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Africa Intelligence Brief — December 11, 2025

Thursday’s signals move real money: Rabat pushed a landmark green-sukuk in local currency; Cairo monetized port assets to Gulf capital; Lagos put refined fuel on the water to Europe; and Pretoria advanced grid-market unbundling with a trading licence milestone.

Liability-management wins in Accra, a clean short-selling rulebook in Nairobi, and fresh industrial footprints in Ethiopia tighten the case for 2026 allocations.

Kinshasa reshaped mining fiscal rules, Cameroon cleared an external payment hurdle, and Luanda de-risked a cross-border oil play—all with direct read-throughs for risk premia, FX, and capex.

1) Morocco — Kingdom prices inaugural domestic green-sukuk (MAD 15 billion ($1.63 billion))

The treasury launched Morocco’s first local-currency green-sukuk, sized at MAD 15 billion ($1.63 billion) across staggered tenors.

Proceeds are ring-fenced to grid reinforcement, water reuse, and public-transport electrification under a published taxonomy. Documentation mirrors international green-bond standards and adds a sovereign verification committee to police use-of-proceeds.

Why it matters: A deep, local green curve lowers funding costs for climate infrastructure, crowding in insurers and pensions while freeing FX for private capex.

2) Egypt — Sovereign wealth platform sells minority stakes in a Red Sea container terminal to Gulf investors

Cairo closed a minority sell-down in a high-throughput terminal, bundling governance covenants, capex schedules, and a dividend floor to attract long-only buyers.

Africa Intelligence Brief — December 11, 2025
Africa Intelligence Brief — December 11, 2025. (Photo Internet reproduction)

Settlement was structured through a Euroclear-friendly route to widen the book beyond regional banks. Proceeds are earmarked for hinterland road/rail links and port digitalisation to raise crane-hour productivity.

Why it matters: Asset recycling into credible hands deepens market plumbing, improves logistics throughput, and signals policy consistency—key inputs for Egypt’s risk premium.

3) Nigeria — Dangote megarefinery issues first confirmed diesel cargoes to Europe

The refinery disclosed its initial diesel liftings to EU buyers after clearing quality and documentation checks, with more parcels slated for Q1.

Daily production dashboards shared with regulators are being supplemented by third-party volume attestations to calm market scepticism. Traders report early bid-ask tightening on coastal diesel, with import allocation plans already being revised.

Why it matters: Higher domestic output cuts FX-draining imports, stabilises pump-price expectations, and supports a stronger naira risk narrative into 2026.

4) South Africa — Transmission unbundling milestone: National Transmission Company gets a power-trading licence

The regulator approved a trading licence for the newly separated transmission company, a prerequisite for a competitive market alongside system-operator and transmission licences.

The approval includes ring-fenced governance, transparency on queue management, and curtailment protocols. Banks flagged greater bankability for wheeling-based PPAs and merchant-plus structures.

Why it matters: A licenced trader unlocks private megawatts faster, reduces load-shedding risk, and helps displace diesel peakers that distort inflation.

5) Ghana — Liability-management win: Eurobond exchange and tender results cut 2026–2028 peaks

Accra announced strong participation in a combined exchange/tender, retiring near-dated paper and smoothing the amortisation hump across 2026–2028.

The deal priced inside initial talk after buy-side comfort on fiscal anchors and a clearer domestic-market calendar. Authorities left room for follow-on taps if spreads keep compressing.

Why it matters: Reduced rollover risk and a cleaner curve lower Ghana’s funding costs and free balance-sheet capacity for private credit and securitisations.

6) Kenya — Short-selling and securities-lending framework goes live to deepen market depth

Nairobi’s exchange switched on a securities-lending and borrowing (SLB) platform with rule-of-the-road on eligible collateral, margin, and fails management. The companion short-selling code sets uptick rules, disclosures, and reporting, giving asset managers real hedging tools. Custodians and brokers completed system tests to support day-one liquidity.

Why it matters: True hedging tightens price discovery, attracts sophisticated capital, and improves IPO and follow-on confidence by letting investors manage downside.

7) Ethiopia — Saudi industrial JV footprints added: textiles and e-mobility components

Addis Ababa signed two industrial-park JVs with Saudi partners—one to expand higher-end textiles and another to assemble e-mobility components using regional supply chains.

Packages include utility guarantees, skills programmes, and export-credit support tied to compliance and localisation. Initial production lines are slated to ship regionally before scaling to the Gulf and Europe.

Why it matters: New anchors diversify exports beyond commodities, build FX-earning capacity, and create investable volumes in logistics, finance, and industrial services.

8) DRC — Mining fiscal reform: windfall-royalty tier and stabilisation fund created

Kinshasa introduced a price-linked windfall-royalty tier on copper/cobalt with proceeds channelled to a ring-fenced macro-stabilisation fund.

The decree pairs tighter transfer-pricing audits with predictable release windows for export permits to reduce demurrage disputes. Industry groups secured a review clause and credit for verified local-processing investments.

Why it matters: Clearer fiscal rules and predictable exports reduce delivered-cost volatility for EV supply chains while improving the sovereign’s buffers.

9) Cameroon — Eurobond coupon met on time; reserves and primary-market plans intact

Yaoundé confirmed on-time payment of a key coupon while publishing a 2026 funding roadmap that tilts toward regional local-currency issuance.

Treasury is moving vendor arrears to a transparent schedule to lower bank NPL formation. Ratings desks noted a small but positive signal for external-debt discipline.

Why it matters: Meeting external obligations on schedule preserves market access, stabilises the currency outlook, and supports banks’ appetite for sovereign paper.

10) Angola/DRC — Cross-border oil unitisation pact clears final hurdles

Luanda and Kinshasa approved a unitisation agreement for a straddling offshore block, aligning metering, cost-recovery, and dispute-resolution mechanisms.

The deal unlocks coordinated appraisal and sets a shared HSE framework to compress timelines. Service companies began staging gear pending joint development approval.

Why it matters: A de-risked, cross-border field improves Atlantic supply visibility, catalyses shared infrastructure, and creates bankable multi-sovereign upstream exposure.

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