Category: Banking

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for July 4, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on July 4, 2025.

    Astronomers have spied an interstellar object zooming through the Solar System
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kirsten Banks, Lecturer, School of Science, Computing and Engineering Technologies, Swinburne University of Technology K Ly / Deep Random Survey This week, astronomers spotted the third known interstellar visitor to our Solar System. First detected by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) on July 1, the

    Avoid bad breath, don’t pick partners when drunk: ancient dating tips to find modern love
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Konstantine Panegyres, Lecturer in Classics and Ancient History, The University of Western Australia Henryk Siemiradzki via Wikimedia Commons To love and be loved is something most people want in their lives. In the modern world, we often see stories about the difficulties of finding love and the

    Back to Back Theatre tackles an epic Shakespearian conflict – set in a factory, with cardboard props
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kate Hunter, Senior Lecturer in Art and Performance, Deakin University Jeff Busby/Back To Back Theatre/ACMI Back to Back Theatre is one of Australia’s national treasures. Over 30 years this dynamic Geelong-based company – an ensemble of actors who are perceived to have intellectual disabilities – has built

    Australia’s new lung cancer screening program has chosen simplicity over equity, and we’re concerned
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lisa J. Whop, Associate Director of Research and Senior Fellow, Yardhura Walani, National Centre for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing Research, Australian National University Thurtell/Getty Images Australia’s lung cancer screening program launched on July 1, and marks real progress and opportunity. It aims to reduce the

    Lost in space: MethaneSat failed just as NZ was to take over mission control – here’s what we need to know now
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nicholas Rattenbury, Associate Professor in Physics, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau Environmental Defense Fund, CC BY-SA This week’s announcement of the loss of a methane-detecting satellite, just days before New Zealand was meant to take over mission control, is a blow to the country’s space research

    Rare wooden tools from Stone Age China reveal plant-based lifestyle of ancient lakeside humans
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Bo Li, Professor, Environmental Futures Research Centre, School of Science, University of Wollongong Excavation at the Gantangqing site. Liu et al. Ancient wooden tools found at a site in Gantangqing in southwestern China are approximately 300,000 years old, new dating has shown. Discovered during excavations carried out

    I’ve seen the brain damage contact sports can cause – we all need to take concussion and CTE more seriously
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alan Pearce, Professor, Adjunct Research Fellow, School of Health Science, Swinburne University of Technology AAP Image/The Conversation, CC BY Concussion in sport continues to make headlines, whether it be class actions, young men flocking to the highly violent “RunIt” activity or debate about whether Australian rules football

    NZ will soon have no real interisland rail-ferry link – why are we so bad at infrastructure planning?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Timothy Welch, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images) Another week, another Cook Strait ferry breakdown. As the winter maintenance season approaches and the Aratere prepares for its final months of service, New Zealand faces a self-imposed crisis. The government

    Mauna Loa Observatory captured the reality of climate change. The US plans to shut it down
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alex Sen Gupta, Associate Professor in Climate Science, UNSW Sydney Izabela23/Shutterstock The greenhouse effect was discovered more than 150 years ago and the first scientific paper linking carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere with climate change was published in 1896. But it wasn’t until the 1950s that

    6 simple questions to tell if a ‘finfluencer’ is more flash than cash
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dimitrios Salampasis, Associate Professor, Emerging Technologies and FinTech | FinTech Capability Lead, Swinburne University of Technology Oleg Golovnev/Shutterstock Images of flashy sports cars. Lavish lifestyle shots. These are just some of the red flags consumers should watch out for when they turn to social media for financial

    Grattan on Friday: how two once hot-button issues this week barely sparked media and political interest
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Political and news cycles often work in a certain and predictable way. Issues flare like bushfires, then rage for weeks or even months, until they are finally extinguished by action or fade by being overtaken by the next big thing.

    How many serious incidents are happening in Australian childcare centres? We don’t really know
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Erin Harper, Lecturer, School of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney Catherine Delahaye/ Getty Images This week, a Melbourne childcare worker was charged over alleged sexual abuse of young children in his care. Families are justifiably appalled and furious – with 1,200 children urged to be

    Too much vitamin B6 can be toxic. 3 symptoms to watch out for
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nial Wheate, Professor, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University Selena3726/Shutterstock Side effects from taking too much vitamin B6 – including nerve damage – may be more widespread than we think, Australia’s medicines regulator says. In an ABC report earlier this week, a spokesperson for the Therapeutic Goods

    Too much vitamin B6 can be toxic. 3 symptoms to watch out for
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nial Wheate, Professor, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University Selena3726/Shutterstock Side effects from taking too much vitamin B6 – including nerve damage – may be more widespread than we think, Australia’s medicines regulator says. In an ABC report earlier this week, a spokesperson for the Therapeutic Goods

    10 steps governments can take now to stamp out child sexual abuse in care settings
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ben Mathews, Distinguished Professor, School of Law, Queensland University of Technology Recent cases of prolific alleged child sexual abuse in Melbourne and other Australian early childhood education and care settings have shocked even experienced people who work to prevent child sexual abuse. Parents are right to be

    Tears, trauma and unpaid work: why men in tinnies aren’t the only heroes during a flood disaster
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rebecca McNaught, Research Fellow, Rural and Remote Health, University of Sydney Dan Peled/Getty Images When flooding strikes, our screens fill with scenes of devastated victims, and men performing heroic dinghy rescues in swollen rivers. But another story often goes untold: how women step in, and step up,

    The takeaway from the Venice Biennale saga: the art world faces deep and troubling structural inequality
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Grace McQuilten, Professor of Art and Associate Dean, Research and Innovation, School of Art, RMIT University Creative Australia’s decision earlier this year to rescind the selection of artist Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino as Australia’s 2026 representatives at the Venice Biennale sent shockwaves through the arts

    The Rainbow Warrior saga: 1. French state terrorism and NZ’s end of innocence
    COMMENTARY: By Eugene Doyle Immediately after killing Fernando Pereira and blowing up Greenpeace’s flagship the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland harbour, several of the French agents went on a ski holiday in New Zealand’s South Island to celebrate. Such was the contempt the French had for the Kiwis and the abilities of our police to pursue

    Does eating cheese before bed really give you nightmares? Here’s what the science says
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Charlotte Gupta, Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Appleton Institute, HealthWise Research Group, CQUniversity Australia Phoenixns/Shutterstock, The Conversation, CC BY Have you heard people say eating cheese before bed will cause you to have vivid dreams or nightmares? It’s a relatively common idea. And this week, a new study

    Experiencing extreme weather and disasters is not enough to change views on climate action, study shows
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Omid Ghasemi, Research Associate in Behavioural Science at the Institute for Climate Risk & Response, UNSW Sydney STR / AFP via Getty Images Climate change has made extreme weather events such as bushfires and floods more frequent and more likely in recent years, and the trend is

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for July 4, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on July 4, 2025.

    Astronomers have spied an interstellar object zooming through the Solar System
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kirsten Banks, Lecturer, School of Science, Computing and Engineering Technologies, Swinburne University of Technology K Ly / Deep Random Survey This week, astronomers spotted the third known interstellar visitor to our Solar System. First detected by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) on July 1, the

    Avoid bad breath, don’t pick partners when drunk: ancient dating tips to find modern love
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Konstantine Panegyres, Lecturer in Classics and Ancient History, The University of Western Australia Henryk Siemiradzki via Wikimedia Commons To love and be loved is something most people want in their lives. In the modern world, we often see stories about the difficulties of finding love and the

    Back to Back Theatre tackles an epic Shakespearian conflict – set in a factory, with cardboard props
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kate Hunter, Senior Lecturer in Art and Performance, Deakin University Jeff Busby/Back To Back Theatre/ACMI Back to Back Theatre is one of Australia’s national treasures. Over 30 years this dynamic Geelong-based company – an ensemble of actors who are perceived to have intellectual disabilities – has built

    Australia’s new lung cancer screening program has chosen simplicity over equity, and we’re concerned
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Lisa J. Whop, Associate Director of Research and Senior Fellow, Yardhura Walani, National Centre for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Wellbeing Research, Australian National University Thurtell/Getty Images Australia’s lung cancer screening program launched on July 1, and marks real progress and opportunity. It aims to reduce the

    Lost in space: MethaneSat failed just as NZ was to take over mission control – here’s what we need to know now
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nicholas Rattenbury, Associate Professor in Physics, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau Environmental Defense Fund, CC BY-SA This week’s announcement of the loss of a methane-detecting satellite, just days before New Zealand was meant to take over mission control, is a blow to the country’s space research

    Rare wooden tools from Stone Age China reveal plant-based lifestyle of ancient lakeside humans
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Bo Li, Professor, Environmental Futures Research Centre, School of Science, University of Wollongong Excavation at the Gantangqing site. Liu et al. Ancient wooden tools found at a site in Gantangqing in southwestern China are approximately 300,000 years old, new dating has shown. Discovered during excavations carried out

    I’ve seen the brain damage contact sports can cause – we all need to take concussion and CTE more seriously
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alan Pearce, Professor, Adjunct Research Fellow, School of Health Science, Swinburne University of Technology AAP Image/The Conversation, CC BY Concussion in sport continues to make headlines, whether it be class actions, young men flocking to the highly violent “RunIt” activity or debate about whether Australian rules football

    NZ will soon have no real interisland rail-ferry link – why are we so bad at infrastructure planning?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Timothy Welch, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images) Another week, another Cook Strait ferry breakdown. As the winter maintenance season approaches and the Aratere prepares for its final months of service, New Zealand faces a self-imposed crisis. The government

    Mauna Loa Observatory captured the reality of climate change. The US plans to shut it down
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alex Sen Gupta, Associate Professor in Climate Science, UNSW Sydney Izabela23/Shutterstock The greenhouse effect was discovered more than 150 years ago and the first scientific paper linking carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere with climate change was published in 1896. But it wasn’t until the 1950s that

    6 simple questions to tell if a ‘finfluencer’ is more flash than cash
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Dimitrios Salampasis, Associate Professor, Emerging Technologies and FinTech | FinTech Capability Lead, Swinburne University of Technology Oleg Golovnev/Shutterstock Images of flashy sports cars. Lavish lifestyle shots. These are just some of the red flags consumers should watch out for when they turn to social media for financial

    Grattan on Friday: how two once hot-button issues this week barely sparked media and political interest
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra Political and news cycles often work in a certain and predictable way. Issues flare like bushfires, then rage for weeks or even months, until they are finally extinguished by action or fade by being overtaken by the next big thing.

    How many serious incidents are happening in Australian childcare centres? We don’t really know
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Erin Harper, Lecturer, School of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney Catherine Delahaye/ Getty Images This week, a Melbourne childcare worker was charged over alleged sexual abuse of young children in his care. Families are justifiably appalled and furious – with 1,200 children urged to be

    Too much vitamin B6 can be toxic. 3 symptoms to watch out for
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nial Wheate, Professor, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University Selena3726/Shutterstock Side effects from taking too much vitamin B6 – including nerve damage – may be more widespread than we think, Australia’s medicines regulator says. In an ABC report earlier this week, a spokesperson for the Therapeutic Goods

    Too much vitamin B6 can be toxic. 3 symptoms to watch out for
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nial Wheate, Professor, School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University Selena3726/Shutterstock Side effects from taking too much vitamin B6 – including nerve damage – may be more widespread than we think, Australia’s medicines regulator says. In an ABC report earlier this week, a spokesperson for the Therapeutic Goods

    10 steps governments can take now to stamp out child sexual abuse in care settings
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ben Mathews, Distinguished Professor, School of Law, Queensland University of Technology Recent cases of prolific alleged child sexual abuse in Melbourne and other Australian early childhood education and care settings have shocked even experienced people who work to prevent child sexual abuse. Parents are right to be

    Tears, trauma and unpaid work: why men in tinnies aren’t the only heroes during a flood disaster
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rebecca McNaught, Research Fellow, Rural and Remote Health, University of Sydney Dan Peled/Getty Images When flooding strikes, our screens fill with scenes of devastated victims, and men performing heroic dinghy rescues in swollen rivers. But another story often goes untold: how women step in, and step up,

    The takeaway from the Venice Biennale saga: the art world faces deep and troubling structural inequality
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Grace McQuilten, Professor of Art and Associate Dean, Research and Innovation, School of Art, RMIT University Creative Australia’s decision earlier this year to rescind the selection of artist Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino as Australia’s 2026 representatives at the Venice Biennale sent shockwaves through the arts

    The Rainbow Warrior saga: 1. French state terrorism and NZ’s end of innocence
    COMMENTARY: By Eugene Doyle Immediately after killing Fernando Pereira and blowing up Greenpeace’s flagship the Rainbow Warrior in Auckland harbour, several of the French agents went on a ski holiday in New Zealand’s South Island to celebrate. Such was the contempt the French had for the Kiwis and the abilities of our police to pursue

    Does eating cheese before bed really give you nightmares? Here’s what the science says
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Charlotte Gupta, Senior Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Appleton Institute, HealthWise Research Group, CQUniversity Australia Phoenixns/Shutterstock, The Conversation, CC BY Have you heard people say eating cheese before bed will cause you to have vivid dreams or nightmares? It’s a relatively common idea. And this week, a new study

    Experiencing extreme weather and disasters is not enough to change views on climate action, study shows
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Omid Ghasemi, Research Associate in Behavioural Science at the Institute for Climate Risk & Response, UNSW Sydney STR / AFP via Getty Images Climate change has made extreme weather events such as bushfires and floods more frequent and more likely in recent years, and the trend is

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Panasonic HD develops “SparseVLM” technology that doubles the processing speed of Vision-Language Model

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Panasonic HD develops “SparseVLM” technology that doubles the processing speed of Vision-Language Model

    Figure 1: Comparison of “SparseVLM” and existing sparsification methods (quoted from the accepted paper)

    Osaka, Japan, July 4, 2025 – Panasonic R&D Company of America (PRDCA) and Panasonic Holdings Co., Ltd. (Panasonic HD), in collaboration with researchers from Peking University, Fudan University, University of California, Berkeley, and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, have developed “SparseVLM,” a technology that speeds up Vision-Language Models (VLMs), AI models that can understand and process both visual data such as images and videos, and text data.In recent years, VLMs have seen rapid development. These models can process visual and textual information simultaneously and can answer questions about visual content. However, handling a large amount of data, especially high-resolution images and long videos, leads to longer inference times and higher computational complexity for the AI model. “SparseVLM” adopts a novel approach by focusing solely on the visual information relevant to the input prompt (Figure 1), significantly reducing inference time and computational complexity while maintaining high accuracy in answering questions about images.This research has been accepted for presentation at the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML2025), one of the premier conferences for AI and machine learning research. The conference will take place in Vancouver, Canada from July 13 to July 19, 2025.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Panasonic HD develops “SparseVLM” technology that doubles the processing speed of Vision-Language Model

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Panasonic HD develops “SparseVLM” technology that doubles the processing speed of Vision-Language Model

    Figure 1: Comparison of “SparseVLM” and existing sparsification methods (quoted from the accepted paper)

    Osaka, Japan, July 4, 2025 – Panasonic R&D Company of America (PRDCA) and Panasonic Holdings Co., Ltd. (Panasonic HD), in collaboration with researchers from Peking University, Fudan University, University of California, Berkeley, and Shanghai Jiao Tong University, have developed “SparseVLM,” a technology that speeds up Vision-Language Models (VLMs), AI models that can understand and process both visual data such as images and videos, and text data.In recent years, VLMs have seen rapid development. These models can process visual and textual information simultaneously and can answer questions about visual content. However, handling a large amount of data, especially high-resolution images and long videos, leads to longer inference times and higher computational complexity for the AI model. “SparseVLM” adopts a novel approach by focusing solely on the visual information relevant to the input prompt (Figure 1), significantly reducing inference time and computational complexity while maintaining high accuracy in answering questions about images.This research has been accepted for presentation at the 42nd International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML2025), one of the premier conferences for AI and machine learning research. The conference will take place in Vancouver, Canada from July 13 to July 19, 2025.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cassidy School Choice Legislation Heads to President Trump’s Desk as Part of One, Big, Beautiful Bill

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) today released a statement after the U.S. House of Representatives passed President Trump’s One, Big, Beautiful Bill that included Cassidy’s Educational Choice for Children Act (ECCA). The bill is now headed to President Trump’s desk to be signed into law.
    “Parents should decide where their kids go to school. This bill helps them do that,” said Dr. Cassidy. “I am grateful to see President Trump sign the first federal school choice bill into law as a part of the One, Big, Beautiful Bill.”
    “Passage of ECCA is a historic moment for educational freedom and parents’ ability to choose the best option for their children. Students deserve the opportunity to succeed in the setting which best meets their needs, and this investment will open new doors for millions of American families. It has been a privilege to work so diligently with Rep. Owens, Sen. Cassidy, and Sen. Scott to accomplish this historic legislation, and I look forward to continuing our work supporting American families as the Treasury Department implements this legislation,” said Representative Adrian Smith (NE-03).
    In January, Cassidy and U.S. Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) led their colleagues in introducing ECCA to expand educational freedom and opportunity for students. Specifically, it provides a charitable donation incentive for individuals and businesses to fund scholarship awards for students to cover expenses related to K-12 public and private education. ECCA will be the first federal school choice legislation to be signed into law in American history.
    Cassidy was joined by U.S. Senators Tim Scott (R-SC), John Thune (R-SD), John Cornyn (R-TX), Steve Daines (R-MT), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-MS), Eric Schmitt (R-MO), Tim Sheehy (R-MT), Ted Budd (R-NC), Tom Cotton (R-AR), John Kennedy (R-LA), Tommy Tubberville (R-AL), Jim Justice (R-WV), James Risch (R-ID), John Barrasso (R-WY), Thom Tillis (R-NC), Roger Marshall (R-KS), Todd Young (R-IN), Josh Hawley (R-MO), Katie Britt (R-AL), Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Dave McCormick (R-PA), Kevin Cramer (R-ND), Roger Wicker (R-MS), Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), Pete Ricketts (R-NE), Jon Husted (R-OH), Bill Hagerty (R-TN), Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), Jim Banks (R-IN), Bernie Moreno (R-OH), John Boozman (R-AR), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), and Ashley Moody (R-FL).

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Global Topic: Panasonic awarded Best Brand in Customer Experience at Oman CX Forum 2025

    Source: Panasonic

    Headline: Global Topic: Panasonic awarded Best Brand in Customer Experience at Oman CX Forum 2025

    Panasonic recognized for its leading approach to customer engagement, personalization and innovation in delivering smooth digital and in-person experiences

    Muscat, Oman – Panasonic Marketing Middle East and Africa FZE (PMMAF) announced that it has been awarded as the Best Brand in Customer Experience at the prestigious Oman CX Forum 2025. The recognition celebrates Panasonic’s unwavering commitment to set new benchmarks in providing exceptional customer service through its leading approach to customer engagement, personalization and continuous innovation in delivering smooth digital and in-person experiences across the region.
    Held recently in Muscat, the Oman CX Forum 2025 brought together over 200 influential regional leaders and dedicated customer experience professionals. The event, presented by Infoline and organised by Muscat Media Group, served as a pivotal platform for discussing the latest digital customer experience trends, exploring groundbreaking innovations, and dissecting customer-centric strategies shaping the future of industries. The forum’s key highlight was the awards ceremonies, which featured 25 categories selected through nationwide consumer voting. Among the top plums of the event’s recognition was the distinguished “Best Brand in Customer Experience” award.
    Panasonic’s strong customer-first approach has been pivotal to its continued success and esteemed reputation as a premium trusted brand across the region. The special accolade validates the company’s commitment to forward-thinking initiatives in order to foster meaningful customer connections. Furthermore, it is a testament to Panasonic’s consistent efforts to deeply understand its customers’ needs, behavior and preferences in delivering seamless digital and in-person experiences, characterized by exceptional engagement and thoughtful personalization.
    Hiroyuki Shibutani, CEO, PMMAF, commented: “We are incredibly honored to receive the ‘Best Brand in Customer Experience’ award at the Oman CX Forum 2025. It marks a significant point in our journey and speaks to the standards we’ve maintained through the years. This recognition is a powerful affirmation of our dedication to placing the customer at the heart of everything we do. It reflects the hard work and relentless pursuit of excellence by our teams who are committed to understanding and exceeding customer expectations at every touchpoint.”
    John Hardy, COO, PMMAF, added: “As businesses embrace innovation to stay relevant in a changing world, we at Panasonic remain focused on shaping what future-ready technology looks like. This recognition not only reinforces the trust our customers place in us, but, equally important, it also motivates us to further invest in strategies that drive us forward and ensure our customers receive unparalleled service.”
    Truly focused on refining and enhancing its top-tier customer experience, Panasonic consistently strives to make an even bigger impact with its customers. In recent years, the company introduced the SMART CARE App, a digital platform which allows customers, dealers, and service centers to seamlessly communicate all service-related matters and claim warranties at the touch of a button. Panasonic is the first appliances brand in the region to launch this kind of paperless warranty system—a testament to its continuing efforts to enhance customer experience through digital excellence.
    Also in April of this year, Panasonic established the Digital Studio at its Digital Repair Training Center in Dubai, UAE with the aim of revolutionizing technical training and ultimately deliver efficient service to its customers. With this new platform, optimized technical knowledge transfer is achieved, ensuring that Panasonic engineers and technicians stay updated with the latest product insights and troubleshooting techniques.

