the culmination of ten months of hard work since the start of the negotiations during his February visit to Greece.

During his previous visit, Talaat witnessed the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between Telecom Egypt and Grid Telecom to connect the two countries using subsea cable systems.

The system will connect Port Said in Egypt to Crete island.

The Managing Director and CEO of Telecom Egypt, Adel Hamed, said that the new agreement would give additional value to the company’s worldwide reach to more than 140 destinations in over 60 countries.

Chairman and CEO of IPTO Manos Manousakis explained that IPTO Group is taking the initiative to transform Greece into a binding energy and data hub of high geopolitical value at the crossroads of Europe, Africa, and Asia.



Dollar Hits 2-week Low as Traders Ponder Trump Tariff Plans

A teller sorts US dollar banknotes inside the cashier's booth at a forex exchange bureau in downtown Nairobi, Kenya February 16, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya/File photo
A teller sorts US dollar banknotes inside the cashier's booth at a forex exchange bureau in downtown Nairobi, Kenya February 16, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya/File photo
TT

Dollar Hits 2-week Low as Traders Ponder Trump Tariff Plans

A teller sorts US dollar banknotes inside the cashier's booth at a forex exchange bureau in downtown Nairobi, Kenya February 16, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya/File photo
A teller sorts US dollar banknotes inside the cashier's booth at a forex exchange bureau in downtown Nairobi, Kenya February 16, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya/File photo

The dollar touched a fresh two-week low on Wednesday, as a lack of clarity on President Donald Trump's plans for tariffs kept financial markets guessing and left the greenback struggling to regain ground against major currencies. Trump said late on Tuesday that his administration was discussing imposing a 10% tariff on goods imported from China on Feb. 1, the same day that he previously said Mexico and Canada could face levies of around 25%.

He also vowed duties on European imports, without providing further details.

Despite those threats, a lack of specific plans from Trump's first day in office saw the dollar start the week with a 1.2% slide against a basket of major peers. It stabilized on Tuesday, ending flat after an attempted rebound fizzled, with US officials saying any new taxes would be imposed in a measured way. The dollar index, which tracks the currency against six top rivals, touched its lowest since Jan. 6 at 107.75 on Wednesday, paring an earlier rise in the index. It was last down 0.15% at 107.97.

"Tariffs have again grabbed the headlines overnight as Trump commented in the evening that his threat of a new 10% tariff on China was still on the table...," said Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid.

"Trump's comments leave plenty of near-term uncertainty even though the trade investigations from his day 1 executive orders will take some time to play out."

Trump on Monday signed a broad trade memorandum, ordering federal agencies to complete comprehensive reviews of a range of trade issues by April 1. The greenback rose 0.3% to 156 yen, edging up from the one-month low it touched the day before.

INFLATION RISKS The euro fell 0.3% in early trading, before it changed course and rose to $1.0457, its highest since Dec. 30. It was last up 0.07% at $1.0434. Sterling hit a two-week high against the greenback, but was last trading down at $1.2351.

Analysts have said that Trump's policies on immigration, tax and tariffs will likely boost growth but also be inflationary, but the more cautious tariff approach has fuelled some hopes that inflation risks could be more limited, Reuters reported.

Traders expect a quarter-point Fed interest rate cut by July, while another reduction by year-end is considered a coin toss. The Canadian dollar was slightly weaker at 1.4346 per US dollar, following a volatile week that saw it tumble as low as 1.4520 overnight for the first time since March 2020, feeling additional pressure from cooling inflation last month. The Mexican peso gained about 0.3% to 20.547 per dollar. China's yuan held steady at 7.272 per dollar in offshore trading, after pushing to the strongest level since Dec. 11 on Tuesday at 7.2530.

"A 10% tariff on China imports would be far below the 60% rate he mentioned in his campaign," said Alvin Tan, head of Asia FX strategy at RBC Capital Markets.

"On top of this is the general sense that Trump is not pursuing maximalist trade protectionism in his early actions, but appears to be positioning for trade negotiations," Tan said.

"Altogether these suggest that the US dollar could drop further."