What's happening in Mediterranean & Africa

 

Mediterranean & Africa
Trade Specialists
 

 

Headway Speed Transportation
Co., Ltd.

Make perfect logistic service! H.S.T
create with you!
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Highroad International Logistics

Professional door to door service
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Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Qingdao's leading consolidator and
comprehensive logistics service
provider
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.

Choice Int'l Forwarding Co Ltd. 

Your Best Choice to Africa
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Awards Shipping Agency Ltd.

From humble beginnings to full
global air and seafreight logistics
service provider.
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   in progress
  
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 Barcelona: Challenging all for the Mediterranean's logistics crown  
    
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 If Cape route makes sense on the back-haul, it might make sense on
   head-haul too  
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With a strong dollar, US consumers have money to spend on
imports from Africa

 


AT first glance the lack-lustre trade figures don't show it, but with an eye to what is happening to oil and exchange rates much more becomes clear - things don't look nearly so bad for Africa and the Mediterranean.

The big news is the impact of strong US dollar and its power of to create a worldwide export boom in US imports. The euro is in pretty good shape too; even the EU economy is not as bad as some make out.

Also note that US imports from Asia are not impressive. The American appetite for Chinese goods has waned lately, perhaps a function of a strong yuan and diversification of sourcing.

But US import performance by numbers alone is far from convincing. That's because it is muddied by the influence of the energy sector. Even so, there is enough to suggest that US strength is spreading, and will continue to do so if overall growth heads up this year.

And that is good news for exporters from Africa and around the Mediterranean basin if they only twig to the opportunity that beckons. If there's a lament in this story, it's that the rest of the world isn't catching on.

America is displaying strong domestic demand growth. This is stoking import demand from the rest of the world, and is being further encouraged by a strong dollar, and it is a spreading trend showing positive signs of growth.

What masks this positive situation, in the eyes of Peter Hall, vice president and chief economist for Export Development Canada, the Canadian trade credit agency, is the seemingly "new normal" of low oil.

Overall trade numbers are being depressed by a poor showing on the energy front. Normally this would be a key signal of weakness: a faltering industrial production machine that needs less energy imports from the rest of the world, says Mr Hall.

But this time around, the conventional reason does not apply. Instead it is crashing world energy prices and much higher US domestic production.

The plunge in oil prices worldwide has skewed overall trade figures concealing the good news under a heap. Mr Hall notes this situation in Canada were expensive Alberta oil sands production has been cut as the price of oil fell 50 per cent of what it was at a time when cost of producing it becomes far more important than it ever was.

Strip oil production away from exports and the situation changes completely. It is a situation in which American exports may be hurt, but one in which imports will thrive.

In December, US food and beverage imports were up 5.7 per cent year on year in inflation-adjusted terms. Auto sector imports posted an 8.8 per cent gain. Imports of consumer and other goods are volatile, but ended the year up 2.5 per cent.

If there's a global crisis in the works, somebody didn't tell US consumers. The media has tried, but it seems even that persuasive voice can't buck fundamentals.

Low petrol prices have suppressed overall sales, but peel away that effect and control for other volatile categories, and January sales put first-quarter consumer spending on track for a four per cent gain.

At the same time, December was revised up. Put that together with a housing sector that's on the up and up and an industrial sector that's running thin on capacity, and the world's top economy isn't looking so bad. This is boosting US imports from the rest of the world.  

US imports were on a roll a year ago. Annualised growth was 10 per cent to close off 2014, and seven per cent more was added in the first three months of 2015.

>From there, things decelerated, but the good news was that those surges in activity were sustained. Things tailed off at the end of last year, along with disappointing GDP growth.

But the recent resumption of spending growth strongly suggests an upside that is being discounted by many market experts on account of the financial market turbulence that has gripped the world in the opening weeks of 2016.

Most economy-watchers acknowledge US strength, albeit to different degrees. The most pessimistic forecaster sees 1.8 per cent growth this year, but the consensus is calling for 2.2 per cent growth.

Consumption is out ahead of this, and business investment, at four per cent by 2017, is the growth leader.

A key gainer is the auto sector, and consumer goods are on a great roll, too. We're not the only ones in this predicament: Mexico is seeing its numbers do the same. Pan across the pond, and Western Europe has its own positive story to tell. Things are on the up-and-up in Germany after a choppy start to last year. Italy's growth run seems even more entrenched.

Not all are on the same path, but it's just possible that imports by the US are part of the reason the EU has been collectively growing its GDP ahead of long-term average growth for five successive quarters.

All this bodes well for export growth in Africa and the Mediterranean. There are things the can be produced from Kenyan flowers to specialty foods from Israel, Egypt, Greece, Italy, Spain and Tunisia not to mention west and south of Sub-Saharan Africa which will find ready markets in the US and Euro zone. But it will take initiative and some get up and go.

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