    Panasonic Marketing Middle East and Africa FZE (PMMAF) are the regional Headquarters, all functions related to Sales and Marketing, Supply chain and Customer service solutions, and Advertising functions under the brand name Panasonic are handled by PMMAF. The vision at PMMAF is to be the No 1 Customer-centric Company and No 1 Customer-preferred brand in the Middle East and Africa region.

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI Economics: African Development Bank awards $1 million grant to support green skills development for South Africans, with focus on youth

    Source: African Development Bank Group
    The African Development Bank, through the Fund for African Private Sector Assistance (FAPA), has awarded a $1 million grant to South Africa’s National Business Initiative (NBI) to strengthen efforts to build a dynamic, demand-led skills ecosystem that enables South Africans, particularly young people, to access emerging job…

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: African Development Bank awards $1 million grant to support green skills development for South Africans, with focus on youth

    Source: African Development Bank Group
    The African Development Bank, through the Fund for African Private Sector Assistance (FAPA), has awarded a $1 million grant to South Africa’s National Business Initiative (NBI) to strengthen efforts to build a dynamic, demand-led skills ecosystem that enables South Africans, particularly young people, to access emerging job…

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Press Briefing Transcript: Julie Kozack, Director, Communications Department, July 3, 2025

    Source: International Monetary Fund

    July 3, 2025

    SPEAKER:  Ms. Julie Kozack, Director of the Communications Department, IMF

    MS. KOZACK: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the IMF Press Briefing. It’s wonderful to see all of you, both those of you here in person and, of course, colleagues online as well. I’m Julie Kozack, Director of the Communications Department at the IMF.  As usual, this briefing is embargoed until 11 A.M. Eastern Time in the United States.  I’ll start as usual with a few announcements and then take your questions in person on WebEx and via the Press Center. 

    Starting with the announcements, the First Deputy Managing Director, Gita Gopinath, will participate in the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meetings in Durban, South Africa, on July 17th to 18th. 

    Second, in the coming weeks, we will be releasing two flagship publications, our External Sector Report and the World Economic Outlook Update.  These reports will offer fresh insights into current global economic trends and external imbalances.  Stay tuned.  We will share more details soon. 

    And with that, I will now open the floor for your questions.  For those of you who are connecting virtually, please turn on both your camera and microphone when speaking.  And now the floor is open. 

    QUESTIONER: Thank you so much.  I have two questions on Ukraine.  In its Eighth Review, the IMF highlighted that Ukraine needs to adopt a supplementary budget for 2025 and enact critical reforms to restore fiscal sustainability and implement the National Revenue Strategy.  Could you please elaborate on this?  What specific reforms should Ukraine implement and when?  And secondly, could you also please inform us when the next review of Ukraine is scheduled?  Thank you.  

    QUESTIONER:  Thank you, Julie.  How concerned is IMF about the Ukraine’s debt sustainability?  Taking into account recent highlights in the IMF’s release.  Thank you. 

    MS. KOZACK: Any other questions on Ukraine? And no one online on Ukraine?  Okay, let me go ahead and answer these questions on Ukraine. 

    So, first, just stepping back to remind everyone where we are on Ukraine. On June 30th, so just a few days ago, the IMF’s Executive Board completed the Eighth Review of the EFF arrangement with Ukraine that enabled a disbursement of U.S. $0.5 billion, and it brought total disbursements under the program to $10.6 billion.  In that review, we found that Ukraine’s economy remains resilient.  The authorities met all end-March quantitative performance criteria, a prior action, and two structural benchmarks that were needed to complete the review. 

    Now, with respect to the specific questions. On the supplementary budget, what I can say there is that  from our discussions over time and from the program documents, restoring fiscal sustainability in Ukraine does require a sustained and decisive effort to implement the National Revenue Strategy.  And that strategy includes modernization of the tax and customs system, including timely appointment of a customs head.  It includes the reduction in tax evasion and harmonization of certain legislation with EU standards.  And the idea behind this package of reforms is that these reforms, combined with improvements in public investment management frameworks and medium-term budget preparation, as well as fiscal risk management, altogether, these are going to be critical to helping Ukraine underpin growth and investment over the medium term. 

    With respect to the Ninth Review, right now we expect the Ninth Review to take place toward the end of the year.  It will combine basically the Ninth and the Tenth Reviews together under this new schedule.  And of course, we do remain closely engaged with the Ukrainian authorities.

    And then on the question on debt, what I can say there is that Ukraine has been able to preserve macroeconomic stability despite very difficult circumstances and conditions under the Fund’s program.  Given the risks to the outlook and the overall challenges that Ukraine continues to face, it is essential that reform momentum is sustained.  And we talked about the measures for domestic revenue mobilization, which are critical, as well as  how important they are for restoring debt sustainability over the medium term. 

    It is also important for Ukraine to complete the remaining elements of the debt restructuring in line with program objectives.  And that will be essential for the full restoration of debt sustainability under the program. 

    QUESTIONER: Two questions.  Had the IMF confirmed any involvement by President Alassane Ouattara of Cote d’ Ivoire in supporting Senegalese ongoing negotiations with the Fund, particularly considering the recent data misreporting issues? This is the first question. 

    The second one, what are the IMF’s views on Senegal’s debt sustainability after the recent leak of the 119 percent national debt, as opposed to 99.7 which was indicated in the recent audit of the nation’s finances?  Do you trust the last numbers on debt, 119 percent of GDP, communicated by the Ministry of Finance?  Are they reliable?  Thank you very much. 

    QUESTIONER: Are there any other questions on Senegal?  Okay, so let me step back and remind where we are on Senegal. 

    So our team remains closely engaged with the Senegalese authorities.  As you know, a Staff Mission visited Dakar in March and April, just a few months ago, to advance resolution of the misreporting case, which was confirmed by the Court of Auditors and which, as you know, revealed underreporting of fiscal deficits and public debt over a number of years.  And we’re working closely with the authorities on the design of corrective measures and actions to address the root causes of the misreporting that took place.  And we’re also working closely with the authorities to strengthen capacity development. 

    What I can say with respect to the question on the debt numbers is we strongly welcome the new government’s commitment to transparency in revealing the discrepancies in the reported debt and the fiscal deficits.  The authorities are conducting their own audit and that audit is ongoing. We understand that the audit is close to being finalized.  And we’re waiting for its completion to better understand the challenges and how we can move forward.  And so ultimately, as we wait for that report, we are going to refrain from commenting on any numbers.  We’re waiting for the report, and we will remain very closely engaged. 

    And on your other question on President Ouattara, I don’t have any information for you at this time, but of course, we’ll keep you updated if we have anything to report on that. 

    QUESTIONER: Question about Russia.  So, the Bank of Russia has recently indicated that it can cut key interest rates for another one percentage point if the inflationary pressure remains to ease in Russia.  So, from the IMF standpoint, how – well-timed and appropriate will this step be, taking into account your view on the current economic situation in Russia?  Thanks. 

    MS. KOZACK: Any other questions on Russia? Okay, so let me start a little bit with our assessment of the economy, and then I’ll speak to your question on monetary policy. 

    So, in terms of how we see the Russian economy following last year’s overheating, what we see is that the Russian economy is now slowing sharply.  Inflation is easing, but is still high.  And Russia, like many countries, is affected by high risks and uncertainty.  In our April WEO, we projected growth to slow to 1.5 percent in 2025.  Recent developments since April suggest that growth may even be lower.  And we will, like for many countries, we will be updating our forecast for Russia in the July WEO update, which will come in a few weeks. 

    With respect to monetary policy, as I said, inflation remains high.  Annual inflation is above the Central Bank of Russia’s target.  But based on our April forecast, we do expect inflation to come down and to decline over time.  In April, we had expected inflation to return to target in the second half of 2027.  And so, we see that for the Central Bank policymaking is going to need to balance the fact that inflation is still high, and that unemployment is still very low in Russia, with the fact that the economy is rapidly slowing and that risks are rising.  So that will be the challenge for the Central Bank that we see in its making of monetary policy in the near future. 

    QUESTIONER: Julie, can I just follow up on that Russia question? So you said that because of the current conditions, can you just explain why your forecast is going to be revised downward for Russia’s growth? 

    MS. KOZACK: So, I want to be clear, we will provide the revised forecast in July as part of the WEO. What the team has been seeing is that some recent data suggests that growth may be lower than we had forecast.  But I don’t want to preempt their actual forecast.  What we see is that the slowdown that we see in Russia reflects a few things.  First, tight policies.  The other factors are cyclical factors.  So, coming off of a period of overheating, you often see a cyclical slowdown.  And that’s what we’re seeing in Russia.  And also, the fact that oil prices are lower, which is also affecting Russia as well.  And we also do see some impact on the economy from tightening sanctions. 

    QUESTIONER: A couple of questions on the U.S. Congress, as you know, is about to pass the, what they call the One Big Beautiful Bill, the sweeping budget tax spending policy bill, which is going to, by all accounts, increase the U.S. deficit by $3.4 trillion over 10 years.  It contains major cuts to social programs such as Medicaid, which is going to be very hard on the poorest Americans.  Just wondering if you can provide any perspective from the IMF on this bill.  It kind of goes against everything that the IMF recommends that the U.S. do on the fiscal front, which is to bring deficits under control and tocreate more equality in the economy.  So just wondering if you can shed some light on sort of how the IMF is going to view this, including your perspective on what it might do for financial markets with extra U.S. debt, perhaps increasing U.S. interest rates in real terms and forcing other countries to pay higher interest rates.  Thanks. 

    MS. KOZACK: Are there any other questions on the U.S.? You have another question?

    QUESTIONER: It’s a trade question. 

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, well, if it’s on the U.S., go for it.

    QUESTIONER: So next week is the July 9th deadline for the U.S. to potentially raise tariff rates on many, many countries.  As you know, the president had lowered those tariff rates temporarily. It’s likely that a lot of countries are going to see much higher interest rates.  And I’m just wondering if you can comment on that and how it will affect whether that’s being factored into your WEO update, and the impact that  will have on the global economy.  Thanks.

    QUESTIONER: Julie, a follow-up?

    MS. KOZACK: Yes, please go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: Just a follow-up to that question with regard to the U.S. and trade.  Now, one of South Asia’s biggest trading partners is the U.S.  Now, President Trump has already signaled deals with countries like Vietnam and India.  But, for small economies like Sri Lanka, Maldives, Bangladesh, there is still uncertainty around it.  So, given the uncertainty around it, will the Fund be looking at changes in certain targets with these countries that are already in programs, or will there be any revisit to the financing already given to these countries?  Thank you. 

    MS. KOZACK: All right, so let me start by saying, I think, to your first question, so at this stage, and as you noted, it’s fair to say there’s a consensus that the recent bill that was approved in the Senate and is now under discussion in the House would add to the fiscal deficit and it appears to run counter to reducing federal debt over the medium term. From the IMF side, we have been consistent in saying that the U.S. will need to reduce its fiscal deficit over time to put public debt-to-GDP on a decisive downward path.  And since a fiscal consolidation will ultimately be needed to achieve or to put debt on a downward path, of course, the sooner that process starts to reduce the deficit, the more gradual the deficit reduction can be over time. 

    And of course, there are many different policy options that the U.S. has to reduce its deficit and debt.  And it is, of course, important to build consensus within the United States about how it will address these chronic fiscal deficits.  We’re currently examining the details of the legislation and the likely impact on the U.S. economy.  We will be providing a broader update of our views in terms of the outlook for the U.S. and also, of course, for the global economy in the July WEO update, which, as I noted, will be coming in the next few weeks.  And of course, we will take into account in the update all updated developments, including potential new policies or legislation. 

    And that goes a little bit to your other question on July 9th and the tariff deadline, to the extent possible and feasible, we will take into account as many of the trade deals or announcements that are made, and we will take those into account in our July WEO update.  And we’re paying, of course, close attention to the situation globally. 

    As we’ve been saying, this is a moment for the global economy marked by high uncertainty.  And so that uncertainty is something that is still with us.  And we’re also taking the fact that we’re at a moment of high uncertainty into account in thinking about our forecasts for the global economy. 

    QUESTIONER: When will the Board will address the first revision of the agreement with Argentina?  It’s a simple question. 

    MS. KOZACK: Okay. Other questions on Argentina?

    QUESTIONER: Is there a concern in the IMF that the external deficit exceed $5 billion in the first quarter of this year?  

    QUESTIONER: Thank you, Julie.  Wanted to ask what the IMF is expecting in terms of Argentina’s ability to meet its reserves target, or whether the IMF will be considering a waiver to ask about the timing for the next $2 billion disbursement.  And finally, how the YPF court order this week influences the outlook for Argentina and the need to build foreign reserves.  

    QUESTIONER: Hi, Julie.  Good morning.   I would like to address the question of my colleague.  Do you think the court ruling of YPF will have significant implications for both, I mean, the company and Argentina’s economic stability?  

    QUESTIONER: Also, on the YPF issue, if that challenges in any way Argentina’s goal to return to international financial markets by the end of the year.  And if you could comment on the mission that was in Buenos Aires’ findings last week.  

    QUESTIONER: A recent JP Morgan report recommended that selling LECAP bonds due to their increased risk because of the lack of reserve accumulation. Also, Argentina failed to rise to MSCI Emerging Market status. Is this a cause for concern for the IMF? Could it obstruct Argentina’s return to international markets in 2026 as the Staff Report indicates? Thank you.

    MS. KOZACK: All right, anyone else on Argentina? Okay, so maybe just stepping back for a moment.  As you know, a recent IMF Staff Technical Mission visited Buenos Aires recently.  The mission concluded on June 27th.  And this mission was part of the First Review under the program under the new $20 billion EFF program.  Discussions for the First Review continue, and they remain very productive. 

    What I can also add is that the program, as we’ve said before, it continues to deliver positive results.  The transition to a more robust FX regime has been smooth.  The disinflation process has resumed.  The economy continues to expand.  High-frequency indicators suggest that poverty is on a downward trend in Argentina.  Argentina has also reaccessed international capital markets for the first time in seven years.  And all of this progress, of course, under the program, is being underpinned by appropriately tight fiscal and monetary policies.

    Discussions now are focused on policies to sustain the stabilization gains, including by continuing to rebuild buffers to address risks from a more complex external backdrop.  Both the IMF Staff and the Argentine authorities are closely engaged on these issues, and it reflects the ongoing collaboration that we have with the authorities as well as a shared commitment to the success of the program. 

    On some of the more specific questions with respect to targets under the program and the potential for waivers, at this stage, given that the discussions are ongoing, I’m not going to speculate on the potential for waivers or the outcome of those discussions.  But we will, of course, keep you updated in due course.

    On the broader question of reserve accumulation, what I can add is that, as I mentioned, Staff and the authorities do have a shared commitment to the success of the program, which I noted.  But I can add that this, of course, includes a shared recognition of the need to continue to build buffers against external risks.  We’re closely engaged with the authorities on the issue. 

    On the question of YPF, we’re obviously paying close attention, monitoring this situation.  However, as a matter of policy, we don’t comment on legal matters involving our member countries, and that includes this IMF case. 

    I need to apologize because a question was asked in the last round which I did not answer.  So, I’m going to repeat the question, and then I’m going to answer it.  The question is the U.S. is one of South Asia’s biggest trading partners and countries are racing to strike deals.  President Trump already signaled a deal with India.  Given this uncertainty around it, will the Fund be looking to change targets or revisit financing?  So here I think, they were asking really about program countries, and they mentioned Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and one other country. 

    So, what I can say on this one is that in all program countries, in all program contexts, the reason why we have reviews during the program is there’s a backward-looking part to the review, which is to assess whether the country has complied with the targets and the commitments that they have made.  But the other part is what we call a forward-looking part.  And that part really looks at what has happened to the economy, globally, what are the trends, and how should those be taken into account going forward.  So to the extent that uncertainty or changes in trading relations or in the trading environment has an effect on the economy, which is significant enough to affect the program, of course, those will be taken into account.  But it will be done on a case-by-case basis, tailored to the specific circumstances of every program country that we have. 

    Let’s continue then.   

    QUESTIONER: Do you know when the Board will meet? 

    MS. KOZACK: Ah, I apologize. So, with respect to the First Review, just in terms of the process, first, the discussions between the team and the authorities will need to come to a conclusion, and a Staff-Level Agreement would need to be reached.  And once that happens, we will submit the documentation to our Board for review.  So, I don’t yet have a timing for the Board meeting, but we will, of course, keep you informed as the discussions continue.

    MS. KOZACK: I’m not going to speculate at all. I want to give time, of course, for the authorities and the team to complete the discussions, and we will abide by our process, the first step of which is a Staff-Level Agreement, and then we will submit the documents for consideration by the Executive Board. 

    QUESTIONER: Can I have a short follow-up? Do you expect Minister Caputo in the upcoming days in Washington D.C.?

    MS. KOZACK: So, what I can say is that the discussions are continuing. There is a technical team here in Washington to have those discussions. But it’s a technical team. 

    MS. KOZACK: All right, let me go online.

    QUESTIONER: I have a couple of questions on Egypt specifically. The first is we all in Egypt were expecting the Fifth Review to be completed before the end of fiscal year, which ends by end of June.  So, could you please update us on the ongoing negotiations regarding the Fifth Review?  My second one is on the RSF financing.  We want to also know an update on that. 

    MS. KOZACK: Are there other questions on Egypt.

    QUESTIONER:  I have another question on Egypt.  So, what are the current points of contention that delayed this disbursement of the fifth tranche?  And do you think there is any room to extend the loan repayment due to the current challenges, especially that there were more effects that have affected Egypt recently, because of the war that happened during June?  And I have another question on Syria.  I don’t know if I could put it in now.  Maybe you can answer that later on.  How will lifting the sanctions change or expedite any program with the IMF regarding Syria? 

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, so let’s first see if there’s other questions on Egypt and I’ll answer on Egypt and then I’ll turn to Syria.

    QUESTIONER: I just want to add to what my colleagues said before whether you’re able to confirm or say any more about reports recently that the Fifth and Sixth Reviews will be combined into one review that would then take place in September. 

    MS. KOZACK: Anyone else on Egypt?   

    So, on Egypt, an IMF team, as you know, visited Cairo in May, from May 6th to 18th, for discussions with the Egyptian authorities.  The discussions were productive.  Egypt continues to make progress under its macroeconomic reform program.  And we can say that there’s been notable improvements in inflation and in the level of foreign exchange reserves, which have increased.

    To move further and to really safeguard macroeconomic stability in Egypt and to bolster the country’s resilience to shocks, it is essential to deepen reforms, and this is particularly important to reduce the state footprint in the economy, level the playing field, and improve the business environment.  Some of the key policies that are under discussion and key priorities are advancing the state ownership policy and asset [divestment diversification] program in sectors where the state has committed to withdraw.  These steps are critical to really enabling the private sector to drive stronger and more sustainable growth in Egypt.  And our commitment, of course, is strong to Egypt.  We’re committed to supporting Egypt in building this resilience and in fostering growth. 

    With respect to the reviews, the discussions suggest that more time is needed to finalize the key policy measures, particularly related to the state’s role in the economy and to ensure that the critical objectives of the program, the authority’s economic reform program, can be met.  Our Staff team is continuing to work with the authorities on this goal.  And for that reason, the Fifth and Sixth Reviews under the EFF will be combined.  And the idea is for them to be combined into a discussion or a combined review for the fall.  So that’s the rationale for combining the reviews.  More time [is] needed. 

    And I think there was also a question on Egypt’s RSF and what I can say on thisis that as the RSF was approved recently for Egypt and as per the schedule approved by the board, the First Review of the RSF is aligned with the Sixth Review under the EFF. 

    QUESTIONER: Julie, would you allow me to follow up on something they’ve just said? 

    So, you said that the Fifth and the Sixth Review will be combined for the fall.  Does this mean that the Fifth and the Sixth disbursements will be together?  Could this be possible? Is this on the table? 

    MS. KOZACK: So, given that the discussions are still underway, a part of the discussions that will, of course, take place around combining the reviews will be to look at what are Egypt’s financing needs and around that, what should be the size of the disbursement around the combined Fifth and Sixth Review. So that’s all part of the discussions, the ongoing discussions that are taking place.  So, it would be premature for me to speculate at this stage. 

    Okay, you had a question on Syria.  So, let me see if anyone else has a question on Syria.  I don’t see anyone else on Syria. 

    So, turning to Syria. So, as I think you know, an IMF team visited Syria from June 1st to 5th.  And this was the first visit of an IMF team to Syria since 2009.  The team was in Syria to assess the economic and financial conditions in Syria and discuss with the authorities their economic policy and capacity-building priorities.  And all of this, of course, is to support the recovery of the Syrian economy. 

    As we’ve discussed here before, Syria faces enormous challenges following years of conflict that have caused, you know, immense human suffering.  And the conflict has reduced the economy to a fraction of its former size.  The lifting of sanctions can help facilitate Syria’s rehabilitation by supporting its reintegration into the global economy.  And as part of our ongoing engagement with the Syrian authorities, we will, as needed, of course, you know, assess the implications of the lifting of sanctions on the Syrian economy. 

    So, again, that’s going to be part of the work of the team as they are putting together a picture of the Syrian economy, but also of the very important and deep capacity development needs that the Syrian authorities will have. 

    QUESTIONER: I just wanted to follow up on a colleague’s follow-up.  The comments that you made a few minutes ago regarding Argentina having a technical team in Washington for discussions with the IMF.  I just wanted to confirm my understanding.  Were you saying that they have a — that there is currently a technical team in Washington, and can you tell us anything more about the dates of the meetings or anything beyond that technical team being currently in Washington, if I understood you correctly? 

