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    Market Commentary

    African equities performance was mixed this week with each market reacting to their own set of local factors, while markets in the US, Europe and Asia, were mostly down for the week. Global markets seem to have reacted negatively to unsteady progress toward another covid-19 relief package in the US, unsuccessful negotiations to date on Britain’s trade relationships with the European Union, and were not particularly excited by the ECB extended its bond-buying program.

    This month, African markets have been marked by Four East African countries: Rwanda (RSE), Uganda (USE), Tanzania (DSE), and Burundi, who have finally merged their stock markets through a decade-long automation project to attract investment. It is a project that has been in the making since 2011 when countries from the region embarked on integrating their stock exchanges. The technology platform dubbed the EAC Capital Markets Infrastructure (CMI), developed by a Pakistan-based private firm, will basically interconnect all the region’s trading systems: Through the platform, investors in the four countries will be able to buy and sell shares of companies listed in any of the countries without going through different stakeholders.

    This week wrapped a strong month of November for equities globally and set what we hope would be the tone for the month of December. On global markets, positive coronavirus vaccine news and emerging political certainty in the U.S. have added to the feeling of back to normalcy and prompted strong gains across the world, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up about 12% for November, the biggest monthly gain since February 1987.

    Download the OCTOBER issue of our new "AM MONTHLY REPORT", a monthly recap of African equity market performance: indices, company shares, market cap., currencies...

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