National Bank of Rwanda Holds Interest Rate at 7.00%


The National Bank of Rwanda held its key repo rate unchanged at 7.00%.  Bank Governor, Claver Gatete, said: “The monetary and exchange rate policy implemented to date continues to sustain Rwanda’s macroeconomic stability. The financial sector is sound and resilient to external shocks, inflation remains moderate and the Rwandan Franc is stable.  In the second quarter of 2012, headline inflation is expected to remain stable as a result of pursuing tight monetary policy, good coordination between the monetary and fiscal policies and other Government policy measures aiming at mitigating exogenous supply shocks that include high oil prices and sovereign debt in the Euro zone.”

The Bank previously increased the repo rate by 50 basis points in November and October, meanwhile the bank last reduced the interest rate 100bps to 6.00% in November last year.  Rwanda  recorded annual inflation of 7.85% in February, compared to 7.5% in August, 5.82% in June, and just 1.09% in January last year.  According to IMF data Rwanda saw annual GDP growth of 5.39% during 2010, meanwhile the IMF recently scaled down its growth estimate for Rwanda to 7% for 2011, from a previous forecast of 7.5%.  The Rwandan Franc (RWF) last traded around 607 against the US dollar, having weakened about 1% so far this year.

Cisco Purchases NDS Group for $5 Billion

Cisco (NASDAQ:CSCO) announced early Thursday morning that they are purchasing NDS Group for $5 billion. The deal is expected to close sometime in the second half of the year.NDS Group is a supplier of video software and content security products based in London.Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) has potential upside of 14.7% based on a current price of $20.19 and an average consensus analyst price target of $23.16.Cisco Systems is currently above its 50-day moving average (MA) of $19.74 and above its 200-day of $17.37.

‘After America’: The World Reset

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Your reporter may be the only person to sleep five minutes away from the Sydney Opera House and spend less than five seconds looking at it. We couldn’t afford to miss a moment of ‘After America’.

On our second night in Sydney we managed to escape to a restaurant with some of the crew. We took separate cabs. The first got there in about five minutes. The second got there in about 40. After the meal, Sound Money. Sound Investments editor Greg Canavan said he would like to take a slow walk back to the hotel. We said it might be slower to take another taxi.

Aussie Housing and Gold

The second day started the way day one ended: at full speed.

Steve Keen had half an hour and didn’t waste a minute. If US Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke had any credibility with the attendees before they came, it was hard to see how he could after they left.

If there was agreement on one thing, it’s he’s the wrong man for the job. Steve Keen said the economic model Bernanke uses practically ignores debt completely. That’s why he didn’t see the crisis coming – he wasn’t even looking. There are plenty of others using the same model. Hopefully not your investment advisor!

Keen had a lot of charts saying why Australian house prices are going to go down. A lot of the squiggly lines representing Australia looked high, but pointed low. He said there isn’t going to be much going up in general anytime soon at all. Just the tempo of the show, as far as we could tell.

Diggers & Drillers editor Dr. Alex Cowie wanted to talk about gold and China. Those two are going to be talked about in the same breath for a while to come. China produces gold. China imports gold. China wants gold. China can’t get enough of gold. There are a lot of reasons why this is so. There are a lot of investing opportunities surrounding this – but you need to factor in a lot more than supply and demand.

Conflicting Views on China and The World

David Thomas, a futurist who specialises in the BRIC countries, painted a positive picture of these emerging markets. If there is going to be growth, he argued, it’s going to come from the BRICs. It was a nice thought, but it couldn’t last, because Satyajit Das was next and he said the opposite. He also stole the show.

Das somehow managed to crack jokes while giving a full tour of the financial system today. He could crack wise so often because so much of it is a farce. We can’t help but steal one line… ‘The world doesn’t need an economic review – it needs a psychiatric one’. Actually we’re going to steal another one. Das said, central banks and politicians are holding an experiment. And we’re the rats.

Das showed how this was so. From Europe to China to America and finally, all the way down here to Australia. He echoed Dan Denning when he said the economic crisis would keep merging into a political one before eventually hitting the core of the system itself: the United States. He echoed Greg Canavan when he said China wasn’t going to solve anyone’s problems, especially ours. We still can’t work out how he got so many gags into such a worrying story.

The investment takeaway was to make sure you had your priorities in the right order: capital preservation, income, then capital gains. That sounded familiar. It was. Kris Sayce had said the same thing.

We want to watch Das’s presentation again. And we will. We just hope the DVD comes out quicker than expected. Alex Cowie joked in his presentation that he should have called his newborn daughter ‘espresso’ because she keeps him up all night. Maybe that’s what Das should call his presentation, too. It’s going to keep me up.

But he doesn’t call it espresso. He calls it The Great Reset. The world is in for a whole lot of volatility, social and financial. The good news is you can prepare – if you know what’s coming.

After America has certainly prepared us for that.

Callum Newman
Roving Reporter, ‘After America’.


‘After America’: The World Reset

Analyst Moves: MS, SNV

Morgan Stanley (MS) was downgraded today by Deutsche Bank (DB) from buy to hold with a price target of $22, due to a mixed macro outlook. Shares are lower by about three tenths of a percent.

Gas Prices Push Wholesale Price Rise

Wholesale prices in the U.S. continued to rise last week, according the Wall Street Journal, pushed up by the already high gas prices in the nation.The rise in the producer price index, which is a measurement of the price that manufacturers and wholesalers will pay for finished goods, is largely a result of the 4.3% increase in gas prices, leaving a seasonally adjusted 0.4% increase in the producer price index. Taken separately from volatile energy and food prices, the index rose by only 0.2%.Fed officials released a statement saying that inflation should not be dramatically affected by the increase.In spite of the wholesale price increase, the U.S. jobs market showed signs of improvement as jobless claims dropped to a level mirroring a four year low last week.

Guess? Shares Fall After Reporting Earnings

Shares of Guess? (NYSE:GES) slipped 10% after the company reported earnings late Wednesday and predicted an unsatisfactory first quarter.The company reported Q4 EPS of $1.05 in-line with analyst estimates. Revenues for the quarter rose 2.5% year-over-year to $776 million, missing consensus estimates of $778.53 million.Guess? (NYSE:GES) has potential upside of 7.6% based on a current price of $36.70 and an average consensus analyst price target of $39.50.