    MS. KOZACK: So, I think all I can add to that is that I can confirm that there is a technical delegation in Washington, you know, from Argentina in Washington, visiting headquarters this week. And the goal is to advance discussions on the First Review under the program.  I hope that clarifies. 

    QUESTIONER: Yes, I wanted to ask you on Mozambique — sorry, just pulling up my note here — which was that –excuse me.  Regarding Mozambique, is it feasible to agree to a new program with Mozambique by year-end, as the president of that country is hoping, or do you have anything on any of the hurdles and the process there?  Thank you. 

    MS. KOZACK: I’m sort of looking. I don’t have anything off-hand in terms of an update on Mozambique. So, we’ll come back to you separately on Mozambique.  I’m sorry about that. 

    All right, let’s go online.  You had a question?

    QUESTIONER: I have a quick follow-up on Ukraine and then another one.  On Ukraine, when you are talking about combining the Ninth and Tenth Reviews, what would that mean also in terms of the disbursement?  But you know, in the case of Egypt, you’re giving the authorities more time to execute reviews.  What is the reason for combining them in the case of Ukraine? 

    And then, how many more reviews, I just don’t remember, how many more reviews were planned to get to the $15.5 billion?  So, we’ve got $10.6 billion dispersed already.  Like, how much is left to go, and how much of that notionally would come in the Ninth and Tenth Reviews?

    And then separately, I just want to come back to the trade question and perhaps broaden it out a little bit.  So, as the United States under the administration of Donald Trump is imposing quite significant tariffs on many, if not all, of its trading partners, that raises costs, obvious for everyone.  At the same time, the government has also been reducing, significantly slashing its foreign aid for development systems.  And you know, obviously, there’s a lot of concern about that.  We’ve seen some reports recently from the Lancet that millions of people could die as a result of this money not being in — in those countries.  That has follow-on consequences for all the countries whose, you know, economies you’re guiding and accompanying.  And I just want to know if you — if you’ve done a sort of broader analysis about this trade environment.  For many years, you have been warning about trade restrictions, and we are now fully into a period where trade restrictions seem to be increasing.  So, just asking a broad question.

    And then finally, we do have the G20 meeting coming up. The United States has not participated in the initial G20 meetings this year.  What would it mean to the organization if the United States also chose to skip this July meeting?  What is the importance of that as in that body?

    QUESTIONER: So, on Ukraine, what I can say is the Ninth Review, as I said, we expect it to take place by the end of the year and it is going to combine the previously envisaged Ninth Review, which was scheduled for the fall, and the Tenth Review, which we expected to take place in the fourth quarter.  And the team is going to remain closely engaged with Ukraine over this period.  I don’t have more details on the reason that the reviews are being combined, but I believe the Staff Report has been published for Ukraine.  And so, I would refer you to that document, which should have the relevant details.

    On your broader question about the trade environment and the aid environment.  I think if you think about it, or if we look back at it, you know, what has the IMF been saying?  If we look back to the Spring Meetings, one of the main messages from the Managing Director’s Curtain Raiser and her global policy agenda, as well as our broader messages, was that it is very important for countries to, we were saying, kind of, or the Managing Director was saying to get their own house in order.  So, there’s — and the message really behind that was that yes, the trade environment is shifting, and we see very significant shifts in the trade environment. 

    But there is a lot that countries can and need to do domestically related to their own reforms to build their own resilience.  There’s a lot that countries can do in terms of policy, and that really relates in many countries to fiscal policy, which is about, because we’ve been talking about a low-growth, high-debt environment for some time.  High uncertainty and weaker trade affects that environment.  But the fact still remains that we have a low-growth and high-debt environment globally.  So, for countries, that means taking measures to reduce the high debt problem. 

    That’s on the fiscal side.  And that is a general piece of policy advice that we’ve given to many, many countries.  And on the growth side, we are strongly encouraging countries to take measures to boost productivity and medium-term growth.  So, this is really at the crux of our policy advice to countries. 

    And on the aid side, what we’ve been warning about for quite some time is that official development assistance, in general, has been on a declining downward trend for many, many years.  And we see the impact of the decline in official development assistance in low-income countries.  So, this is a broad trend that we observe globally across many countries, affecting low-income countries.  But what it means for those countries is that they are going to have to both work with the IMF, other MDBs [multinational development banks], [and] donors who are still providing financing.  But most importantly, those countries are going to need to look for ways to mobilize domestic resources so that they can fund many of their own development needs. 

    And so this is also part of, we call it a three-pillar approach where we look at the need for domestic reforms in countries, the need for assistance and stepped-up  assistance from multilateral organizations to provide needed financing for countries, and of course ways to ultimately reduce the cost of financing and also looking to mobilize private financing for countries.  So, there is a very rich and large agenda on this broad topic that we have been discussing for quite some time.

    And on the G20, this is really a matter, I think, for the G20 presidency and for the — for the United States. 

    Let me look online. 

    QUESTIONER: So, I have like two questions regarding the finalizing the four-year Extended Credit Facility that is linked between the International Monetary Fund and the government of Ethiopia.  So again, the IMF Staff has been paying a review visit to Ethiopia many times to review Ethiopia’s section and disperse the money.  In this point, I have two questions.  The first one is how does the IMF evaluate Ethiopia’s move and current achievement towards liberalizing its economy?  And the second one is what are the parameters to indicate whether the mission is going on the right track, as the people of the country are facing heavy life burden?

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, thank you. Other questions on Ethiopia? 

    QUESTIONER: I noted [that] in the Third Review that came out late last night that most of the macroeconomic forecasts are looking up compared to the second.  Apart from public debt-to-GDP, I can’t really figure out why.  So, could you maybe walk me through that?  And I have a separate question on Lebanon.  Maybe we’ll take that later.

    MS. KOZACK: Anything else on Ethiopia? All right. So, with respect to Ethiopia, the IMF Executive Board approved the 2025 Article IV consultation and the Third Review under the ECF on July 2nd, and that enabled Ethiopia to access about U.S. $260 million. 

    What I can add is that the completion of the review reflects both the assessment of the Staff and our Executive Board that Ethiopia’s strong adherence to the program and the program goals, and it also reflects continued confidence in the government’s reform agenda.  The Ethiopian authorities have made significant progress in implementing some really important and fundamental reforms under the ECF.  Key economic indicators such as inflation, fiscal balance, and external balance are all showing signs of stabilization.  And that suggests that the country and the economy are kind of progressing on the right track. 

    With respect to your more detailed question, we will have to come back to you bilaterally.  I’m not sure exactly why.  I don’t know off the top of my head the answer to that, but we will come back to you on that one. 

    I know there’s a few more questions online, so let’s try to get to them. 

    QUESTIONER: Hi, good morning.  Sorry.  So, I wanted to — my question is regarding what is going on in Kenya.  President Ruto announced that he planned to privatize some of the public assets.  And I was wondering if you could provide any views from the IMF?  I also wanted to ask you, next week, President Donald Trump will be meeting with several African leaders.  Some of those countries have critical minerals.  So perhaps the meeting we resolve around critical minerals.  As you know, a lot of countries, the U.S., China, as well as European nations, are very interested in African critical minerals.  So, I was wondering if you could share your view, giving what has happened in the past and the corruption around critical minerals and the mismanagement of the Fund received from the minerals.  What is the IMF’s recommendation to nations across the African continent right now, on how to —

    MS. KOZACK: I think we lost you.

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, so, we lost you for a bit in the middle, but I think I got the gist of your question. So, let me now ask, does anyone else have a question on Kenya? 

    QUESTIONER: Yeah, I do.  Hello? 

    MS. KOZACK: Yes, please go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: I wanted to ask about that Diagnostic Mission.  I know I’d asked you about it before, but now it’s completed, and does the IMF want that report to be made public, or does it expect it to be made public?  I have a question on Barbados, too, but I’ll wait on that one. 

    MS. KOZACK: All right, so let me start with Kenya. So, on Kenya, maybe just to remind everyone where we are on Kenya. Our Staff team is actively engaged with the authorities on recent developments.  As you know, we’ve been discussing with them the timing of the next Article IV Mission and also their request for a new program. 

    And I will come to your question on the Government Diagnostics Mission in just a minute. 

    So, a big part of our work with Kenya now is this Government Diagnostics Mission.  The Technical Mission just concluded on June 30th, and they released a short press release, which was just issued.  This was kind of the first step of a process that we expect to take until the end of the year.  So, collaboration on government diagnostics.  It will continue over the next several months.  A draft diagnostic assessment report is expected to be shared with the Kenyan authorities before the end of the year.  So that first report will go to the authorities, and then the report will be published once consent is received from the authorities.  So that is the process that we’ll have.  But it will take quite some time to get that report prepared and ready.  So, kind of hold this space.  We’ll continue to work on it. 

    And then on your question on Kenya, what I can say is that we look forward to learning more details about the President’s statement that was made yesterday.  What I can say more broadly is that our engagement with the Kenyan authorities on privatization has been focused on establishing a solid framework to ensure that transparency and good governance, with the aim to unlock potential benefits. 

    So again, our discussions have very much focused on having a framework, and if done well, we see potential benefits that could include, for example, increased efficiency of improved private investment, reducing the fiscal burden, and improving service delivery. 

    On your second question, I think the way I will approach it is to say that, and Kenya is an example of this in some ways, with this governance Diagnostic Mission that, of course, at the IMF, we are concerned about not only in Africa, but in all countries where it’s a — where corruption affects economic activity, we are concerned about governance.  We have a strong governance program, and it includes a Government Diagnostic Mission.  Government diagnostic assessments allow our experts to go and do a deep assessment of governance in a country, look at where governance weaknesses exist, and to recommend a path forward to improve governance and reduce corruption over time. 

    We recognize that in many of our member countries, governance and corruption issues do have a significant impact on economic activity, and we are very committed to working with our member countries to improve governance as an important part of enabling countries to achieve stronger growth and better livelihoods for their people. 

    And let me go — I have Jermine.  You haven’t had a question yet, and I think we are over time.  So,  I am going to wrap up with you as the last question. 

    QUESTIONER: I have two questions pertaining to the Caribbean region, more specifically to the Citizenship by Investment programs.  What’s IMF’s position regarding the decisions made by St. Kitts and Nevis and other territories to establish a regulatory body to oversee these programs? 

    MS. KOZACK: Go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: Regarding the looming threat of visa waivers by the Schengen region, the European Union, regarding these particular passport holders, knowing that the CBI programs are the pillars of the economies of the region. 

    MS. KOZACK: So, what I can say on the CBI, the citizenship by investment programs, is that our position has been that we generally advocate for common CBI program standards across the region, including in the area of transparency. And this was noted in our 2024 Regional Consultation Report on the ECCU. 

    And with respect to specific countries such as Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, and St. Lucia, for those specific countries, we have provided country-specific information, and the information on those can be found in the respective Article IV reports for those countries. 

    With respect to the question on the Schengen region, this is really a matter between the individual countries in the Caribbean and the countries in the Schengen region.  It’s not really a matter for the IMF. 

    So, with that, given that we’ve taken more time than we normally allocate, I want to thank everyone very much for your participation today.  As a reminder, the briefing is embargoed until 11:00 A.M. Eastern Time in the United States.  As always, a transcript will be made later — available later on IMF.org.  And of course, in case of any clarifications, additional queries, if you didn’t get a chance to ask your questions today, please do be in contact with my colleagues at media@imf.org, and we will be sure to give you a response.  I wish you all a wonderful day and a wonderful long weekend, and I look forward to seeing you all next time.  Thanks very much.  

    *  *  *  *  *

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Rahim Kanani

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Press Briefing Transcript: Julie Kozack, Director, Communications Department, July 3, 2025

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    July 3, 2025

    SPEAKER:  Ms. Julie Kozack, Director of the Communications Department, IMF

    MS. KOZACK: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the IMF Press Briefing. It’s wonderful to see all of you, both those of you here in person and, of course, colleagues online as well. I’m Julie Kozack, Director of the Communications Department at the IMF.  As usual, this briefing is embargoed until 11 A.M. Eastern Time in the United States.  I’ll start as usual with a few announcements and then take your questions in person on WebEx and via the Press Center. 

    Starting with the announcements, the First Deputy Managing Director, Gita Gopinath, will participate in the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meetings in Durban, South Africa, on July 17th to 18th. 

    Second, in the coming weeks, we will be releasing two flagship publications, our External Sector Report and the World Economic Outlook Update.  These reports will offer fresh insights into current global economic trends and external imbalances.  Stay tuned.  We will share more details soon. 

    And with that, I will now open the floor for your questions.  For those of you who are connecting virtually, please turn on both your camera and microphone when speaking.  And now the floor is open. 

    QUESTIONER: Thank you so much.  I have two questions on Ukraine.  In its Eighth Review, the IMF highlighted that Ukraine needs to adopt a supplementary budget for 2025 and enact critical reforms to restore fiscal sustainability and implement the National Revenue Strategy.  Could you please elaborate on this?  What specific reforms should Ukraine implement and when?  And secondly, could you also please inform us when the next review of Ukraine is scheduled?  Thank you.  

    QUESTIONER:  Thank you, Julie.  How concerned is IMF about the Ukraine’s debt sustainability?  Taking into account recent highlights in the IMF’s release.  Thank you. 

    MS. KOZACK: Any other questions on Ukraine? And no one online on Ukraine?  Okay, let me go ahead and answer these questions on Ukraine. 

    So, first, just stepping back to remind everyone where we are on Ukraine. On June 30th, so just a few days ago, the IMF’s Executive Board completed the Eighth Review of the EFF arrangement with Ukraine that enabled a disbursement of U.S. $0.5 billion, and it brought total disbursements under the program to $10.6 billion.  In that review, we found that Ukraine’s economy remains resilient.  The authorities met all end-March quantitative performance criteria, a prior action, and two structural benchmarks that were needed to complete the review. 

    Now, with respect to the specific questions. On the supplementary budget, what I can say there is that  from our discussions over time and from the program documents, restoring fiscal sustainability in Ukraine does require a sustained and decisive effort to implement the National Revenue Strategy.  And that strategy includes modernization of the tax and customs system, including timely appointment of a customs head.  It includes the reduction in tax evasion and harmonization of certain legislation with EU standards.  And the idea behind this package of reforms is that these reforms, combined with improvements in public investment management frameworks and medium-term budget preparation, as well as fiscal risk management, altogether, these are going to be critical to helping Ukraine underpin growth and investment over the medium term. 

    With respect to the Ninth Review, right now we expect the Ninth Review to take place toward the end of the year.  It will combine basically the Ninth and the Tenth Reviews together under this new schedule.  And of course, we do remain closely engaged with the Ukrainian authorities.

    And then on the question on debt, what I can say there is that Ukraine has been able to preserve macroeconomic stability despite very difficult circumstances and conditions under the Fund’s program.  Given the risks to the outlook and the overall challenges that Ukraine continues to face, it is essential that reform momentum is sustained.  And we talked about the measures for domestic revenue mobilization, which are critical, as well as  how important they are for restoring debt sustainability over the medium term. 

    It is also important for Ukraine to complete the remaining elements of the debt restructuring in line with program objectives.  And that will be essential for the full restoration of debt sustainability under the program. 

    QUESTIONER: Two questions.  Had the IMF confirmed any involvement by President Alassane Ouattara of Cote d’ Ivoire in supporting Senegalese ongoing negotiations with the Fund, particularly considering the recent data misreporting issues? This is the first question. 

    The second one, what are the IMF’s views on Senegal’s debt sustainability after the recent leak of the 119 percent national debt, as opposed to 99.7 which was indicated in the recent audit of the nation’s finances?  Do you trust the last numbers on debt, 119 percent of GDP, communicated by the Ministry of Finance?  Are they reliable?  Thank you very much. 

    QUESTIONER: Are there any other questions on Senegal?  Okay, so let me step back and remind where we are on Senegal. 

    So our team remains closely engaged with the Senegalese authorities.  As you know, a Staff Mission visited Dakar in March and April, just a few months ago, to advance resolution of the misreporting case, which was confirmed by the Court of Auditors and which, as you know, revealed underreporting of fiscal deficits and public debt over a number of years.  And we’re working closely with the authorities on the design of corrective measures and actions to address the root causes of the misreporting that took place.  And we’re also working closely with the authorities to strengthen capacity development. 

    What I can say with respect to the question on the debt numbers is we strongly welcome the new government’s commitment to transparency in revealing the discrepancies in the reported debt and the fiscal deficits.  The authorities are conducting their own audit and that audit is ongoing. We understand that the audit is close to being finalized.  And we’re waiting for its completion to better understand the challenges and how we can move forward.  And so ultimately, as we wait for that report, we are going to refrain from commenting on any numbers.  We’re waiting for the report, and we will remain very closely engaged. 

    And on your other question on President Ouattara, I don’t have any information for you at this time, but of course, we’ll keep you updated if we have anything to report on that. 

    QUESTIONER: Question about Russia.  So, the Bank of Russia has recently indicated that it can cut key interest rates for another one percentage point if the inflationary pressure remains to ease in Russia.  So, from the IMF standpoint, how – well-timed and appropriate will this step be, taking into account your view on the current economic situation in Russia?  Thanks. 

    MS. KOZACK: Any other questions on Russia? Okay, so let me start a little bit with our assessment of the economy, and then I’ll speak to your question on monetary policy. 

    So, in terms of how we see the Russian economy following last year’s overheating, what we see is that the Russian economy is now slowing sharply.  Inflation is easing, but is still high.  And Russia, like many countries, is affected by high risks and uncertainty.  In our April WEO, we projected growth to slow to 1.5 percent in 2025.  Recent developments since April suggest that growth may even be lower.  And we will, like for many countries, we will be updating our forecast for Russia in the July WEO update, which will come in a few weeks. 

    With respect to monetary policy, as I said, inflation remains high.  Annual inflation is above the Central Bank of Russia’s target.  But based on our April forecast, we do expect inflation to come down and to decline over time.  In April, we had expected inflation to return to target in the second half of 2027.  And so, we see that for the Central Bank policymaking is going to need to balance the fact that inflation is still high, and that unemployment is still very low in Russia, with the fact that the economy is rapidly slowing and that risks are rising.  So that will be the challenge for the Central Bank that we see in its making of monetary policy in the near future. 

    QUESTIONER: Julie, can I just follow up on that Russia question? So you said that because of the current conditions, can you just explain why your forecast is going to be revised downward for Russia’s growth? 

    MS. KOZACK: So, I want to be clear, we will provide the revised forecast in July as part of the WEO. What the team has been seeing is that some recent data suggests that growth may be lower than we had forecast.  But I don’t want to preempt their actual forecast.  What we see is that the slowdown that we see in Russia reflects a few things.  First, tight policies.  The other factors are cyclical factors.  So, coming off of a period of overheating, you often see a cyclical slowdown.  And that’s what we’re seeing in Russia.  And also, the fact that oil prices are lower, which is also affecting Russia as well.  And we also do see some impact on the economy from tightening sanctions. 

    QUESTIONER: A couple of questions on the U.S. Congress, as you know, is about to pass the, what they call the One Big Beautiful Bill, the sweeping budget tax spending policy bill, which is going to, by all accounts, increase the U.S. deficit by $3.4 trillion over 10 years.  It contains major cuts to social programs such as Medicaid, which is going to be very hard on the poorest Americans.  Just wondering if you can provide any perspective from the IMF on this bill.  It kind of goes against everything that the IMF recommends that the U.S. do on the fiscal front, which is to bring deficits under control and tocreate more equality in the economy.  So just wondering if you can shed some light on sort of how the IMF is going to view this, including your perspective on what it might do for financial markets with extra U.S. debt, perhaps increasing U.S. interest rates in real terms and forcing other countries to pay higher interest rates.  Thanks. 

    MS. KOZACK: Are there any other questions on the U.S.? You have another question?

    QUESTIONER: It’s a trade question. 

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, well, if it’s on the U.S., go for it.

    QUESTIONER: So next week is the July 9th deadline for the U.S. to potentially raise tariff rates on many, many countries.  As you know, the president had lowered those tariff rates temporarily. It’s likely that a lot of countries are going to see much higher interest rates.  And I’m just wondering if you can comment on that and how it will affect whether that’s being factored into your WEO update, and the impact that  will have on the global economy.  Thanks.

    QUESTIONER: Julie, a follow-up?

    MS. KOZACK: Yes, please go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: Just a follow-up to that question with regard to the U.S. and trade.  Now, one of South Asia’s biggest trading partners is the U.S.  Now, President Trump has already signaled deals with countries like Vietnam and India.  But, for small economies like Sri Lanka, Maldives, Bangladesh, there is still uncertainty around it.  So, given the uncertainty around it, will the Fund be looking at changes in certain targets with these countries that are already in programs, or will there be any revisit to the financing already given to these countries?  Thank you. 

    MS. KOZACK: All right, so let me start by saying, I think, to your first question, so at this stage, and as you noted, it’s fair to say there’s a consensus that the recent bill that was approved in the Senate and is now under discussion in the House would add to the fiscal deficit and it appears to run counter to reducing federal debt over the medium term. From the IMF side, we have been consistent in saying that the U.S. will need to reduce its fiscal deficit over time to put public debt-to-GDP on a decisive downward path.  And since a fiscal consolidation will ultimately be needed to achieve or to put debt on a downward path, of course, the sooner that process starts to reduce the deficit, the more gradual the deficit reduction can be over time. 

    And of course, there are many different policy options that the U.S. has to reduce its deficit and debt.  And it is, of course, important to build consensus within the United States about how it will address these chronic fiscal deficits.  We’re currently examining the details of the legislation and the likely impact on the U.S. economy.  We will be providing a broader update of our views in terms of the outlook for the U.S. and also, of course, for the global economy in the July WEO update, which, as I noted, will be coming in the next few weeks.  And of course, we will take into account in the update all updated developments, including potential new policies or legislation. 

