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Egypt fintech firm MNT-Halan securing $400 million in new finance

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Egypt fintech firm MNT-Halan securing $400 million in new finance

CAIRO, Feb 1(Reuters) – Egyptian microfinance lending and funds firm MNT-Halan is securing $400 million in new fairness and finance, bringing its valuation to greater than $1 billion, the corporate mentioned in a press release on Wednesday.

The investments embrace an fairness stake of a minimum of 20% of MNT-Halan price greater than $200 million taken by personal fairness agency Chimera Abu Dhabi. One other $60 million in major capital is being secured from worldwide buyers, the assertion mentioned.

These buyers embrace the Worldwide Finance Company (IFC), in accordance with information on the IFC’s web site.

MNT-Halan obtained $140 million in financing by securitising a part of its mortgage e-book, the assertion mentioned.

MNT-Halan gives small- and micro-business lending, funds, shopper finance and e-commerce, the corporate mentioned. It has greater than 5 million clients in Egypt, of which 3.5 million are monetary shoppers and a pair of million are debtors. About 1.3 million of the purchasers are energetic month-to-month.

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New laws and regulatory adjustments in Egypt, the Arab world’s most populous nation, have been serving to entice a surge in new fintech investments and alter the way in which the nation’s largely unbanked residents do enterprise.

“Following the completion of those investments, MNT-Halan’s valuation will exceed $1 billion,” the assertion added.

Earlier buyers in MNT-Halan embrace Cairo-based Lorax Capital Companions, and Center Japanese enterprise capitalists Algebra Ventures, DisrupTech, Endeavor Catalyst, Egypt Ventures, MEVP and Wamda.

Reporting by Patrick Werr. Enhancing by Gerry Doyle

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The US sees the clouds of a financial crisis gathering on the horizon

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The US sees the clouds of a financial crisis gathering on the horizon

The longer interest rates remain high, the greater the risk of financial trouble. Joe Biden’s term in office began with the resurgence of a trend in inflation that had disappeared three decades ago, and it could end with a financial crash in the US. An office real estate crisis, a venture capital downturn, the risk of unlisted debt, Wall Street’s artificial intelligence bubble and abysmal deficits: The signals are proliferating, raising fears that the blue skies of full employment and growth might turn into storm clouds, brought on by persistent inflation and high interest rates, both slow poisons for the national economy.

The country got a taste of this in March 2023, when one regional bank after another went bankrupt for making rookie mistakes. They had made long-term investments with their clients’ funds and were then squeezed by the general rise in rates: Their customers withdrew their deposits to discover short-term remuneration equivalent to that offered by the Federal Reserve (Fed) – 5.25% per year – while the value of their long-term investments had fallen (when rates rise, the value of a bond falls to adjust in line with the market). The fire was put out by the Fed and J.P. Morgan, Wall Street’s “boss” in the event of a serious crisis.

One year later, high rates have continued to spread their venom. As is often the case, crises come as a surprise, emerging where no one saw them coming, often because the system is not transparent and does not allow for risk assessment. Private finance will feel the impact first – though not “private” as opposed to “public” (almost nothing is public in the United States), but rather as opposed to “listed on the markets.”

Read more Subscribers only Yellen says US ready to rescue other regional banks

The first issue is office real estate. The 2010s were characterized by a frenzy of construction, which crashed up against the wall of Covid-19 and the mainstreaming of remote work, especially in expensive cities such as New York, San Francisco and Chicago. With 110 million square meters of vacant office space in the country, landlords are caught between plummeting rents and occupancy rates and rising interest rates. The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) examined securitized real estate loans, which account for less than 15% of loans but give a good indication of the state of the market.

Within 12 months, $18 billion (€16.6 billion) of securitized loans will have to be repaid – double the figure recorded in 2023. According to the WSJ, only 35% of the loans have been repaid at maturity as scheduled in 2024, compared with 99% in 2021. This is worse than the 37% repayment rate that was reached in 2009 in the wake of the great financial crisis, according to Moody’s Ratings. These non-repaid loans are not necessarily the result of bankruptcies, but renegotiations or extensions. Nevertheless, the tension is high.

