Morocco’s Central Bank Caps its First Treasury Bond Purchases

A tourist buys locally-manufactured Argan oil from one of the stores in Moroccan Essaouira (AFP)
A tourist buys locally-manufactured Argan oil from one of the stores in Moroccan Essaouira (AFP)
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Morocco’s Central Bank Caps its First Treasury Bond Purchases

A tourist buys locally-manufactured Argan oil from one of the stores in Moroccan Essaouira (AFP)
A tourist buys locally-manufactured Argan oil from one of the stores in Moroccan Essaouira (AFP)

Morocco's central bank said on Thursday it planned to limit its first-ever liquidity-boosting purchase operations of treasury bonds to 25 billion dirhams ($2.5 billion), citing the dampening impact of market uncertainty over rate outlook on demand.

The central bank has so far injected 16.2 billion dirhams ($1.6 billion) through treasury bond purchases on Jan. 9 and Jan. 16.

The move comes amid lower demand for treasury bonds due to "fears of investors regarding the evolution of the benchmark interest rate," Younes Issami of the Bank's monetary policy and foreign exchange department told a news conference.

Morocco's central bank raised its benchmark interest rate in December by 50 basis points to 2.5 percent as it looks to curb inflation.

"Most investors have no visibility on the evolution of rates ... They preferred to wait rather than invest," he said.

The Moroccan central bank limited the purchases to bonds with less than a year maturity issued less than a month ago, he said.

Buying treasury bonds is a tool of "boosting liquidity without affecting the central bank’s monetary policy," Issami said.

Separately, Morocco is considering issuing an international bond in 2023 most likely in US dollars, he said.

Morocco hopes to regain its investment grade as it expects to leave the "grey list" of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) which is currently visiting the country.

The bond issuance is not conditioned on the retrieval of the investment grade which Morocco lost in 2020, Issami said.

Foreign debt represented 15.5 percent of Moroccan gross domestic product in 2022 and is expected to rise to 16.5 percent in both 2023 and 2024, according to central bank figures.

Morocco's economic growth is expected to recover to 3.3 percent in 2023 after 1.3 percent in 2022, the High Commission for Planning expected Moroccan said last week.

"Uncertainties linked primarily to the progress of the war in Ukraine, interest rates, and epidemic and climatic risks" will decide how much the economy actually grows in 2023, Ayache Khellaf, secretary general of the HCP said at a press conference in Rabat.



E-commerce Giant Alibaba Has Completed 3-year 'Rectification' Period

Alibaba Group has completed three years "rectification" following a fine levied in 2021 for monopolistic behavior. Reuters
Alibaba Group has completed three years "rectification" following a fine levied in 2021 for monopolistic behavior. Reuters
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E-commerce Giant Alibaba Has Completed 3-year 'Rectification' Period

Alibaba Group has completed three years "rectification" following a fine levied in 2021 for monopolistic behavior. Reuters
Alibaba Group has completed three years "rectification" following a fine levied in 2021 for monopolistic behavior. Reuters

China's State Administration of Market Regulation issued a statement on Friday saying Alibaba Group had completed three years "rectification" following a fine levied in 2021 for monopolistic behavior.
In 2021, the regulator slapped a record $2.75 billion fine on the e-commerce giant for abusing its market position by forcing merchants on its platforms not to work with rival platforms.
The regulator's statement said Alibaba's rectification work had achieved "good results" and that it would continue to "guide" Alibaba to continue to "regulate its operations and improve its compliance and quality."
The fine levied on Alibaba in 2021 came during a period of intense scrutiny for the business empire founded by billionaire Jack Ma, Reuters reported. A $37 billion IPO by the finance arm he founded, Ant Group, was also scuttled following Ma's public critique of the country's regulatory system in late 2020.
Alibaba, in its own statement, described the regulator's announcement on Friday as a "new starting point for development" and said it would continue to "promote the healthy development of the platform economy and create more value for society."