    And that goes a little bit to your other question on July 9th and the tariff deadline, to the extent possible and feasible, we will take into account as many of the trade deals or announcements that are made, and we will take those into account in our July WEO update.  And we’re paying, of course, close attention to the situation globally. 

    As we’ve been saying, this is a moment for the global economy marked by high uncertainty.  And so that uncertainty is something that is still with us.  And we’re also taking the fact that we’re at a moment of high uncertainty into account in thinking about our forecasts for the global economy. 

    QUESTIONER: When will the Board will address the first revision of the agreement with Argentina?  It’s a simple question. 

    MS. KOZACK: Okay. Other questions on Argentina?

    QUESTIONER: Is there a concern in the IMF that the external deficit exceed $5 billion in the first quarter of this year?  

    QUESTIONER: Thank you, Julie.  Wanted to ask what the IMF is expecting in terms of Argentina’s ability to meet its reserves target, or whether the IMF will be considering a waiver to ask about the timing for the next $2 billion disbursement.  And finally, how the YPF court order this week influences the outlook for Argentina and the need to build foreign reserves.  

    QUESTIONER: Hi, Julie.  Good morning.   I would like to address the question of my colleague.  Do you think the court ruling of YPF will have significant implications for both, I mean, the company and Argentina’s economic stability?  

    QUESTIONER: Also, on the YPF issue, if that challenges in any way Argentina’s goal to return to international financial markets by the end of the year.  And if you could comment on the mission that was in Buenos Aires’ findings last week.  

    QUESTIONER: A recent JP Morgan report recommended that selling LECAP bonds due to their increased risk because of the lack of reserve accumulation. Also, Argentina failed to rise to MSCI Emerging Market status. Is this a cause for concern for the IMF? Could it obstruct Argentina’s return to international markets in 2026 as the Staff Report indicates? Thank you.

    MS. KOZACK: All right, anyone else on Argentina? Okay, so maybe just stepping back for a moment.  As you know, a recent IMF Staff Technical Mission visited Buenos Aires recently.  The mission concluded on June 27th.  And this mission was part of the First Review under the program under the new $20 billion EFF program.  Discussions for the First Review continue, and they remain very productive. 

    What I can also add is that the program, as we’ve said before, it continues to deliver positive results.  The transition to a more robust FX regime has been smooth.  The disinflation process has resumed.  The economy continues to expand.  High-frequency indicators suggest that poverty is on a downward trend in Argentina.  Argentina has also reaccessed international capital markets for the first time in seven years.  And all of this progress, of course, under the program, is being underpinned by appropriately tight fiscal and monetary policies.

    Discussions now are focused on policies to sustain the stabilization gains, including by continuing to rebuild buffers to address risks from a more complex external backdrop.  Both the IMF Staff and the Argentine authorities are closely engaged on these issues, and it reflects the ongoing collaboration that we have with the authorities as well as a shared commitment to the success of the program. 

    On some of the more specific questions with respect to targets under the program and the potential for waivers, at this stage, given that the discussions are ongoing, I’m not going to speculate on the potential for waivers or the outcome of those discussions.  But we will, of course, keep you updated in due course.

    On the broader question of reserve accumulation, what I can add is that, as I mentioned, Staff and the authorities do have a shared commitment to the success of the program, which I noted.  But I can add that this, of course, includes a shared recognition of the need to continue to build buffers against external risks.  We’re closely engaged with the authorities on the issue. 

    On the question of YPF, we’re obviously paying close attention, monitoring this situation.  However, as a matter of policy, we don’t comment on legal matters involving our member countries, and that includes this IMF case. 

    I need to apologize because a question was asked in the last round which I did not answer.  So, I’m going to repeat the question, and then I’m going to answer it.  The question is the U.S. is one of South Asia’s biggest trading partners and countries are racing to strike deals.  President Trump already signaled a deal with India.  Given this uncertainty around it, will the Fund be looking to change targets or revisit financing?  So here I think, they were asking really about program countries, and they mentioned Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and one other country. 

    So, what I can say on this one is that in all program countries, in all program contexts, the reason why we have reviews during the program is there’s a backward-looking part to the review, which is to assess whether the country has complied with the targets and the commitments that they have made.  But the other part is what we call a forward-looking part.  And that part really looks at what has happened to the economy, globally, what are the trends, and how should those be taken into account going forward.  So to the extent that uncertainty or changes in trading relations or in the trading environment has an effect on the economy, which is significant enough to affect the program, of course, those will be taken into account.  But it will be done on a case-by-case basis, tailored to the specific circumstances of every program country that we have. 

    Let’s continue then.   

    QUESTIONER: Do you know when the Board will meet? 

    MS. KOZACK: Ah, I apologize. So, with respect to the First Review, just in terms of the process, first, the discussions between the team and the authorities will need to come to a conclusion, and a Staff-Level Agreement would need to be reached.  And once that happens, we will submit the documentation to our Board for review.  So, I don’t yet have a timing for the Board meeting, but we will, of course, keep you informed as the discussions continue.

    MS. KOZACK: I’m not going to speculate at all. I want to give time, of course, for the authorities and the team to complete the discussions, and we will abide by our process, the first step of which is a Staff-Level Agreement, and then we will submit the documents for consideration by the Executive Board. 

    QUESTIONER: Can I have a short follow-up? Do you expect Minister Caputo in the upcoming days in Washington D.C.?

    MS. KOZACK: So, what I can say is that the discussions are continuing. There is a technical team here in Washington to have those discussions. But it’s a technical team. 

    MS. KOZACK: All right, let me go online.

    QUESTIONER: I have a couple of questions on Egypt specifically. The first is we all in Egypt were expecting the Fifth Review to be completed before the end of fiscal year, which ends by end of June.  So, could you please update us on the ongoing negotiations regarding the Fifth Review?  My second one is on the RSF financing.  We want to also know an update on that. 

    MS. KOZACK: Are there other questions on Egypt.

    QUESTIONER:  I have another question on Egypt.  So, what are the current points of contention that delayed this disbursement of the fifth tranche?  And do you think there is any room to extend the loan repayment due to the current challenges, especially that there were more effects that have affected Egypt recently, because of the war that happened during June?  And I have another question on Syria.  I don’t know if I could put it in now.  Maybe you can answer that later on.  How will lifting the sanctions change or expedite any program with the IMF regarding Syria? 

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, so let’s first see if there’s other questions on Egypt and I’ll answer on Egypt and then I’ll turn to Syria.

    QUESTIONER: I just want to add to what my colleagues said before whether you’re able to confirm or say any more about reports recently that the Fifth and Sixth Reviews will be combined into one review that would then take place in September. 

    MS. KOZACK: Anyone else on Egypt?   

    So, on Egypt, an IMF team, as you know, visited Cairo in May, from May 6th to 18th, for discussions with the Egyptian authorities.  The discussions were productive.  Egypt continues to make progress under its macroeconomic reform program.  And we can say that there’s been notable improvements in inflation and in the level of foreign exchange reserves, which have increased.

    To move further and to really safeguard macroeconomic stability in Egypt and to bolster the country’s resilience to shocks, it is essential to deepen reforms, and this is particularly important to reduce the state footprint in the economy, level the playing field, and improve the business environment.  Some of the key policies that are under discussion and key priorities are advancing the state ownership policy and asset diversification program in sectors where the state has committed to withdraw.  These steps are critical to really enabling the private sector to drive stronger and more sustainable growth in Egypt.  And our commitment, of course, is strong to Egypt.  We’re committed to supporting Egypt in building this resilience and in fostering growth. 

    With respect to the reviews, the discussions suggest that more time is needed to finalize the key policy measures, particularly related to the state’s role in the economy and to ensure that the critical objectives of the program, the authority’s economic reform program, can be met.  Our Staff team is continuing to work with the authorities on this goal.  And for that reason, the Fifth and Sixth Reviews under the EFF will be combined.  And the idea is for them to be combined into a discussion or a combined review for the fall.  So that’s the rationale for combining the reviews.  More time [is] needed. 

    And I think there was also a question on Egypt’s RSF and what I can say on thisis that as the RSF was approved recently for Egypt and as per the schedule approved by the board, the First Review of the RSF is aligned with the Sixth Review under the EFF. 

    QUESTIONER: Julie, would you allow me to follow up on something they’ve just said? 

    So, you said that the Fifth and the Sixth Review will be combined for the fall.  Does this mean that the Fifth and the Sixth disbursements will be together?  Could this be possible? Is this on the table? 

    MS. KOZACK: So, given that the discussions are still underway, a part of the discussions that will, of course, take place around combining the reviews will be to look at what are Egypt’s financing needs and around that, what should be the size of the disbursement around the combined Fifth and Sixth Review. So that’s all part of the discussions, the ongoing discussions that are taking place.  So, it would be premature for me to speculate at this stage. 

    Okay, you had a question on Syria.  So, let me see if anyone else has a question on Syria.  I don’t see anyone else on Syria. 

    So, turning to Syria. So, as I think you know, an IMF team visited Syria from June 1st to 5th.  And this was the first visit of an IMF team to Syria since 2009.  The team was in Syria to assess the economic and financial conditions in Syria and discuss with the authorities their economic policy and capacity-building priorities.  And all of this, of course, is to support the recovery of the Syrian economy. 

    As we’ve discussed here before, Syria faces enormous challenges following years of conflict that have caused, you know, immense human suffering.  And the conflict has reduced the economy to a fraction of its former size.  The lifting of sanctions can help facilitate Syria’s rehabilitation by supporting its reintegration into the global economy.  And as part of our ongoing engagement with the Syrian authorities, we will, as needed, of course, you know, assess the implications of the lifting of sanctions on the Syrian economy. 

    So, again, that’s going to be part of the work of the team as they are putting together a picture of the Syrian economy, but also of the very important and deep capacity development needs that the Syrian authorities will have. 

    QUESTIONER: I just wanted to follow up on a colleague’s follow-up.  The comments that you made a few minutes ago regarding Argentina having a technical team in Washington for discussions with the IMF.  I just wanted to confirm my understanding.  Were you saying that they have a — that there is currently a technical team in Washington, and can you tell us anything more about the dates of the meetings or anything beyond that technical team being currently in Washington, if I understood you correctly? 

    MS. KOZACK: So, I think all I can add to that is that I can confirm that there is a technical delegation in Washington, you know, from Argentina in Washington, visiting headquarters this week. And the goal is to advance discussions on the First Review under the program.  I hope that clarifies. 

    QUESTIONER: Yes, I wanted to ask you on Mozambique — sorry, just pulling up my note here — which was that –excuse me.  Regarding Mozambique, is it feasible to agree to a new program with Mozambique by year-end, as the president of that country is hoping, or do you have anything on any of the hurdles and the process there?  Thank you. 

    MS. KOZACK: I’m sort of looking. I don’t have anything off-hand in terms of an update on Mozambique. So, we’ll come back to you separately on Mozambique.  I’m sorry about that. 

    All right, let’s go online.  You had a question?

    QUESTIONER: I have a quick follow-up on Ukraine and then another one.  On Ukraine, when you are talking about combining the Ninth and Tenth Reviews, what would that mean also in terms of the disbursement?  But you know, in the case of Egypt, you’re giving the authorities more time to execute reviews.  What is the reason for combining them in the case of Ukraine? 

    And then, how many more reviews, I just don’t remember, how many more reviews were planned to get to the $15.5 billion?  So, we’ve got $10.6 billion dispersed already.  Like, how much is left to go, and how much of that notionally would come in the Ninth and Tenth Reviews?

    And then separately, I just want to come back to the trade question and perhaps broaden it out a little bit.  So, as the United States under the administration of Donald Trump is imposing quite significant tariffs on many, if not all, of its trading partners, that raises costs, obvious for everyone.  At the same time, the government has also been reducing, significantly slashing its foreign aid for development systems.  And you know, obviously, there’s a lot of concern about that.  We’ve seen some reports recently from the Lancet that millions of people could die as a result of this money not being in — in those countries.  That has follow-on consequences for all the countries whose, you know, economies you’re guiding and accompanying.  And I just want to know if you — if you’ve done a sort of broader analysis about this trade environment.  For many years, you have been warning about trade restrictions, and we are now fully into a period where trade restrictions seem to be increasing.  So, just asking a broad question.

    And then finally, we do have the G20 meeting coming up. The United States has not participated in the initial G20 meetings this year.  What would it mean to the organization if the United States also chose to skip this July meeting?  What is the importance of that as in that body?

    QUESTIONER: So, on Ukraine, what I can say is the Ninth Review, as I said, we expect it to take place by the end of the year and it is going to combine the previously envisaged Ninth Review, which was scheduled for the fall, and the Tenth Review, which we expected to take place in the fourth quarter.  And the team is going to remain closely engaged with Ukraine over this period.  I don’t have more details on the reason that the reviews are being combined, but I believe the Staff Report has been published for Ukraine.  And so, I would refer you to that document, which should have the relevant details.

    On your broader question about the trade environment and the aid environment.  I think if you think about it, or if we look back at it, you know, what has the IMF been saying?  If we look back to the Spring Meetings, one of the main messages from the Managing Director’s Curtain Raiser and her global policy agenda, as well as our broader messages, was that it is very important for countries to, we were saying, kind of, or the Managing Director was saying to get their own house in order.  So, there’s — and the message really behind that was that yes, the trade environment is shifting, and we see very significant shifts in the trade environment. 

    But there is a lot that countries can and need to do domestically related to their own reforms to build their own resilience.  There’s a lot that countries can do in terms of policy, and that really relates in many countries to fiscal policy, which is about, because we’ve been talking about a low-growth, high-debt environment for some time.  High uncertainty and weaker trade affects that environment.  But the fact still remains that we have a low-growth and high-debt environment globally.  So, for countries, that means taking measures to reduce the high debt problem. 

    That’s on the fiscal side.  And that is a general piece of policy advice that we’ve given to many, many countries.  And on the growth side, we are strongly encouraging countries to take measures to boost productivity and medium-term growth.  So, this is really at the crux of our policy advice to countries. 

    And on the aid side, what we’ve been warning about for quite some time is that official development assistance, in general, has been on a declining downward trend for many, many years.  And we see the impact of the decline in official development assistance in low-income countries.  So, this is a broad trend that we observe globally across many countries, affecting low-income countries.  But what it means for those countries is that they are going to have to both work with the IMF, other MDBs [multinational development banks], [and] donors who are still providing financing.  But most importantly, those countries are going to need to look for ways to mobilize domestic resources so that they can fund many of their own development needs. 

    And so this is also part of, we call it a three-pillar approach where we look at the need for domestic reforms in countries, the need for assistance and stepped-up  assistance from multilateral organizations to provide needed financing for countries, and of course ways to ultimately reduce the cost of financing and also looking to mobilize private financing for countries.  So, there is a very rich and large agenda on this broad topic that we have been discussing for quite some time.

    And on the G20, this is really a matter, I think, for the G20 presidency and for the — for the United States. 

    Let me look online. 

    QUESTIONER: So, I have like two questions regarding the finalizing the four-year Extended Credit Facility that is linked between the International Monetary Fund and the government of Ethiopia.  So again, the IMF Staff has been paying a review visit to Ethiopia many times to review Ethiopia’s section and disperse the money.  In this point, I have two questions.  The first one is how does the IMF evaluate Ethiopia’s move and current achievement towards liberalizing its economy?  And the second one is what are the parameters to indicate whether the mission is going on the right track, as the people of the country are facing heavy life burden?

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, thank you. Other questions on Ethiopia? 

    QUESTIONER: I noted [that] in the Third Review that came out late last night that most of the macroeconomic forecasts are looking up compared to the second.  Apart from public debt-to-GDP, I can’t really figure out why.  So, could you maybe walk me through that?  And I have a separate question on Lebanon.  Maybe we’ll take that later.

    MS. KOZACK: Anything else on Ethiopia? All right. So, with respect to Ethiopia, the IMF Executive Board approved the 2025 Article IV consultation and the Third Review under the ECF on July 2nd, and that enabled Ethiopia to access about U.S. $260 million. 

    What I can add is that the completion of the review reflects both the assessment of the Staff and our Executive Board that Ethiopia’s strong adherence to the program and the program goals, and it also reflects continued confidence in the government’s reform agenda.  The Ethiopian authorities have made significant progress in implementing some really important and fundamental reforms under the ECF.  Key economic indicators such as inflation, fiscal balance, and external balance are all showing signs of stabilization.  And that suggests that the country and the economy are kind of progressing on the right track. 

    With respect to your more detailed question, we will have to come back to you bilaterally.  I’m not sure exactly why.  I don’t know off the top of my head the answer to that, but we will come back to you on that one. 

    I know there’s a few more questions online, so let’s try to get to them. 

    QUESTIONER: Hi, good morning.  Sorry.  So, I wanted to — my question is regarding what is going on in Kenya.  President Ruto announced that he planned to privatize some of the public assets.  And I was wondering if you could provide any views from the IMF?  I also wanted to ask you, next week, President Donald Trump will be meeting with several African leaders.  Some of those countries have critical minerals.  So perhaps the meeting we resolve around critical minerals.  As you know, a lot of countries, the U.S., China, as well as European nations, are very interested in African critical minerals.  So, I was wondering if you could share your view, giving what has happened in the past and the corruption around critical minerals and the mismanagement of the Fund received from the minerals.  What is the IMF’s recommendation to nations across the African continent right now, on how to —

    MS. KOZACK: I think we lost you.

    MS. KOZACK: Okay, so, we lost you for a bit in the middle, but I think I got the gist of your question. So, let me now ask, does anyone else have a question on Kenya? 

    QUESTIONER: Yeah, I do.  Hello? 

    MS. KOZACK: Yes, please go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: I wanted to ask about that Diagnostic Mission.  I know I’d asked you about it before, but now it’s completed, and does the IMF want that report to be made public, or does it expect it to be made public?  I have a question on Barbados, too, but I’ll wait on that one. 

    MS. KOZACK: All right, so let me start with Kenya. So, on Kenya, maybe just to remind everyone where we are on Kenya. Our Staff team is actively engaged with the authorities on recent developments.  As you know, we’ve been discussing with them the timing of the next Article IV Mission and also their request for a new program. 

    And I will come to your question on the Government Diagnostics Mission in just a minute. 

    So, a big part of our work with Kenya now is this Government Diagnostics Mission.  The Technical Mission just concluded on June 30th, and they released a short press release, which was just issued.  This was kind of the first step of a process that we expect to take until the end of the year.  So, collaboration on government diagnostics.  It will continue over the next several months.  A draft diagnostic assessment report is expected to be shared with the Kenyan authorities before the end of the year.  So that first report will go to the authorities, and then the report will be published once consent is received from the authorities.  So that is the process that we’ll have.  But it will take quite some time to get that report prepared and ready.  So, kind of hold this space.  We’ll continue to work on it. 

    And then on your question on Kenya, what I can say is that we look forward to learning more details about the President’s statement that was made yesterday.  What I can say more broadly is that our engagement with the Kenyan authorities on privatization has been focused on establishing a solid framework to ensure that transparency and good governance, with the aim to unlock potential benefits. 

    So again, our discussions have very much focused on having a framework, and if done well, we see potential benefits that could include, for example, increased efficiency of improved private investment, reducing the fiscal burden, and improving service delivery. 

    On your second question, I think the way I will approach it is to say that, and Kenya is an example of this in some ways, with this governance Diagnostic Mission that, of course, at the IMF, we are concerned about not only in Africa, but in all countries where it’s a — where corruption affects economic activity, we are concerned about governance.  We have a strong governance program, and it includes a Government Diagnostic Mission.  Government diagnostic assessments allow our experts to go and do a deep assessment of governance in a country, look at where governance weaknesses exist, and to recommend a path forward to improve governance and reduce corruption over time. 

    We recognize that in many of our member countries, governance and corruption issues do have a significant impact on economic activity, and we are very committed to working with our member countries to improve governance as an important part of enabling countries to achieve stronger growth and better livelihoods for their people. 

    And let me go — I have Jermine.  You haven’t had a question yet, and I think we are over time.  So,  I am going to wrap up with you as the last question. 

    QUESTIONER: I have two questions pertaining to the Caribbean region, more specifically to the Citizenship by Investment programs.  What’s IMF’s position regarding the decisions made by St. Kitts and Nevis and other territories to establish a regulatory body to oversee these programs? 

    MS. KOZACK: Go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: Regarding the looming threat of visa waivers by the Schengen region, the European Union, regarding these particular passport holders, knowing that the CBI programs are the pillars of the economies of the region. 

    MS. KOZACK: So, what I can say on the CBI, the citizenship by investment programs, is that our position has been that we generally advocate for common CBI program standards across the region, including in the area of transparency. And this was noted in our 2024 Regional Consultation Report on the ECCU. 

    And with respect to specific countries such as Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, and St. Lucia, for those specific countries, we have provided country-specific information, and the information on those can be found in the respective Article IV reports for those countries. 

    With respect to the question on the Schengen region, this is really a matter between the individual countries in the Caribbean and the countries in the Schengen region.  It’s not really a matter for the IMF. 

    So, with that, given that we’ve taken more time than we normally allocate, I want to thank everyone very much for your participation today.  As a reminder, the briefing is embargoed until 11:00 A.M. Eastern Time in the United States.  As always, a transcript will be made later — available later on IMF.org.  And of course, in case of any clarifications, additional queries, if you didn’t get a chance to ask your questions today, please do be in contact with my colleagues at media@imf.org, and we will be sure to give you a response.  I wish you all a wonderful day and a wonderful long weekend, and I look forward to seeing you all next time.  Thanks very much.  