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Trump’s guilty verdict is turning into a lottery for his campaign finance

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Trump’s guilty verdict is turning into a lottery for his campaign finance

Trump’s campaign raised almost twice as much money than on any previous day. The money was raised through an online donor platform
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A day after former US President Donald Trump was handed over the historic guilty verdict in the infamous hush money case, his campaign said that it had shattered its own fundraising record. On Thursday, the business mogul turned politician created history for all the wrong reasons after a 12-member jury found him guilty of falsifying his business records.

According to the Financial Times, Trump’s campaign raised almost twice as much money than on any previous day. The money was raised through an online donor platform.

The campaign said on Friday morning that it had raised $34.8mn following the verdict. It is pertinent to note that with this verdict, Trump became the first ex-president ever to be convicted of a felony. He was found guilty on all 34 counts and was accused of hiding the hush money given to adult film star Stormy Daniels from his business records.

The campaign site briefly crashed 

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Trump’s campaign said that the amount was nearly double the sum garnered on its best-ever day on the WinRed donation platform. With the massive inflow of donations, the site briefly crashed as well.

“President Trump is fighting to save our nation and November fifth is the day Americans will deliver the real verdict,” said Trump campaign senior advisers Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles in a statement.

Shortly after the verdict started making headlines, Trump’s campaign moved within minutes to start a donation drive and went on to refer to Trump as a “political prisoner”.

“I was just convicted in a RIGGED political Witch Hunt trial,” wrote Trump on the campaign page. “I DID NOTHING WRONG!”

Even before the verdict, Trump’s campaign has stepped up its fundraising efforts, including holding events with oil barons in Texas and a planned June trip to Silicon Valley.

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Jason Thielman, who runs the official Senate Republican campaign also noted the spike in the campaign funds. “Outrage over the sham verdict against Trump has spurred average Americans into action!” Thielman wrote on X, formally known as Twitter.

“The NRSC just had its largest online daily fundraising haul of the cycle. The people are energized and determined to take back the White House and Senate!” he added.

Not only this, Google searches for DonaldJTrump.com and WinRed spiked over 5,000 per cent, the “Trump campaign website” jumped over 1,000 per cent and the “Biden campaign website” saw an increase of over 350 per cent, Financial Times reported.

Billionaires like Stephen Schwarzman, Bill Ackman and Miriam Adelson have expressed their intentions to support the former president in the upcoming elections.

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With inputs from agencies.

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MPS finance reports: Superintendent could be fired, agenda shows

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MPS finance reports: Superintendent could be fired, agenda shows

The Milwaukee Board of School Directors is scheduled to consider the future of MPS Superintendent Keith Posley on Monday, June 3.

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According to the school board’s meeting agenda, members could meet in closed session to discuss Posley’s “dismissal, demotion, licensing or discipline.”  

Multiple requests to interview Posley – made prior to the Friday’s agenda update – were denied or went unanswered. He did not speak during Thursday night’s board meeting.

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A lot happened for the school district this week, but it all centers on financial woes. A scathing letter from the Wisconisn Department of Public Instruction stated MPS has not submitted required financial data to the state, with some reports more than eight months past due. 

The delays could cost MPS millions of dollars and impact how funds are allocated to other school districts across Wisconsin.

It led to a volatile school board meeting on Thursday night, during which some people were escorted out as members tabled a $1.5 billion budget proposal that could cut hundreds of positions. 

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MPS Board Vice President Jilly Gokalgandhi said the board took “immediate action” to get the proper financial experts on staff and working with DPI. FOX6 asked her to clarify, on the record, if and when the school board knew how this was allowed to happen. She declined.

FOX6 also asked Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson on Thursday if he had trust in MPS leadership and Posley.

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“My goal right now is to make sure this gets solved, and that’s a decision for the administration and the school board to make,” he said. “My responsibility right now is to make sure conversations are happening, and that the kids who attend Milwaukee Public Schools are in the best position to get all the resources that they need.”

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