    *  *  *  *  *

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Rahim Kanani

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/07/03/tr-070325-com-regular-press-briefing-july-3-2025

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI: Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. Announces Date for Q2 2025 Operating Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DALLAS, July 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (NASDAQ: TCBI), the parent company of Texas Capital Bank, today announced that it expects to issue financial results for the second quarter of 2025 before market on Thursday, July 17, 2025. Executive management will host a conference call and webcast to discuss second quarter 2025 operating results on Thursday, July 17, 2025, at 9:00 a.m. EDT.

    Participants may pre-register for the call by visiting https://www.netroadshow.com/events/login?show=3539d7ee&confId=85196 and will receive a unique PIN number to be used when dialing in for the call for immediate access.

    Alternatively, participants may call 833.470.1428 and use the access code 718573 at least fifteen minutes prior to the call to join through an operator.

    The live webcast can be found at https://events.q4inc.com/attendee/201990716. Corresponding presentation slides can be accessed on the company’s investor website at http://investors.texascapitalbank.com.

    An audio replay will be available one hour after the conclusion of the call on the company’s investor website.

    ABOUT TEXAS CAPITAL BANCSHARES, INC.
    Texas Capital Bancshares, Inc. (NASDAQ®: TCBI), a member of the Russell 2000® Index and the S&P MidCap 400®, is the parent company of Texas Capital Bank (“TCB”). Texas Capital is the collective brand name for TCB and its separate, non-bank affiliates and wholly-owned subsidiaries. Texas Capital is a full-service financial services firm that delivers customized solutions to businesses, entrepreneurs and individual customers. Founded in 1998, the institution is headquartered in Dallas with offices in Austin, Houston, San Antonio and Fort Worth, and has built a network of clients across the country. With the ability to service clients through their entire lifecycles, Texas Capital has established commercial banking, consumer banking, investment banking and wealth management capabilities. All services are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and service terms. Deposit and lending products and services are offered by TCB. For deposit products, member FDIC. For more information, please visit www.texascapital.com.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Preferred Bank Announces 2025 Second Quarter Earnings Release and Conference Call

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, July 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Preferred Bank (NASDAQ: PFBC), one of the larger independent commercial banks in California, today announced plans to release its financial results for the second quarter ended June 30, 2025 before the open of market on Monday, July 21, 2025. That same day, management will host a conference call at 2:00 p.m. Eastern (11:00 a.m. Pacific). The call will be simultaneously broadcast over the Internet.

    Interested participants and investors may access the conference call by dialing 888-243-4451 (domestic) or
    412-542-4135 (international) and referencing “Preferred Bank.” There will also be a live webcast of the call available at the Investor Relations section of Preferred Bank’s website at www.preferredbank.com.

    Preferred Bank’s Chairman and CEO Li Yu, President and Chief Operating Officer Wellington Chen, Chief Financial Officer Edward J. Czajka, Chief Credit Officer Nick Pi and Deputy Chief Operating Officer Johnny Hsu will discuss Preferred Bank’s financial results, business highlights and outlook. After the live webcast, a replay will be available at the Investor Relations section of Preferred Bank’s website. A replay of the call will also be available at 877-344-7529 (domestic) or 412-317-0088 (international) through July 28, 2025; the passcode is 9171084.

    About Preferred Bank

    Preferred Bank is one of the larger independent commercial banks headquartered in California. The Bank is chartered by the State of California, and its deposits are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or FDIC, to the maximum extent permitted by law. The Bank conducts its banking business from its main office in Los Angeles, California, and through twelve full-service branch banking offices in the California cities of Alhambra, Century City, City of Industry, Torrance, Arcadia, Irvine (2 branches), Diamond Bar, Pico Rivera, Tarzana and San Francisco (2 branches) and two branches in New York (Flushing and Manhattan) and one branch in the Houston suburb of Sugar Land, Texas. Additionally, the Bank operates a Loan Production Office in Sunnyvale, California. Preferred Bank offers a broad range of deposit and loan products and services to both commercial and consumer customers. The Bank provides personalized deposit services as well as real estate finance, commercial loans and trade finance to small and mid-sized businesses, entrepreneurs, real estate developers, professionals and high net worth individuals. Although originally founded as a Chinese-American Bank, Preferred Bank now derives most of its customers from the diversified mainstream market but does continue to benefit from the significant migration to California of ethnic Chinese from China and other areas of East Asia.

    AT THE COMPANY: AT FINANCIAL PROFILES:
    Edward J. Czajka Jeffrey Haas
    Executive Vice President General Information
    Chief Financial Officer (310) 622-8240
    (213) 891-1188 PFBC@finprofiles.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Islamic Republic of Mauritania: IMF Executive Board Completes Fourth Reviews of the Extended Arrangement under the Extended Credit Facility and the Extended Fund Facility Arrangement and Third Review of the Resilience and Sustainability Facility Arrangement

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    July 3, 2025

    • The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Fourth Reviews of Mauritania’s Extended Credit Facility and the Extended Fund Facility arrangements, and the Third Review under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility Arrangement. The decisions allow for an immediate disbursement of SDR 36.16 million (about US$ [49.2] million).
    • Rule-based fiscal consolidation, supported by robust tax collection, and flexibilization of the exchange rate —alongside ongoing reforms to monetary operations and banking supervision—have strengthened the Mauritanian economy resilience, amid heightened global uncertainties and regional security risks.
    • A strong reform agenda, including the recent adoption by the parliament of key anti-corruption laws, should bolster governance and help promote private sector investments.

    Washington, DC: The IMF Executive Board completed today the Fourth Reviews under the 42‑month blended Extended Credit Facility arrangement (ECF) and the Extended Fund Facility arrangement (EFF), and the Third Review under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility arrangement (RSF). The ECF/EFF were approved by the IMF Executive Board in January 2023 (see PR 23/15) and the RSF was approved in December 2023 (see PR23/465). The completion of the reviews allows for the immediate disbursement of SDR 36.16 million (about US$ 49.8 million) of which SDR 6.44 million (about US$ 8.9 million) under the ECF/EFF and SDR 29.72 million (about US$ 40.9 million) under the RSF, bringing the cumulative disbursements to SDR 125.9 million (about US$ 166.5 million).

    The Mauritanian economy has proven resilient, notwithstanding heightened global uncertainty and increasing regional security risks, with economic activity estimated to have decelerated slightly to 5.2 percent in 2024. Following a further deceleration to 4.0 percent in 2025, growth is expected to remain favorable in the medium term, supported by the government infrastructure drive and by private investment. Inflation is expected to remain contained within the Central Bank’s target. The reforms in the areas of governance, monetary and financial sector, investment policies, and vocational training are expected to support efforts to diversify the economy away from the extractive industries.

    Program performance has been strong, with all end-December 2024 quantitative targets met, and most of the structural benchmarks under the ECF/EFF implemented. Reforms under the RSF are also progressing.

    At the conclusion of the Executive Board’s discussion, Mr. Okamura, Deputy Managing Director and Chair stated:

    “Program performance under the Extended Credit Facility (ECF) and Extended Fund Facility (EFF) arrangements has been strong. Supported by the authorities’ prudent and well-calibrated policies, Mauritania’s economy continued to grow in 2024, albeit at a slower pace than in 2023, while inflation decreased. The fiscal performance, including the implementation of a fiscal anchor, is supporting the authorities’ medium-term goal of stabilizing debt. The current account widened in 2024, but international reserves remained at comfortable levels.”

    “The authorities’ prudent fiscal stance, underpinned by the fiscal anchor, helps insulate public spending from commodity price volatility and contributes to stabilizing debt. Continuing with this prudent fiscal policy, and complementing it with reforms in tax policy and administration, would create fiscal space for social spending and public investment while safeguarding the credibility of the medium-term budget framework.”

    “With inflation easing, the Central Bank of Mauritania has begun lowering interest rates. Effective liquidity management, supported by continued development of monetary policy instruments, helps anchor inflation expectations while fostering the development of domestic debt markets. Continued reforms to deepen the foreign exchange market would enhance exchange rate flexibility and resilience to external shocks. Strengthening the banking sector’s resilience requires close monitoring of financial sector trends and consistent enforcement of prudential regulations.”

    “Decisive implementation of structural reforms is essential to support higher, more inclusive and diversified, private-sector-led growth. Priorities include operationalizing recent governance reforms, strengthening accountability and transparency, developing human capital, promoting financial inclusion, and enhancing the business climate.”

    “Effective implementation of the ECF and EFF arrangements, along with intensified reform efforts under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility, will help Mauritania address its medium- and long-term challenges and secure additional financing. These programs aim to maintain adequate international reserves, strengthen macroeconomic policy frameworks, and promote sustainable growth, thereby supporting the country’s climate agenda, human capital development, and poverty reduction.”

    Mauritania: Selected Economic Indicators, 2020–25

    2020

    2021

    2022

    2023

    2024

    2025

    3rd Review

    Est.

    Projections

    National accounts and prices

    (Annual change in percent)

    Real GDP 

    -0.4

    0.7

    6.8

    6.5

    4.6

    5.2

    4.0

    Real extractive GDP

    7.1

    -19.2

    18.3

    9.4

    -0.5

    3.2

    -1.0

    Real non-extractive GDP

    -1.7

    6.0

    3.8

    5.9

    5.7

    5.6

    5.1

    Consumer prices (end of period)

    1.8

    5.7

    11.0

    1.6

    3.0

    1.5

    3.5

    Central government operations

    (in percent of nonextractive GDP, unless otherwise indicated)

    Revenues and grants

    20.8

    22.7

    25.0

    22.5

    24.1

    22.5

    25.6

    Nonextractive

    16.6

    16.2

    18.2

    17.0

    18.9

    18.1

    19.9

    Taxes

    10.9

    11.7

    13.4

    12.6

    14.3

    14.1

    15.5

    Extractive

    2.1

    4.2

    5.1

    3.7

    3.4

    3.2

    3.8

    Expenditure and net lending

    18.5

    20.8

    28.7

    25.0

    25.4

    23.9

    26.1

       Of which: Current

    12.0

    13.0

    17.2

    16.4

    15.5

    15.1

    14.4

       Capital

    6.6

    7.8

    11.5

    8.7

    9.8

    8.8

    11.7

    Primary balance (excl. grants)

    1.2

    0.5

    -4.5

    -3.3

    -2.1

    -1.6

    -1.5

    Overall balance (in percent of GDP)

    2.2

    1.9

    -3.7

    -2.5

    -1.2

    -1.4

    -0.5

    Public sector debt (in percent of GDP)

    56.5

    52.4

    48.5

    46.4

    44.3

    42.1

    41.2

    External sector

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Current account balance (in percent of GDP)

    -6.8

    -8.6

    -14.9

    -8.8

    -7.7

    -9.5

    -6.2

    Excl. externally financed extractive capital goods imports

    2.2

    1.0

    -0.8

    -0.3

    -1.4

    -1.4

    -0.2

    Gross official reserves (in millions of US$, eop)

    1,542

    2,347

    1,877

    2,032

    2,039

    1,921

    1846

    In months of prospective non-extractive imports

    6.7

    8.2

    6.2

    6.4

    6.5

    6.4

    5.9

    External public debt (in millions of US$)

    4,113

    4,204

    3,970

    3,959

    3921

    3,980

    4050

    In percent of GDP

    49.1

    45.8

    42.3

    40.0

    36.3

    36.3

    34.5

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Mayada Ghazala

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/07/03/pr25240-mauritania-imf-comp-4th-rev-of-ext-arr-under-ecf-and-eff-arr-and-3rd-rev-of-rsf-arr

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  • MIL-OSI: USCB Financial Holdings, Inc. To Announce Second Quarter 2025 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MIAMI, July 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — USCB FINANCIAL HOLDINGS, INC. (the “Company”) (NASDAQ: USCB) will report financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2025 after the market closes on Thursday, July 24, 2025.

    A conference call to discuss quarterly results will also be held with Chairman, President, and CEO, Luis de la Aguilera, Chief Financial Officer, Robert Anderson, and Chief Credit Officer, William Turner, details which are provided below.

    Live Conference Call and Audio Webcast

    Date: Friday, July 25, 2025
    Time: 11:00am Eastern Time
    Dial-in: (833) 816-1416 (toll free in the U.S.)
    Passcode: USCB Financial Holdings Call

    A live audio webcast of the call will be available with the press release and slides on the investor relations page of the Company’s website at https://investors.uscenturybank.com/. Please allow extra time prior to the call to visit the site and download the streaming media software required to listen to the internet broadcast.

    A replay of the webcast will be archived on the investor relations page shortly after the conference call has ended.

    About USCB Financial Holdings, Inc.

    USCB Financial Holdings, Inc. is the bank holding company for U.S. Century Bank. Established in 2002, U.S. Century Bank is one of the largest community banks headquartered in Miami, and one of the largest community banks in the state of Florida. U.S. Century Bank is rated 5-Stars by BauerFinancial, the nation’s leading independent bank rating firm. U.S. Century Bank offers customers a wide range of financial products and services and supports numerous community organizations, including the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, the South Florida Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and ChamberSouth. For more information or to find a U.S. Century Bank banking center near you, please call (305) 715-5200 or visit www.uscentury.com.

    Contacts:

    Investor Relations
    InvestorRelations@uscentury.com 

    Media Relations
    Martha Guerra-Kattou
    MGuerra@uscentury.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: USCB Financial Holdings, Inc. To Announce Second Quarter 2025 Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MIAMI, July 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — USCB FINANCIAL HOLDINGS, INC. (the “Company”) (NASDAQ: USCB) will report financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2025 after the market closes on Thursday, July 24, 2025.

    A conference call to discuss quarterly results will also be held with Chairman, President, and CEO, Luis de la Aguilera, Chief Financial Officer, Robert Anderson, and Chief Credit Officer, William Turner, details which are provided below.

    Live Conference Call and Audio Webcast

    Date: Friday, July 25, 2025
    Time: 11:00am Eastern Time
    Dial-in: (833) 816-1416 (toll free in the U.S.)
    Passcode: USCB Financial Holdings Call

    A live audio webcast of the call will be available with the press release and slides on the investor relations page of the Company’s website at https://investors.uscenturybank.com/. Please allow extra time prior to the call to visit the site and download the streaming media software required to listen to the internet broadcast.

    A replay of the webcast will be archived on the investor relations page shortly after the conference call has ended.

    About USCB Financial Holdings, Inc.

    USCB Financial Holdings, Inc. is the bank holding company for U.S. Century Bank. Established in 2002, U.S. Century Bank is one of the largest community banks headquartered in Miami, and one of the largest community banks in the state of Florida. U.S. Century Bank is rated 5-Stars by BauerFinancial, the nation’s leading independent bank rating firm. U.S. Century Bank offers customers a wide range of financial products and services and supports numerous community organizations, including the Greater Miami Chamber of Commerce, the South Florida Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, and ChamberSouth. For more information or to find a U.S. Century Bank banking center near you, please call (305) 715-5200 or visit www.uscentury.com.

    Contacts:

    Investor Relations
    InvestorRelations@uscentury.com 

    Media Relations
    Martha Guerra-Kattou
    MGuerra@uscentury.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Bahrain Sees Robust Pipeline of Financial Institutions: 16 New Financial Institutions Licensed, 52 in Progress Surge of new financial institutions Reinforces Bahrain’s Regional Financial Hub Status

    Source: Central Bank of Bahrain

    Bahrain Sees Robust Pipeline of Financial Institutions: 16 New Financial Institutions Licensed, 52 in Progress Surge of new financial institutions Reinforces Bahrain’s Regional Financial Hub Status

    Published on 3 July 2025

    Manama, Bahrain – 3 July 2025: The Central Bank of Bahrain (CBB) has reported a significant increase in financial institution licensing, with 16 new financial firms approved and 52 additional applications underway from early 2024 through mid-2025.

    This surge highlights Bahrain’s growing appeal as a destination for digital-first financial services, with nearly 75% of the 68 applications coming from international applicants. The influx is expected to create over 850 jobs initially, with more opportunities anticipated as newly licensed firms scale their operations.

    The license applications span a diverse range of categories, including wholesale banks, payments, investment services, insurance, and crypto-asset services. This diverse portfolio reasserts Bahrain as a hub for financial innovation and solidifies its reputation as a competitive launchpad for regional and international firms.

    Notably, 16 applicants have been licensed during this period, including two wholesale banks, with additional bank license applications currently in the pipeline. The CBB continues to work closely with the remaining applicants to support them in meeting the licensing requirements.

    Commenting on this, H.E. Khalid Humaidan, Governor of the Central Bank of Bahrain said, “This increase in licensing applications reflects the CBB’s dual mandate of ensuring stability while fostering growth, and underscores the strength of our regulatory framework and the Kingdom’s unique ability to attract innovation without compromising financial stability. This achievement is the result of close collaboration with our partners across government and industry, and reaffirms Bahrain’s role as a gateway for regional and global growth in financial services.”

    Central to this success is the CBB’s unified regulatory model, which provides licensees with a single point of contact across all financial sub-sectors. This model eliminates conflicting requirements from multiple authorities, streamlines compliance, and offers consistent oversight.

    The announcement was made during the FS Horizons: Doubling Down on Digital event, hosted in partnership with the Bahrain Economic Development Board, where industry leaders gathered to highlight Bahrain’s advancements in digital banking, payments infrastructure, and talent development.

    Share this

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  • MIL-OSI: Triumph Announces Schedule for Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Release and Conference Call

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DALLAS, July 03, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Triumph Financial, Inc. (Nasdaq: TFIN) today announced that it expects to release its second quarter financial results and management commentary after the market closes on Wednesday, July 16, 2025. Upon filing, the financial results and commentary will be available on the Company’s IR website at ir.triumph.io.

    Aaron P. Graft, Vice Chairman and CEO, and Brad Voss, CFO, will review the financial results in a conference call with investors and analysts beginning at 9:30 a.m. central time on Thursday, July 17, 2025.

    The live video conference may be accessed directly through this link, https://triumph-financial-q2-2025-earnings.open-exchange.net/ or via the Company’s IR website at ir.triumph.io through the News & Events, Events & Presentations links. An archive of this video conference will subsequently be available at the same location, referenced above, on the Company’s website.

    About Triumph

    Triumph (Nasdaq: TFIN) is a financial and technology company focused on payments, factoring, intelligence and banking to modernize and simplify freight transactions. Headquartered in Dallas, Texas, its portfolio of brands includes Triumph, TBK Bank and LoadPay.    

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. Investors are cautioned that such statements are predictions and that actual events or results may differ materially. Triumph Financial’s expected financial results or other plans are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties. For a discussion of such risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements, see “Risk Factors” and the forward-looking statement disclosure contained in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 11, 2025. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date made and Triumph Financial undertakes no duty to update the information.

    Source: Triumph Financial, Inc.

    Investor Relations:
    Luke Wyse
    Executive Vice President, Head of Investor Relations
    lwyse@tfin.com
    214-365-6936

    Media Contact:
    Amanda Tavackoli
    Senior Vice President, Director of Corporate Communication
    atavackoli@tfin.com
    214-365-6930

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  • MIL-OSI Russia: Press Briefing Transcript: IMF Executive Board Completes Fourth Review of Sri Lanka’s Extended Fund Facility

    Source: IMF – News in Russian

    July 3, 2025

    PARTICIPANTS:

    Evan Papageorgiou, Mission Chief for Sri Lanka, IMF

    Martha Tesfaye Woldemichael, Resident Representative in Sri Lanka, IMF

    MODERATOR:

    Randa Elnagar, Senior Communications Officer

    *  *  *  *  * 

    Ms. Elnagar: Good morning, everyone and to those joining us from Washington and good evening to those who are joining us from Sri Lanka and Asia.
    Welcome to the press briefing on the 4th review for Sri Lanka’s Extended Fund Facility. I am Randa Elnagar of the IMF’s Communications Department. Joining me today are two speakers, Evan Papageorgiou. He’s the mission chief for Sri Lanka and Martha Tesfaye Woldemichael, IMF’s resident representative in Sri Lanka.
    To kickstart our briefing today, I would like to invite Evan to deliver his opening remarks. Then we will be taking your questions. Evan, over to you.

    Mr. Papageorgiou: Thank you, Randa. Hello everyone. Good evening to all of you in Sri Lanka and thank you for joining us today for this important press conference. My name is Evan Papageorgiou and as Randa also said, I am the IMF Mission Chief for Sri Lanka.

    I’m also joined by our Resident Representative in Colombo, Martha Woldemichael. So, I’m happy to reconnect with all of you and to tell you a bit about our latest news on Sri Lanka. So, I’d like to take a few minutes to make some introductory remarks.
    And then Martha and I will be happy to take your questions.

    OK, so today I am happy to report that on July 1st the IMF Executive Board completed two very important board meetings for Sri Lanka. First, the Executive Board granted the Sri Lankan authorities request for waivers of non observance of the. quantitative performance criterion that gave rise to non-compliant purchases and decided not to require further action in connection with the breach of obligations under Article 8, Section 5. And I will get back to this in one second to explain what this means.

    Second, the Board completed the 4th review under the Extended Fund facility for Sri Lanka, and this allows the Sri Lankan authorities to draw 315 million U.S. dollars from the IMF. Bringing the total so far to about one and three quarters of one billion .

    This funding is intended to support Sri Lanka’s ongoing economic policies and reforms, and it represents a significant milestone in the country’s efforts to durably restore macroeconomic stability.

    The performance under the program in the 4th review has been generally strong, with some implementation risks being addressed.

    There were two prior actions for this review and the authorities met both of them. The first was about restoring cost recovery electricity pricing for the remainder of 2025; and the second one was to operationalize the automatic electricity tariff adjustment mechanism. It’s important to note that all quantitative targets for the end of March 2025 were met as well with the exception of the stock of expenditure arrears, which I can say a bit more in one second, and that’s related also to the first board meeting.

    Furthermore, all structural benchmarks due by end of May 2025 were either met or implemented with a delay and which demonstrates a commendable commitment to the to the reform agenda.

    Now, as we reflect on the progress made, it is essential to recognize the significant achievements under the program and under the ambitious reform agenda. The rebound in growth in 2024 and so far in 2025 reflects a broad and strong recovery amid rising confidence among consumers and businesses. The improvement in revenue performance with a revenue to GDP ratio climbing to 13.5% in 2024 and continue to climb in 2025 from 8.2% in 2022 is a testament to the successful implementation of these reforms.

    Looking ahead, the economic outlook for Sri Lanka remains positive. We have observed that inflation in the second quarter of 2025 continues to be below the central bank inflation target, largely due to electricity and energy prices, but even there there’s good news in that it’s coming back closer to target. Additionally, Sri Lanka has signed bilateral debt restructuring agreements with Japan, France and India, bringing the debt restructuring near completion, which is critical for restoring fiscal and debt sustainability.

    Now it’s important to also note that the authorities must remain vigilant. The global economic landscape presents substantial challenges, particularly due to uncertainty surrounding global trade policies. If these risks materialize, we are committed to working closely with the Sri Lankan authorities to assess their impact and to formulate appropriate policy responses.

    Sustained revenue mobilization is critical to restoring fiscal sustainability and creating the necessary fiscal space. Strengthening tax exemption frameworks and boosting tax compliance along with enhancing Public financial management are vital steps in ensuring effective fiscal policy. There’s also a need to further improve the coverage and targeting of social support to the most vulnerable members of society.

    A smoother execution of capital spending within the fiscal envelope would help foster medium-term growth. Establishing cost recovery, electricity pricing and automatic electricity tariff adjustments are commendable and should be maintained in order to contain the fiscal risks. All these actions are essential to ensure that the energy sector remains viable and can support the country’s economic growth.

    Monetary policy must continue to prioritize price stability, supported by sustained commitment to safeguard Central Bank independence. Greater exchange rate flexibility and the gradual phasing out of administrative balance of payment measures remain critical to rebuilding external buffers and enhancing economic resilience. In addition, resolving non-performing loans, strengthening governance and oversight of state-owned banks and improving the insolvency and resolution framework are vital to reviving credit growth and supporting private sector development.

    Finally, structural reforms are crucial to unlocking Sri Lanka’s potential. The government should continue to implement governance reforms and advanced trade facilitation reforms to boost export growth and diversification of the economy.

    Now let me also take a moment to explain the first board meeting decision. So in the course of regular staff review of the budget appropriation for this year and inadvertent under reporting of data for government expenditure arrears was identified. This under reporting on the stock of arrears means that the quantitative performance criterion relating to the stock of government expenditure arrears, which had a ceiling of zero, was missed in the last three reviews and gave rise to a breach of the authority’s commitment for the provision of accurate data. We worked very closely with the authorities to provide corrected data, and the authorities have undertaken several corrected measures to report and make progress in clearing the existing arrears. The authorities also committed to improve their processes and practices aided by technical assistance that we will provide. The IMF Executive Board considered all this evidence and approved the authority’s request for a waiver of non observance of this quantitative performance criteria on arrears that was missed.

    OK, let me conclude here by commending the Sri Lankan government and Sandra.
    Bank for their sustained commitment and to the program objectives. These put the country on a path towards robust and inclusive growth. We, the IMF, remain dedicated to supporting Sri Lanka in safeguarding its hard won games and navigating the road ahead. Thank you. I will pause here and then Martha, I now look forward to your questions. Randa, back to you.

    Ms. Elnagar: Thank you. Thank you, Evan. Colleagues, I’m asking you to please put on your camera, raise your hand, identify yourself and your news organization before asking your questions. We are going to group your questions. So we’re going to take three at a time or two at a time. Just if you don’t mind, to  chance to your colleagues, we are going to take one question per person. So we’ll start please go ahead.

    QUESTIONER: Thank you. Thank you, Evan. Thank you, Randa. My question is when you mentioned about the underreporting of data, can you elaborate on what areas that the government had underreported this data and what proposals that the government has given for the government to move forward with the program on data submission.

    Ms. Elnagar: Thank you. Colleagues, I’m asking you to please mute if you’re not speaking. There is going to be an echo and please identify yourself and your organization.

    QUESTIONER: My question is the government took steps to increase the electric tariff based on IMF advice or recommendation. So currently people are under pressure due to the tax burden and the cost of living. Why are you imposing more burden on the people? Is that fair?

    QUESTIONER: My question is also linked to the previous one. It’s about the taxation. Now tax regime is one of the major areas of concern during this whole IMF process. So what what’s your assessment of the current status of Sri Lanka’s taxation and the process of whether it’s successful or whether it’s satisfied for your end.

    Ms. Elnagar: Thank you so much.

    Mr. Papageorgiou: Thank you, Randa. So first of all, on the on the inaccurate data. So let me give you a little bit more detail here. So in the course of a regular review that we as staff undertook with the authorities during going over the budget appropriation, we identified an inadvertent under reporting of of data.
    This one source of these arrears was due to the previous interest subsidy scheme for senior citizens. That was the one that ran out in end of 2022.  Now I should mention that the data part of that data that was released was also the outstanding liabilities were also published by the authorities on a separate report by the Ministry of Finance, but they were not reported to the Fund. And so this, and some other schemes that we were discussing with the authorities, alongside with some other weaknesses in the timely reporting of outstanding liabilities and by line ministries to the Ministry of Finance created a misunderstanding by the authorities on the definition of arrears under the technical memorandum of understanding of the program. So the combination of these created an under reporting on the stock of of arrears, which means that under the QPC under the Quantitative performance criterion was missed in the last three reviews. The first review, the second review and the third review, which gave rise to a breach of the authorities commitment for the provision of accurate data.

    As I mentioned also in my introductory remarks, we worked very closely with the authorities to rectify the issue, to provide the corrected data on these arrears. And the authorities have indeed undertaken several corrective measures in the interim. Since we started discussing this, they have started reporting to us the full stock of arrears that have been accumulated.

    And they have made progress in putting a plan to clear these existing areas. The authorities also committed to improving the processes and practices in keeping track of these areas going forward, and as I mentioned, we will also help with technical assistance. I should also mention, which is very relevant here, is that these are years were already being cleared. There was a lot of clarity from the side of the authorities.
    Into what was owed to whom. It’s just that it was not reported properly to the Fund under the program requirements. So, when we presented all this evidence to the Executive Board under the Managing Director’s recommendation, the board approved the authorities request for a waiver of this non-observance of this quantitative performance criterion and so this allowed the 4th review now the one that we’re talking about now to be approved. So hopefully that answers your question.

    The second question on electricity tariffs. Yes. So obviously that’s an ongoing discussion that we’ve had for you know we also discussed in the back the staff level agreement. And the cost of living is obviously a very important question, very, very important side question of this. So let me just say one important thing here. Cost reflective electricity pricing is one core part of how the utility company and the regulator PUCSL see it as appropriate and this is also adopted by the government. It’s also one of the building blocks of the IMF program. So maintaining cost recovery, electricity pricing is very important for containing the fiscal risks and supporting long term economic stability, which ensures that the utility company operates on a commercial ground and doesn’t become a burden for taxpayers, provide stable and predictable electricity pricing and so on. And all these are good outcomes. Now you know in terms of the cost of living and we know the impact that this has.

    So first of all, it’s important to understand also that there is differentiation in the pricing of electricity for different households and different levels of income. So there is already some, by consumer category in other words. So for residential customers, the tariffs are lower for small consumers and increases progressively with the.
    consumption level. Therefore, larger consumers of electricity cross subsidize smaller consumers and so the average tariff level is adjusted quarterly to ensure that this financial availability of CB. Also, gives a nod, a strong nod to the differentiation.
    But beyond that, obviously, the IMF program has provisions to protect the poor and the vulnerable. So we think that this is an appropriate course of action.

    On the taxes from the question on revenue and associated other issues. So obviously you know it’s very important that there is a revenue based fiscal consolidation. So tax revenues have risen considerably between the beginning of the program or even earlier between 2022 and 2024. In this year’s budget in our forecast as well, we target tax revenues of a little bit less than 14%, about 13.9% of GDP and a primary balance of 2.3% of GDP. So the overall fiscal deficit, the deficit that includes the interest payments has been shrinking between 2020 and 2024 in line with the program projections. So I think there is good progress and we think it’s very important to continue sustaining this reform momentum and continue building on this on this hard won gains. So I’ll pause here and I’ll give it back to you, Randa. Thank you.

    Ms. Elnagar: Thank you, Evan. Please ask your question and identify your organization. Thank you.

    QUESTIONER: Thank you. I have two questions. There’s a sentence in the staff report saying: going forward, authorities need to amend previous tax exemption framework commensurate to the economic value they provide. I saw that there’s Port City Act and STP Act you are going to amend. When you’re saying previous, is it going to change any taxes already given to companies or is it just the framework that is in existence? And another question regarding the PUCSL and the electricity, I saw that the formula is going to be changed. But also this question of cross subsidies, our cross subsidies are like very wide between industry and service, and even like it’s almost like de facto taxation kind of thing. So is there any attempt to reduce the cross subsidies and make it a more transparent Treasury subsidy instead  of
    charging various customers very wide, widely differing prices by type of industry, for example.

    Mr. Papageorgiou:  Thank you. Randa, let’s take one more question. These are two questions, so let’s take one more. Yeah.

    Ms. Elnagar: Yes.

    QUESTIONER: Thank you, Randa. Evan, my question is you mentioned governance reform that it must continue. Could you give us sort of an idea of how the IMF rates or looks at the reforms conducted so far and going forward, what are the other key areas? Or levels of reform that you say must be undertaken, particularly in view of the sort of governance, diagnostic and the sort of key sort of importance that was identified in in working on governance on corruption and things like that. Thank you.

    Ms. Elnagar: I see your hand. Evan is going to answer these questions and then we’re going to get back to you. Thank you.

    Mr. Papageorgiou: Thank you, Randa, and thank you. Why don’t I have Martha coming into the governance reform part of the question and I’ll answer the one on tax exemptions and the PUCSL and the cross subsidies. OK, so obviously, on the tax exemptions. So thank you for the question and for the clarification. So let me say one second before I answer the question; let me just say one important thing. Granting ad hoc, non-transparent and large tax exemptions in the past has created these significant issues that we have noticed, both obviously on the fiscal and the revenue, which created significant losses in foregone revenue for the government and for the Sri Lankan people but also has given rise to corruption vulnerability. And so, the reason why we think that the revision of the tax exemption frameworks is a key cornerstone because the authorities have also committed to refrain from granting tax exemptions until the new tax emption framework is updated to meet best practices, in line also with technical assistance. So, under the IMF program, we have structural benchmarks to amend the STP Act by the end of August and the Port City Act by the end of October as well as the associated regulations driving or spelling out the exemptions. And so, on the back of that there should be transparent and rules-based eligibility criteria to limit the duration of tax incentives, for example. And so, what we have asked is until then the authorities should commit to a continuous structural benchmark which requires them not to provide new exemptions to businesses based on the STP and the Port City Acts and regulations, and the authorities have agreed and have shown strong commitment to this so far now.

    The recommendation is to amend the STP and the Port City Acts going forward, so there shouldn’t be any more exemptions under the existing frameworks and going forward they should be amended and any new exemption should be given under the new frameworks, not the old ones. And it’s important to note that the tax exemption should not be the primary tool for attracting foreign investment. I think we mentioned this several times. There should be policy continuity and to reduce uncertainty by having a well-defined tax exemption framework that is going to last. On PUCSL formula. Yes, that is something that we discussed in great detail with the authorities and with the utility company PCB and PUCSL, the regulator.
    We will discuss this in greater detail in the 5th review and we’re also providing technical assistance on evaluating the formula and examining whether there’s a need for any adjustments there. There’s technical assistance that will be completed by November.  And the authorities will take a look at this. On the cross subsidies, you’re right. There is a very wide cross subsidy practice. That would be something that we could also examine obviously within the new Electricity Act and the amendment rather to the Electricity Act, but maybe scope to examine other things and we were talking to our development partners, to the World Bank, ADB and others as well as to our partners to see the scope of considering this as well. Let me pause here. I’ll pass it on to Martha for the governance reform questions.
    Thank you.

    Ms. Woldemichael: Thank you, Evan. So, I think you can say that Sri Lanka has already taken major steps in terms of strengthening governance and also advancing the anti-corruption agenda. I can mention the important milestones that were achieved when the government enacted key legislation. So, I ‘m thinking about legislation for safeguarding the independence of the central bank, for improving public financial management and also for strengthening the legal framework for anti-corruption through The Anti-Corruption Act. And as you know, in 2023 Sri Lanka became the first country in Asia to undergo the IMF’s Governance Diagnostic assessment, and some of the recommendations of this assessment were embedded in the IMF program, given how critical they are to achieve the objectives of the EFF, in terms of reducing corruption vulnerabilities. One example I can give here is the requirement to publish public procurement contracts and also the requirement to publish the list of firms that are benefiting from tax exemptions. More recently, in addition to all of these, the government published an action plan on governance reforms. So, this was end-February. It was actually a structural benchmark under the EFF program and many of the action items that are being considered in this government action plan are aligned with the recommendations of the IMF Governance Diagnostic assessment. So, for instance, enactment of the asset recovery law was a structural benchmark under the EFF program that the authorities met. For the forward-looking part to address your question, I think we would hope to see continued emphasis on improving governance. Having the government effectively implement their action plan on governance is going to be critical.
    But more broadly speaking, under the EFF program, the authorities are taking steps to strengthen the asset declaration system, as well as the tax exemptions framework that Evan mentioned as well. AML/CFT is also something they’re looking into.
    They are also prioritizing anti-corruption reforms at customs. We have a new structural benchmark that was included in the program under the 4th review that was just completed. They’re also working on strengthening procurement processes in order to reduce revenue leakages. So, I I hope this gives you an overview
    on governance. Thank you very much. Randa, over to you.

    Ms. Elnagar: Thank you, Martha. Thank you, Evan. Mindful of the time, we’re going to take the last two questions.

    QUESTIONER What at are the key milestones Sri Lanka must meet ahead of the 5th review and, second one, some key SOEs are still lost making. Is IMF satisfied with the steps taken to restructure these institutions?

    Ms. Elnagar: The last one – what are the conditions that Sri Lanka should achieve or should follow to or implement to reach the 5th review. These are the two questions and after that we’re going to wrap up. Thank you.

    Mr. Papageorgiou: The questions are very similar, so I’ll answer them together. The second question was about SOE. I couldn’t hear you very clearly, but I hope I got the gist of it. But you can let us know in the chat, maybe.

    So, milestones and criteria and conditions for the 5th review. Obviously, it’s a bit early. We just finished the 4th review. We have a little bit of time ahead of us. First, we have a staff visit to meet the authorities to discuss a lot of the upcoming issues and that will set the tone on what we will be discussing for the 5th review.
    But there is a set of standard issues that we always look at every review and the 5th review will be similar. So, we have both backward and forward-looking components in the review. In other words, we will need to assess the recent economic developments and program performance by looking at quantitative targets and structural benchmarks and then, looking ahead, we will be looking at the economic outlook together with the authorities, jointly, determine the program targets and appropriate reform measures for the period ahead.

    For the 5th review, obviously we will have to evaluate the quantitative targets such as quantitative performance criteria and indicative targets for June 2025. That will be the test period and the structure of benchmarks that are due between June 30th of this year and December 30th of this year, as well as the usual continuous structural benchmarks and quantitative targets. I think you all know what these are, but by way of example, floors and tax revenue or the primary balance or social spending and so on.

    And then on the structural front, we have illustrated and have highlighted in this reform, we have a lot of structural benchmarks on key reforms such as the repeal of SVAT (the simplified VAT), the tax exemptions framework that we discussed a little earlier about the STP and Port City, the review of the electricity tariff methodology jointly with other partners as well, and then ongoing work on SOE governances and customs. We will also assess the observance of the continuous structure benchmark on maintaining cost recovery for energy, for electricity.

    Obviously one important one will be the 2026 budget which is coming up. The discussions are coming up. This is a very, very important part of the of the program. And we will ensure that revenue and expenditure and all the targets are met in accordance to the program and also in accordance to the authorities’ targets. As obviously as Martha also mentioned, there will be more work on governance reforms, which is always very important as well as. Discussions on monetary policy and reserves and everything else I think are all well defined by now.

    On the issues of SOEs – SOEs and the governance of SOES in general – has been an important [part] and at the forefront of the program. A lot of them are in connection to resolving legacy debt and implementing cost recovery pricing for both electricity and fuel, which essentially would create a better run set of companies as well as reducing the fiscal risks from the SOE to the government, as contingent liabilities get reused. We have spoken to this in different terms, but this would mean the cost recovery pricing of energy, electricity, and fuels, containing the risk from guarantees to SOES; refraining from new FX borrowing to non-financial SOEs; and making SOES more transparent by publishing their audited financial statements of the of the 52 largest SOEs

    That will be just a general overview, but we look forward to doing more, working more, and covering more ground here. Thank you, back to you.

    Ms. Elnagar: Thank you very much, Evan, Martha, and our colleagues who participated in this call. We come to the end of our press conference. The video recording and the transcript will be posted on imf.org. And thanks to everyone for joining us today. We look forward to seeing you in the future.

    IMF Communications Department
    MEDIA RELATIONS

    PRESS OFFICER: Randa Elnagar

    Phone: +1 202 623-7100Email: MEDIA@IMF.org

    https://www.imf.org/en/News/Articles/2025/07/03/070325-press-briefing-transcript-on-the-imf-board-completion-of-sri-lankas-4th-review-for-the-eff

    MIL OSI

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Meeting of 3-5 June 2025

    Source: European Central Bank

    Account of the monetary policy meeting of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank held in Frankfurt am Main on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, 3-5 June 2025

    3 July 2025

    1. Review of financial, economic and monetary developments and policy options

    Financial market developments

    Ms Schnabel started her presentation by noting that the narrative in financial markets remained unstable. Since January 2025 market sentiment had swung from strong confidence in US exceptionalism to expectations of a global recession that had prevailed around the time of the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting on 16-17 April, and then back to investor optimism. These developments had been mirrored by sharp swings in euro area asset markets, which had now more than recovered from the shock triggered by the US tariff announcement on 2 April. On the back of these developments, market-based measures of inflation compensation had edged up across maturities since the previous monetary policy meeting. The priced-in inflation path was currently close to 2% over the medium term, with a temporary dip below 2% seen for early 2026, largely owing to energy-related base effects. Nevertheless, expectations regarding ECB monetary policy had not recovered and remained near the levels seen immediately after 2 April.

    Financial market volatility had quickly declined after the spike in early April. Stock market volatility had risen sharply in the euro area and the United States in response to the US tariff announcement on 2 April, reaching levels last seen around the time of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and the COVID-19 pandemic shock in 2020. However, compared with these shocks, volatility had receded much faster, returning to post-pandemic average levels.

    The receding volatility had been reflected in a sharp rebound in asset prices across market segments. In the euro area, risk assets had more than recovered from the heavy losses incurred after the 2 April tariff announcement. By contrast, some US market segments, notably the dollar and Treasuries, had not fully recovered from their losses. The largest price increases had been observed for bitcoin and gold.

    Two main drivers had led the recovery in euro area risk asset markets and the outperformance of euro area assets relative to US assets. The first had been the reassessment of the near-term macroeconomic outlook for the euro area since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting. Macroeconomic data for both the euro area and the United States had recently surprised on the upside, refuting the prospect of a looming recession for both regions. The forecasts from Consensus Economics for euro area real GDP growth in 2025, which had been revised down following the April tariff announcement, had gradually been revised up again, as the prospective economic impact of tariffs was currently seen as less severe than had initially been priced in. Expectations for growth in 2026 remained well above the 2025 forecasts. By contrast, expectations for growth in the United States in both 2025 and 2026 had been revised down much more sharply, suggesting that economic growth in the United States would be worse hit by tariffs than growth in the euro area.

    The second factor supporting euro area asset prices in recent months had been a growing preference among global investors for broader international diversification away from the United States. Evidence from equity funds suggested that the euro area was benefiting from global investors’ international portfolio rebalancing.

    The growing attractiveness of euro-denominated assets across market segments had been reflected in recent exchange rate developments. Since the April tariff shock, the EUR/USD exchange rate had decoupled from interest rate differentials, partly owing to a change in hedging behaviour. Historically, the euro had depreciated against the US dollar when volatility in foreign exchange markets increased. Over the past three months, however, it had appreciated against the dollar when volatility had risen, suggesting that the euro – rather than the dollar – had recently served as a safe-haven currency.

    The outperformance of euro area markets relative to other economies had been most visible in equity prices. Euro area stocks had continued to outperform not only their US peers, but also stock indices of other major economies, including the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Japan. The German DAX had led the euro area rally and had surpassed its pre-tariff levels to reach a new record high, driven by expectations of strengthening growth momentum following the announcement of the German fiscal package in March. Looking at the factors behind euro area stock market developments, a divergence could be observed between short-term and longer-term earnings growth expectations. Whereas, for the next 12 months, euro area firms’ expected earnings growth had been revised down since the tariff announcement, for the next three to five years, analysts had continued to revise earnings growth expectations up. This could be due to a combination of a short-term dampening effect from tariffs and a longer-term positive impulse from fiscal policy.

    The recovery in risk sentiment had also been visible in corporate bond markets. The spreads of high-yielding euro area non-financial corporate bonds had more than reversed the spike triggered by the April tariff announcement. This suggested that the heightened trade policy uncertainty had not had a lasting impact on the funding conditions of euro area firms. Despite comparable funding costs on the two sides of the Atlantic, when taking into account currency risk-hedging costs, US companies had increasingly turned to euro funding. This underlined the increased attractiveness of the euro.

    The resilience of euro area government bond markets had been remarkable. The spread between euro area sovereign bonds and overnight index swap (OIS) rates had narrowed visibly since the April tariff announcement. Historically, during “risk-off” periods GDP-weighted euro area government asset swap spreads had tended to widen. However, during the latest risk-off period the reaction of the GDP-weighted euro area sovereign yield curve had resembled that of the German Bund, the traditional safe haven.

    A decomposition of euro area and US OIS rates showed that, in the United States, the rise in longer-term OIS rates had been driven by a sharp increase in term premia, while expectations of policy rate cuts had declined. In the euro area, the decline in two-year OIS rates had been entirely driven by expectations of lower policy rates, while for longer-term rates the term premium had also fallen slightly. Hence, the reassessment of monetary policy expectations had not been the main driver of diverging interest rate dynamics on either side of the Atlantic. Instead, the key driver had been a divergence in term premia.

    The recent market developments had had implications for overall financial conditions. Despite the tightening pressure stemming from the stronger euro exchange rate, indices of financial conditions had recovered to stand above their pre-April levels. The decline in euro area real risk-free interest rates across the entire yield curve had brought real yields below the level prevailing at the time of the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting.

    Inflation compensation had edged up in the euro area since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting. One-year forward inflation compensation two years ahead, excluding tobacco, currently stood at 1.8%, i.e. only slightly below the 2% inflation target when accounting for tobacco. Over the longer term five-year forward inflation compensation five years ahead remained well anchored around 2%. The fact that near-term inflation compensation remained below the levels seen in early 2025 could largely be ascribed to the sharp drop in oil prices.

    In spite of the notable easing in financial conditions, the fading of financial market volatility, the pick-up in inflation expectations and positive macroeconomic surprises, investors’ expectations regarding ECB monetary policy had remained broadly unchanged. A 25 basis point cut was fully priced in for the present meeting, and another rate cut was priced in by the end of the year, with some uncertainty regarding the timing. Hence, expectations for ECB rates had proven relatively insensitive to the recovery in other market segments.

    The global environment and economic and monetary developments in the euro area

    Mr Lane started by noting that headline inflation had declined to 1.9% in May from 2.2% in April. Energy inflation had been unchanged at -3.6% in May. Food inflation had edged up to 3.3%, from 3.0%, while goods inflation had been stable at 0.6% in May and services inflation had declined to 3.2% in May, from 4.0% in April.

    Most measures of underlying inflation suggested that in the medium term inflation would settle at around the 2% target on a sustained basis, in part as a result of the continuing moderation in wage growth. The annual growth rate of negotiated wages had fallen to 2.4% in the first quarter of 2025, from 4.1% in the fourth quarter of 2024. Forward-looking wage trackers continued to point to an easing in negotiated wage growth. The Eurosystem staff macroeconomic projections for the euro area foresaw a deceleration in the annual growth rate of compensation per employee, from 4.5% in 2024 to 3.2% in 2025, and to 2.8% in 2026 and 2027. The Consumer Expectations Survey also pointed to moderating wage pressures.

    The short-term outlook for headline inflation had been revised down, owing to lower energy prices and the stronger euro. This was supported by market-based inflation compensation measures. The euro had appreciated strongly since early March – but had moved broadly sideways over the past few weeks. Since the April Governing Council meeting the euro had strengthened slightly against the US dollar (+0.6%) and had depreciated in nominal effective terms (-0.7%). Compared with the March projections, oil prices and oil futures had decreased substantially. As the euro had appreciated, the decline in oil prices in euro terms had become even larger than in US dollar terms. Gas prices and gas futures were also at much lower levels than at the time of the March projections.

    According to the baseline in the June staff projections, headline inflation – as measured by the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) – was expected to average 2.0% in 2025, 1.6% in 2026 and 2.0% in 2027. Relative to the March projections, inflation had been revised down by 0.3 percentage points for both 2025 and 2026, and was unchanged for 2027. Headline inflation was expected to remain below the target for the next one and a half years. The downward revisions mainly reflected lower energy price assumptions, as well as a stronger euro. The projected increase in inflation in 2027 incorporated an expected temporary upward impact from climate-related fiscal measures – namely the new EU Emissions Trading System (ETS2). In the June baseline projections, core inflation (HICP inflation excluding energy and food) was expected to average 2.4% in 2025 and 1.9% in both 2026 and 2027. The results of the latest Survey of Monetary Analysts were broadly in line with the June projections for headline inflation in 2025 and 2027, but showed a notably less pronounced undershoot for 2026. Most measures of longer-term inflation expectations remained at around the 2% target, which supported the sustainable return of inflation to target. At the same time, markets were pricing in an extended phase of below-target inflation, with the one-year forward inflation-linked swap rate two years ahead and the one-year forward rate three years ahead averaging 1.8%.

    The frontloading of imports in anticipation of higher tariffs had contributed to stronger than expected global trade growth in the first quarter of the year. However, high-frequency data pointed to a significant slowdown of trade in May. Excluding the euro area, global GDP growth had moderated to 0.7% in the first quarter, down from 1.1% in the fourth quarter of 2024. The global manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) excluding the euro area continued to signal stagnation, edging down to 49.6 in May, from 50.0 in April. The forward-looking PMI for new manufacturing orders remained below the neutral threshold of 50. Compared with the March projections, euro area foreign demand had been revised down by 0.4 percentage points for 2025 and by 1.4 percentage points for 2026. Growth in euro area foreign demand was expected to decline to 2.8% in 2025 and 1.7% in 2026, before recovering to 3.1% in 2027.

    While Eurostat’s most recent flash estimate suggested that the euro area economy had grown by 0.3% in the first quarter, an aggregation of available country data pointed to a growth rate of 0.4%. Domestic demand, exports and inventories should all have made a positive contribution to the first quarter outturn. Economic activity had likely benefited from frontloading in anticipation of trade frictions. This was supported by anecdotal evidence from the latest Non-Financial Business Sector Dialogue held in May and by particularly strong export and industrial production growth in some euro area countries in March. On the supply side, value-added in manufacturing appeared to have contributed to GDP growth more than services for the first time since the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Survey data pointed to weaker euro area growth in the second quarter amid elevated uncertainty. Uncertainty was also affecting consumer confidence: the Consumer Expectations Survey confidence indicator had dropped in April, falling to its lowest level since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, mainly because higher-income households were more responsive to changing economic conditions. A saving rate indicator based on the same survey had also increased in annual terms for the first time since October 2023, likely reflecting precautionary motives for saving.

    The labour market remained robust. According to Eurostat’s flash estimate, employment had increased by 0.3% in the first quarter of 2025, from 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2024. The unemployment rate had remained broadly unchanged since October 2024 and had stood at a record low of 6.2% in April. At the same time, demand for labour continued to moderate gradually, as reflected in a decline in the job vacancy rate and subdued employment PMIs. Workers’ perceptions of the labour market and of probabilities of finding a job had also weakened, according to the latest Consumer Expectations Survey.

    Trade tensions and elevated uncertainty had clouded the outlook for the euro area economy. Greater uncertainty was expected to weigh on investment. Higher tariffs and the recent appreciation of the euro should weigh on exports.

    Despite these headwinds, conditions remained in place for the euro area economy to strengthen over time. In particular, a strong labour market, rising real wages, robust private sector balance sheets and less restrictive financing conditions following the Governing Council’s past interest rate cuts should help the economy withstand the fallout from a volatile global environment. In addition, a rebound in foreign demand later in the projection horizon and the recently announced fiscal support measures were expected to bolster growth over the medium term. In the June projections, the fiscal deficit was now expected to be 3.1% in 2025, 3.4% in 2026 and 3.5% in 2027. The higher deficit path was mostly due to the additional fiscal package related to higher defence and infrastructure spending in Germany. The June projections foresaw annual average real GDP growth of 0.9% in 2025, 1.1% in 2026 and 1.3% in 2027. Relative to the March projections, the outlook for GDP growth was unchanged for 2025 and 2027 and had been revised down by 0.1 percentage points for 2026. The unrevised growth projection for 2025 reflected a stronger than expected first quarter combined with weaker prospects for the remainder of the year.

    In the current context of high uncertainty, Eurosystem staff had also assessed how different trade policies, and the level of uncertainty surrounding these policies, could affect growth and inflation under some alternative illustrative scenarios, which would be published with the staff projections on the ECB’s website. If the trade tensions were to escalate further over the coming months, staff would expect growth and inflation to be below their baseline projections. By contrast, if the trade tensions were resolved with a benign outcome, staff would expect growth and, to a lesser extent, inflation to be higher than in the baseline projections.

    Turning to monetary and financial conditions, risk-free interest rates had remained broadly unchanged since the April meeting. Equity prices had risen and corporate bond spreads had narrowed in response to better trade news. While global risk sentiment had improved, the euro had stayed close to the level it had reached as a result of the deepening of trade and financial tensions in April. At the same time, sentiment in financial markets remained fragile, especially as suspensions of higher US tariff rates were set to expire starting in early July.

    Lower policy rates continued to be transmitted to lending conditions for firms and households. The average interest rate on new loans to firms had declined to 3.8% in April, from 3.9% in March, with the cost of issuing market-based debt unchanged at 3.7%. Consistent with these patterns, bank lending to firms had continued to strengthen gradually, growing by an annual rate of 2.6% in April, after 2.4% in March, while corporate bond issuance had been subdued. The average interest rate on new mortgages had stayed at 3.3% in April, while growth in mortgage lending had increased to 1.9%, from 1.7% in March. Annual growth in broad money, as measured by M3, had picked up in April to 3.9%, from 3.7% in March.

    Monetary policy considerations and policy options

    In summary, inflation was currently at around the 2% target. While this in part reflected falling energy prices, most measures of underlying inflation suggested that inflation would settle at this level on a sustained basis in the medium term. This medium-term outlook was underpinned by the expected continuing moderation in services inflation as wage growth decelerated. The current indications were that rising barriers to global trade would likely have a disinflationary impact on the euro area in 2025 and 2026, as reflected in the June baseline and the staff scenarios. However, the possibility that a deterioration in trade relations would put upward pressure on inflation through supply chain disruptions required careful ongoing monitoring. Under the baseline, only a limited revision was seen to the path of GDP growth, but the headwinds to activity would be stronger under the severe scenario. Broadly speaking, monetary transmission was proceeding smoothly, although high uncertainty reduced its strength.

    Based on this assessment, Mr Lane proposed lowering the three key ECB interest rates by 25 basis points, taking the deposit facility rate to 2.0%. The June projections were conditioned on a rate path that included a one-quarter of a percentage point reduction in the deposit facility rate in June. By supporting the pricing pressure needed to generate target-consistent inflation in the medium term, this cut would help ensure that the projected deviation of inflation below the target in 2025-26 remained temporary and did not turn into a longer-term deviation. By demonstrating that the Governing Council was determined to make sure that inflation returned to target in the medium term, the rate reduction would help underpin inflation expectations and avoid an unwarranted tightening in financial conditions. The proposal was also robust across the different trade policy scenarios prepared by staff.

    2. Governing Council’s discussion and monetary policy decisions

    Economic, monetary and financial analyses

    On the global environment, growth in the world economy (outside the euro area) was expected to slow in 2025 and 2026 compared with 2024. This slowdown reflected developments in the United States – although China would also be affected – and would result in slower growth in euro area foreign demand. These developments were seen to stem mainly from trade policy measures enacted by the US Administration and reactions from China and other countries.

    Members underlined that the outlook for the global economy remained highly uncertain. Elevated trade uncertainty was likely to prevail for some time and could broaden and intensify, beyond the most recent announcements of tariffs on steel and aluminium. Further tariffs could increase trade tensions, as well as the likelihood of retaliatory actions and the prospect of non-linear effects, as retaliation would increasingly affect intermediate goods. While high-frequency trackers of global economic activity and trade had remained relatively resilient in the first quarter of 2025 (partly reflecting frontloading), indicators for April and May already suggested some slowdown. The euro had appreciated in nominal effective terms since the March 2025 projection exercise, although not by as much as it had strengthened against the US dollar. Another noteworthy development was the sharp decline in energy commodity prices, with both crude oil and natural gas prices now expected to be substantially lower than foreseen in the March projections (on the basis of futures prices). Developments in energy prices and the exchange rate were seen as the main drivers of the dynamics of euro area headline inflation at present.

    Members extensively discussed the trade scenarios prepared by Eurosystem staff in the context of the June projection exercise. Such scenarios should assist in identifying the relevant channels at work and could provide a quantification of the impact of tariffs and trade policy uncertainty on growth, the labour market and inflation, in conjunction with regular sensitivity analyses. The baseline assumption of the June 2025 projection exercise was that tariffs would remain at the May 2025 level over the projection horizon and that uncertainty would remain elevated, though gradually declining. Recognising the high level of uncertainty currently surrounding US trade policies, two alternative scenarios had been considered for illustrative purposes. One was a “mild” scenario of lower tariffs, incorporating the “zero-for-zero” tariff proposal for industrial goods put forward by the European Commission and a faster reduction in trade policy uncertainty. The other was a “severe” scenario which assumed that tariffs would revert to the higher levels announced in April and also included retaliation by the EU, with trade policy uncertainty remaining elevated.

    In the first instance, it was underlined that the probability that could be attached to the baseline projection materialising was lower than in normal times. Accordingly, a higher probability had to be attached to alternative possible outcomes, including potential non-linearities entailed in jumping from one scenario to another, and the baseline provided less guidance than usual. Mixed views were expressed, however, on the likelihood of the scenarios and on which would be the most relevant channels. On the one hand, the mild scenario was regarded as useful to demonstrate the benefits of freeing trade rather than restricting it. However, at the current juncture there was relatively little confidence that it would materialise. Regarding the severe scenario, the discussion did not centre on its degree of severity but rather on whether it adequately captured the possible adverse ramifications of substantially higher tariffs. One source of additional stress was related to dislocations in financial markets. Moreover, downward pressure on inflation could be amplified if countries with overcapacity rerouted their exports to the euro area. More pressure could come from energy prices falling further and the euro appreciating more strongly. It was remarked that in all the scenarios, the main impact on activity and inflation appeared to stem from higher policy uncertainty rather than from the direct impact of higher tariffs.

    A third focus of the discussion regarded possible adverse supply-side effects. The argument was made that the scenarios presented in the staff projections were likely to underestimate the upside risks to inflation, because tariffs were modelled as a negative demand shock, while supply-side effects were not taken into account. While it was noted that, thus far, no significant broad-based supply-side disturbances had materialised, restrictions on trade in rare earths were cited as an example of adverse supply chain effects that had already occurred. Moreover, the experiences after the pandemic and after Russia’s unjustified invasion of Ukraine served as cautionary reminders that supply-side effects, if and when they occurred, could be non-linear in nature and impact. In this respect, potential short-term supply chain disruptions needed to be distinguished from longer-term trends such as deglobalisation. Reference was made to an Occasional Paper published in December 2024 on trade fragmentation entitled “Navigating a fragmenting global trading system: insights for central banks”, which had considered the implications of a splitting of trading blocs between the East and the West. While such detailed sectoral analysis could serve as a useful “satellite model”, it was not part of the standard macroeconomic toolkit underpinning the projections. At the same time, it was noted that large supply-side effects from trade fragmentation could themselves trigger negative demand effects.

    Against this background, it was argued that retaliatory tariffs and non-linear effects of tariffs on the supply side of the economy, including through structural disruption and fragmentation of global supply chains, might spur inflationary pressures. In particular, inflation could be higher than in the baseline in the short run if the EU took retaliatory measures following an escalation of the tariff war by the United States, and if tariffs were imposed on products that were not easily substitutable, such as intermediate goods. In such a scenario, tariffs and countermeasures could ripple through the global economy via global supply chains. Firms suffering from rising costs of imported inputs would over time likely pass these costs on to consumers, as the previous erosion of profit margins made cost absorption difficult. Over the longer term a reconfiguration of global supply chains would probably make production less efficient, thereby reversing earlier gains from globalisation. As a result, the inflationary effects of tariffs on the supply side could outweigh the disinflationary pressure from reduced foreign demand and therefore pose upside risks to the medium-term inflation outlook.

    With regard to euro area activity, the economy had proven more resilient in the first quarter of 2025 than had been expected, but the outlook remained challenging. Preliminary estimates of euro area real GDP growth in the first quarter suggested that it had not only been stronger than previously anticipated but also broader-based, and recent updates based on the aggregation of selected available country data suggested that there could be a further upward revision. Frontloading of activity and trade ahead of prospective tariffs had likely played a significant role in the stronger than expected outturn in the first quarter, but the broad-based expansion was a positive signal, with data suggesting growth in most demand components, including private consumption and investment. In particular, attention was drawn to the likely positive contribution from investment, which had been expected to be more adversely affected by trade policy uncertainty. It was also felt that the underlying fundamentals of the euro area were in a good state, and would support economic growth in the period ahead. Notably, higher real incomes and the robust labour market would allow households to spend more. Rising government investment in infrastructure and defence would also support growth, particularly in 2026 and 2027. These solid foundations for domestic demand should help to make the euro area economy more resilient to external shocks.

    At the same time, economic growth was expected to be more subdued in the second and third quarters of 2025. This assessment reflected in part the assumed unwinding of the frontloading that had occurred in the first quarter, the implementation of some of the previously announced trade restrictions and ongoing uncertainty about future trade policies. Indeed, recent real-time indicators for the second quarter appeared to confirm the expected slowdown. Composite PMI data for April and May pointed to a moderation, both in current activity and in more forward-looking indicators, such as new orders. It was noted that a novel feature of the latest survey data was that manufacturing indicators were above those for services. In fact, the manufacturing sector continued to show signs of a recovery, in spite of trade policy uncertainty, with the manufacturing PMI standing at its highest level since August 2022. The PMIs for manufacturing output and new orders had been in expansionary territory for three months in a row and expectations regarding future output were at their highest level for more than three years.

    While this was viewed as a positive development, it partly reflected a temporary boost to manufacturing, stemming from frontloading of exports, which masked potential headwinds for exporting firms in the months ahead that would be further reinforced by a stronger euro. While there was considerable volatility in export developments at present, the expected profile over the entire projection horizon had been revised down substantially in the past two projection exercises. In addition, ongoing high uncertainty and trade policy unpredictability were expected to weigh on investment. Furthermore, the decline in services indicators was suggestive of the toll that trade policy uncertainty was taking on economic sentiment more broadly. Overall, estimates for GDP growth in the near term suggested a significant slowdown in growth dynamics and pointed to broadly flat economic activity in the middle of the year.

    Looking ahead, broad agreement was expressed with the June 2025 Eurosystem staff projections for growth, although it was felt that the outlook was more clouded than usual as a result of current trade policy developments. It was noted that stronger than previously expected growth around the turn of the year had provided a marked boost to the annual growth figure, with staff expecting an average of 0.9% for 2025. However, it was observed that the unrevised projection for 2025 as a whole concealed a stronger than previously anticipated start to the year but a weaker than previously projected middle part of the year. Thus, the expected pick-up in growth to 1.1% in 2026 also masked an anticipated slowdown in the middle of 2025. Staff expected growth to increase further to 1.3% in 2027. Some scepticism was expressed regarding the much stronger quarterly growth rates foreseen for 2026 following essentially flat quarterly growth for the remainder of 2025.

    All in all, it was felt that robust labour markets and rising real wages provided reasonable grounds for optimism regarding the expected pick-up in growth. Private sector balance sheets were seen to be in good shape, and part of the increase in activity foreseen for 2026 and 2027 was driven by expectations of increased government investment in infrastructure and defence. Moreover, the expected recovery in consumption was made more likely by the fact that the projections foresaw only a relatively gradual decline in the household saving rate, which was expected to remain relatively high compared with the pre-pandemic period. At the same time, it was noted that the decline in the household saving rate factored into the projections might not materialise in the current environment of elevated trade policy uncertainty. Similarly, scepticism was expressed regarding the projected rebound in housing investment, given that mortgage rates could be expected to increase in line with higher long-term interest rates. More generally, caution was expressed about the composition of the expected pick-up in activity. In recent years higher public expenditure had to some extent masked weakness in private sector activity. Looking ahead, given the economic and political constraints, public investment could turn out to be lower or less powerful in boosting economic growth than assumed in the baseline, even when abstracting from the lack of sufficient “fiscal space” in a number of jurisdictions.

    Labour markets continued to represent a bright spot for the euro area economy and contributed to its resilience in the current environment. Employment continued to grow, and April data indicated that the unemployment rate, at 6.2%, was at its lowest level since the launch of the euro. The positive signals from labour markets and growth in real wages, together with more favourable financing conditions, gave grounds for confidence that the euro area economy could weather the current trade policy storm and resume a growth path once conditions became more stable. However, attention was also drawn to some indications of a gradual softening in labour demand. This was evident, in particular, in the decline in job vacancy rates. In addition, while the manufacturing employment PMI indicated less negative developments, the services sector indicator had declined in April and May. Lastly, consumer surveys suggested that workers’ expectations for the unemployment rate had deteriorated and unemployed workers’ expectations of finding a job had fallen.

    With regard to fiscal and structural policies, it was argued that the boost to spending on infrastructure and defence, thus far seen as mainly concentrated in the largest euro area economy, would broadly offset the impact on activity from ongoing trade tensions. However, the time profile of the effects was seen to differ between the two shocks.

    Against this background, members considered that the risks to economic growth remained tilted to the downside. The main downside risks included a possible further escalation in global trade tensions and associated uncertainties, which could lower euro area growth by dampening exports and dragging down investment and consumption. Furthermore, it was noted that a deterioration in financial market sentiment could lead to tighter financing conditions and greater risk aversion, and make firms and households less willing to invest and consume. In addition, geopolitical tensions, such as Russia’s unjustified war against Ukraine and the tragic conflict in the Middle East, remained a major source of uncertainty. On the other hand, it was noted that if trade and geopolitical tensions were resolved swiftly, this could lift sentiment and spur activity. A further increase in defence and infrastructure spending, together with productivity-enhancing reforms, would also add to growth.

    In the context of structural and fiscal policies, it was felt that while the current geopolitical situation posed challenges to the euro area economy, it also offered opportunities. However, these opportunities would only be realised if quick and decisive actions were taken by economic policymakers. It was noted that monetary policy had delivered, bringing inflation back to target despite the unprecedented shocks and challenges. It was observed that now was the time for other actors (in particular the European Commission and national governments) to step up quickly, particularly as the window of opportunity was likely to be limited. This included implementing the recommendations in the reports by Mario Draghi and Enrico Letta, and projects under the European savings and investment union. These measures would not only bring benefits in their own right, but could also strengthen the international role of the euro and enhance the resilience of the euro area economy more broadly.

    It was widely underlined that the present geopolitical environment made it even more urgent for fiscal and structural policies to make the euro area economy more productive, competitive and resilient. In particular, it was considered that the European Commission’s Competitiveness Compass provided a concrete roadmap for action, and its proposals, including on simplification, should be swiftly adopted. This included completing the savings and investment union, following a clear and ambitious timetable. It was also important to rapidly establish the legislative framework to prepare the ground for the potential introduction of a digital euro. Governments should ensure sustainable public finances in line with the EU’s economic governance framework, while prioritising essential growth-enhancing structural reforms and strategic investment.

    With regard to price developments, members largely concurred with the assessment presented by Mr Lane. The fact that the latest release showed that headline inflation – at 1.9% in May – was back in line with the target was widely welcomed. This flash estimate (released on Tuesday, 3 June, well after the cut-off point for the June projections) showed a noticeable decline in services inflation, to 3.2% in May from 4.0% in April. The drop was reassuring, as it supported the argument that the timing of Easter and its effect on travel-related (air transport and package holiday) prices had been behind the 0.5 percentage point uptick in services inflation in April. The rate of increase in non-energy industrial goods prices had remained contained at 0.6% in May. Accordingly, core inflation had decreased to 2.3%, from 2.7% in April, more than offsetting the 0.3 percentage point increase observed in that month. Some concern was expressed about the increase in food price inflation to 3.3% in May, from 3.0% in April, but it was also noted that international food commodity prices had decreased most recently. It was widely acknowledged that consumer energy prices, which had declined by 3.6% year on year in May, were continuing to pull down the headline rate of inflation and were the key drivers of the downward revision of the inflation profile in the June projections compared with the March projections.

    Looking ahead, according to the June projections headline inflation was set to average 2.0% in 2025, 1.6% in 2026 and 2.0% in 2027. It was underlined that the downward revisions compared with the March projections, by 0.3 percentage points for both 2025 and 2026, mainly reflected lower assumptions for energy prices and a stronger euro. The projections for core inflation, which was expected to average 2.4% in 2025 and 1.9% in 2026 and 2027, were broadly unchanged from the March projections.

    While energy prices and exchange rates were likely to lead to headline inflation undershooting the target for some time, inflation dynamics would over the medium term increasingly be driven by the effects of fiscal policy. Hence headline inflation was on target for 2027, though this was partly due to a sizeable contribution from the implementation of ETS2. Overall, it was considered that the euro area was currently in a good place as far as inflation was concerned. There was increasing confidence that most measures of underlying inflation were consistent with inflation settling at around the 2% medium-term target on a sustained basis, even as domestic inflation remained high. While wage growth remained elevated, there was broad agreement that wages were set to moderate visibly. Furthermore, profits were assessed to be partially buffering the impact of wage growth on inflation. However, it was also remarked that firms’ profit margins had been squeezed for some time, which increased the likelihood of cost-push shocks being passed through to prices. While short-term consumer inflation expectations had edged up in April, this likely reflected the impact of news about trade tensions. Most measures of longer-term inflation expectations continued to stand at around 2%.

    Regarding wage developments, it was noted that both hard data and survey data suggested that moderation was ongoing. This was supported particularly by incoming data on negotiated wages and available country data on compensation per employee. Furthermore, the ECB wage tracker pointed to a further easing of negotiated wage growth in 2025, while the staff projections saw wage growth falling below 3% in 2026 and 2027. It was noted that the projections for the rate of increase in compensation per employee – 2.8% in both 2026 and 2027 – would see wages rising just at the rate of inflation, 2.0%, plus trend productivity growth of 0.8%. It was commented, however, that compensation per employee in the first quarter of 2025 had surprised on the upside and that the decline in negotiated wage indicators was partly driven by one-off payments.

    Turning to the Governing Council’s risk assessment, it was considered that the outlook for euro area inflation was more uncertain than usual, as a result of the volatile global trade policy environment. Falling energy prices and a stronger euro could put further downward pressure on inflation. This could be reinforced if higher tariffs led to lower demand for euro area exports and to countries with overcapacity rerouting their exports to the euro area. Trade tensions could lead to greater volatility and risk aversion in financial markets, which would weigh on domestic demand and would thereby also lower inflation. By contrast, a fragmentation of global supply chains could raise inflation by pushing up import prices and adding to capacity constraints in the domestic economy. A boost in defence and infrastructure spending could also raise inflation over the medium term. Extreme weather events, and the unfolding climate crisis more broadly, could drive up food prices by more than expected.

    Regarding the trade scenarios, a key issue in the risk assessment for inflation was the relative roles of demand-side and supply-side effects. It was broadly felt that the potential demand-side effects of tariffs were relatively well understood in the context of standard models, where they were typically treated as equivalent to a tax on cross-border goods and services. At the same time, uncertainties remained about the magnitude of these demand factors, with milder or more severe effects relative to the baseline both judged as being plausible. It was also argued that growth and sentiment had remained resilient despite extraordinarily high uncertainty. This suggested that the persistence of uncertainty, or its effects on growth and inflation, in the severe scenario might be overstated, especially given the current positive confidence effect in the euro area visible in financial markets. The relatively small impact on inflation even in the severe scenario, which pushed GDP growth to 0% in 2026, suggested that the downside risks to inflation were limited.

    Furthermore, it was noted that, while the trade policy scenarios and sensitivity analyses resulted in some variation in numbers depending on tariff assumptions, the effects were dwarfed by the impact of the assumptions for energy prices and the exchange rate, which were common to all scenarios. In this context, it was suggested that the impact of the exchange rate on inflation might be more muted than projected. First, the high level of the use of the euro as an invoicing currency limited the impact of the exchange rate on inflation. Second, the pass-through from exchange rate changes to inflation might be asymmetric, i.e. weaker in the case of an appreciation as firms sought to boost their compressed profit margins. Moreover, the analysis might be unable to properly capture the positive impact of higher confidence in the euro area, of which the stronger euro exchange rate was just one reflection. The positive effects had also been visible in sovereign bond markets, with lower spreads and reduced term premia bringing down financing costs for sovereigns and firms.

    On potential supply-side effects, the experiences in the aftermath of the pandemic and Russia’s unjustified invasion of Ukraine were mentioned as pointing to risks of strong adverse supply-side effects, which could be non-linear and appear quickly. In this context, it was noted that supply-side indicators, particularly concerning supply chains and potential bottlenecks, were being monitored and tracked very closely by staff. However, sufficient evidence had not so far been collected to substantiate these factors playing a major role.

    Moreover, attention was also drawn to potential disinflationary supply-side effects, for example arising from trade diversion from China. However, it was suggested that this effect was quantitatively limited. Moreover, it was argued that any large-scale trade diversion could prompt countermeasures from the EU, as was already the case in specific instances, which should attenuate disinflationary pressures.

    There was some discussion of whether energy commodity prices were weak because of demand or supply effects. It was noted that this had implications for the inflation risk assessment. If the weakness was primarily due to demand effects, then inflation risks were tied to the risks to economic activity and going in the same direction. If the weakness was due to supply effects, as suggested by staff analysis, in particular to oil production increases, then risks from energy prices could go in the opposite direction. Thus if the changes to oil production were reversed, energy prices could surprise on the upside even if economic activity surprised on the downside.

    Turning to the monetary and financial analysis, risk-free interest rates had remained broadly unchanged since the Governing Council’s previous monetary policy meeting on 16-17 April. Market participants were fully pricing in a 25 basis point rate cut at the current meeting. Broader financial conditions had eased in the euro area since the April meeting, with equity prices fully recovering their previous losses over the past month, corporate bond spreads narrowing and sovereign bond spreads declining to levels not seen for a long time. This was in response to more positive news about global trade policies, an improvement in global risk sentiment and higher confidence in the euro area. At the same time, it was highlighted that there had still been significant negative news about global trade policies over recent weeks. In this context, it was argued that market participants might have become slightly over-optimistic, as they had become more accustomed both to negative news and to policy reversals from the United States, and this could pose risks. It was seen as noteworthy that overall financial conditions had continued to ease recently without markets expecting a substantial further reduction in policy rates. It was also contended that the fiscal package in the euro area’s largest economy might push up the neutral rate of interest, suggesting that the recent loosening of financial conditions was even more significant when assessed against this rate benchmark.

    The euro had stayed close to the level it had reached following the announcement of the German fiscal package in March and the deepening trade and financial tensions in April. In this context, structural factors could be influencing exchange rates, possibly including greater confidence in the euro area and an adverse outlook for US fiscal policies. These developments could explain US dollar weakness despite the recent increase in long-term government bond yields in the United States and their decline in the euro area. Portfolio managers had also started to rebalance away from the US dollar and US assets. If this were to continue, the euro might experience further appreciation pressures. In addition, there had recently been a significant increase in the issuance of “reverse Yankee” bonds – euro-denominated bonds issued by companies based outside the euro area and in particular in the United States – partly reflecting wider yield differentials.

    In the euro area, the transmission of past interest rate cuts continued to make corporate borrowing less expensive overall, and interest rates on deposits were also still declining. At the same time, lending rates were flattening out. The average interest rate on new loans to firms had declined to 3.8% in April, from 3.9% in March, while the cost of issuing market-based debt had been unchanged at 3.7%. The average interest rate on new mortgages had stayed at 3.3% in April but was expected to increase in the near future owing to higher long-term yields since the cut-off date for the March projections.

    Bank lending to firms had continued to strengthen gradually, growing by an annual rate of 2.6% in April after 2.4% in March, while corporate bond issuance had been subdued. The growth in mortgage lending had increased to 1.9%. The sustained recovery in credit was welcome, with the annual growth in credit to both firms and households now at its highest level since June 2023. It was remarked that credit growth had seemingly become resilient even though the recovery had started from, on average, higher interest rates than in previous cycles. Households’ demand for mortgages had continued to increase swiftly according to the bank lending survey. This seemed to be a natural consequence of interest rates on housing loans being already below their historical average, with mortgage demand much more sensitive to interest rates than corporate loan demand. With interest rates on corporate loans still declining, although remaining above their historical average, the latest Survey on the Access to Finance of Enterprises had also shown that firms did not see access to finance as an obstacle to borrowing, as loan applications had increased and many companies not applying for loans appeared to have sufficient internal funds. At the same time, loan demand was picking up from still subdued levels and credit growth remained fairly muted by historical standards. Furthermore, elevated uncertainty due to trade tensions and geopolitical risks was still not fully reflected in the available hard data. It was also observed that by reducing external competitiveness, the recent appreciation of the euro could affect exporters’ credit demand.

    In their biannual exchange on the links between monetary policy and financial stability, members concurred that while euro area banks had remained resilient, broader financial stability risks remained elevated, in particular owing to highly uncertain and volatile global trade policies. Risks in global sovereign bond markets were also discussed, and it was noted that the euro area sovereign bond market was proving more resilient than had been the case for a long time. Macroprudential policy remained the first line of defence against the build-up of financial vulnerabilities, enhancing resilience and preserving macroprudential space.

    Monetary policy stance and policy considerations

    Turning to the monetary policy stance, members assessed the data that had become available since the last monetary policy meeting in accordance with the three main elements that the Governing Council had communicated in 2023 as shaping its reaction function. These comprised (i) the implications of the incoming economic and financial data for the inflation outlook, (ii) the dynamics of underlying inflation, and (iii) the strength of monetary policy transmission.

    Starting with the inflation outlook, members welcomed the fact that headline inflation was currently at around the 2% medium-term target, and that this had occurred earlier than previously anticipated as a result of lower energy prices and a stronger exchange rate. Lower energy prices and a stronger euro would continue to put downward pressure on inflation in the near term, with inflation projected to fall below the target in 2026 before returning to target in 2027. Most measures of longer-term inflation expectations continued to stand at around 2%, which also supported the stabilisation of inflation around the target.

    Members discussed the extent to which the projected temporary undershooting of the inflation target was a concern. Concerns were expressed that following the downward revisions to annual inflation for both 2025 and 2026, inflation was projected to be below the target for 18 months, which could be considered as extending into the medium term. It was argued that 2026 would be an important year because below-target inflation expectations could become embedded in wage negotiations and lead to downside second-round effects. It was also contended that the risk of undershooting the target for a prolonged period was due not only to energy prices and the exchange rate but also to weak demand and the expected slowdown in wage growth. In addition, the timing and effects of fiscal expansion remained uncertain. It was important to keep in mind that the inflation undershoot remaining temporary was conditional on an appropriate setting of monetary policy.

    At the same time, it was highlighted that, despite the undershooting of the target in the relatively near term, which was partly due to sizeable energy base effects amplified by the appreciation of the euro, from a medium-term perspective inflation was set to remain broadly at around 2%. In view of this, it was important not to overemphasise the downside deviation, especially since it was mainly due to volatile external factors, which could easily reverse. Therefore, the risk of a sustained undershooting of the inflation target was seen as limited unless there was a sharp deterioration in labour market conditions. The return of inflation to target would be supported by the likely emergence of upside pressures on inflation, especially from fiscal policy. So, as long as the projected undershoot did not become more pronounced or affect the return to target in 2027, and provided that inflation expectations remained anchored, the soft inflation figures foreseen in the near term should be manageable.

    Turning to underlying inflation, members concurred that most measures suggested that inflation would settle at around the 2% medium-term target on a sustained basis. While core inflation remained elevated, it was projected to decline to 1.9% in 2026 and remain there in 2027. This was seen as consistent with the stabilisation of inflation at target. Some other measures of underlying inflation, including domestic inflation, were still elevated but were also moving in the right direction. The projected decline in underlying inflation was expected to be supported by further deceleration in wage growth and a reduction in services inflation. Although the pace of wage growth was still strong, it had continued to moderate visibly, as indicated by incoming data on negotiated wages and available country data on compensation per employee, and profits were also partially buffering its impact on inflation. Looking ahead, underlying inflation could come under further downward pressure if the projected near-term undershooting of headline inflation lowered wage expectations, and also because large shocks to energy prices typically percolated across the economy. At the same time, fiscal policy and tariffs had the potential to generate new upward pressure on underlying inflation over the medium term.

    Finally, transmission of monetary policy continued to be smooth. Looking back over a long period, it was observed that robust and data-driven monetary policy had made a significant contribution to bringing inflation back to the 2% target. The removal of monetary restriction over the past year had also been timely in helping to ensure that inflation would stabilise sustainably at around the target in the period ahead. Its transmission to lending rates had been effective, contributing to easier financing conditions and supporting credit growth. Some of the transmission from rate cuts remained in the pipeline and would continue to provide support to the economy, helping consumers and firms withstand the fallout from the volatile global environment. Concerns that increased uncertainty and a volatile market response to the trade tensions in April would have a tightening impact on financing conditions had eased. On the contrary, financial frictions appeared low in the euro area, with limited risk premia and declining term premia supporting transmission of the monetary impulse and bringing down financing costs for sovereign and corporate borrowers. At the same time, elevated uncertainty could weaken the transmission mechanism of monetary policy, possibly because of the option value of deferring consumption and investment decisions in such an environment. There also remained a risk that a deterioration in financial market sentiment could lead to tighter financing conditions and greater risk aversion, and make firms and households less willing to invest and consume.

    It was contended that, after seven rate cuts, interest rates were now firmly in neutral territory and possibly already in accommodative territory. It was argued that this was also suggested by the upturn in credit growth and by the bank lending survey. However, it was highlighted that, although banks were lending more and demand for loans was rising, credit origination remained at subdued levels when compared with a range of benchmarks based on past regularities. Investment also remained weak compared with historical benchmarks.

    Monetary policy decisions and communication

    Against this background, almost all members supported the proposal made by Mr Lane to lower the three key ECB interest rates by 25 basis points. Lowering the deposit facility rate – the rate through which the Governing Council steered the monetary policy stance – was justified by its updated assessment of the inflation outlook, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission.

    A further reduction in interest rates was seen as warranted to protect the medium-term inflation target beyond 2026, in an environment in which inflation was currently at target but projected to fall below it for a temporary period. In this context, it was recalled that the staff projections were conditioned on a market curve that embedded a 25 basis point rate cut in June and about 50 basis points of cuts in total by the end of 2025. It was also noted that the staff scenarios and sensitivity analyses generally pointed to inflation being below the target in 2026. Moreover, while inflation was consistent with the target, the growth projection for 2026 had been revised slightly downwards.

    The proposed reduction in policy rates should be seen as aiming to protect the “on target” 2% projection for 2027. It should ensure that the temporary undershoot in headline inflation did not become prolonged, in a context in which further disinflation in core measures was expected, the growth outlook remained relatively weak and spare capacity in manufacturing made it unlikely that slightly faster growth would translate into immediate inflationary pressures. It was argued that cutting interest rates by 25 basis points at the current meeting would leave rates in broadly neutral territory. This would keep the Governing Council well positioned to navigate the high uncertainty that lay ahead, while affording full optionality for future meetings to manage two-sided inflation risks across a wide range of scenarios. By contrast, keeping interest rates at their current levels could increase the risk of undershooting the inflation target in 2026 and 2027.

    At the same time, a few members saw a case for keeping interest rates at their current levels. The near-term temporary inflation undershoot should be looked through, since it was mostly due to volatile factors such as lower energy prices and a stronger exchange rate, which could easily reverse. It remained to be seen whether and to what extent these factors would translate into lower core inflation. It was necessary to avoid reacting excessively to volatility in headline inflation at a time when domestic inflation remained high and there might be new upward pressure on underlying inflation over the medium term – from both tariffs and fiscal policy. This was especially the case after a period of above-target inflation and when the inflation expectations of firms and households were still above target, with short-term consumer inflation expectations having increased recently and inflation expectations standing above 2% across horizons. This implied that there was a very limited risk of a downward unanchoring of inflation expectations.

    There were also several reasons why the projections and scenarios might be underestimating medium-term inflationary pressures. There could be upside risks from underlying inflation, in part because services inflation remained above levels compatible with a sustained return to the inflation target. The exceptional uncertainty relating to trade tensions had reduced confidence in the baseline projections and meant that there could be value in waiting to see how the trade war unfolded. In addition, although growth was only picking up gradually and there were risks to the downside, the probability of a recession was currently quite low and interest rates were already low enough not to hold back economic growth. The point was made that the labour market had proven very resilient, with the unemployment rate at a historical low and employment expanding despite prospects of higher tariffs. Given the recent re-flattening of the Phillips curve, the risk of a sustained undershooting of the inflation target was seen as limited in the absence of a sharp deterioration of labour market conditions. It was also argued that adopting an accommodative monetary policy stance would not be appropriate. In any case, the evidence suggested that such accommodation would not be very effective in an environment of high uncertainty.

    In this context, it was also contended that interest rates could already be in accommodative territory. An argument was made that the neutral rate of interest had undergone a shift since early 2022, increasing substantially, and it was still likely to increase further owing to fiscal expansion and the shift from a dearth of safe assets to a government bond glut. However, it was pointed out that while expected policy rates and the term premium had increased in 2022, there was an open question as to the extent to which that reflected an increase in the neutral rate of interest or simply the removal of extraordinary policy accommodation. It was argued that the recent weakness in investment, strength of savings and still subdued credit volumes suggested that there probably had not been a significant increase in the neutral rate of interest.

    With these considerations in mind, these members expressed an initial preference for keeping interest rates unchanged to allow more time to analyse the current situation and detect any sustained inflationary or disinflationary pressures. However, in light of the preceding discussion, they ultimately expressed readiness to join the consensus, with the exception of one member, who upheld a dissenting view.

    Looking ahead, members reiterated that the Governing Council remained determined to ensure that inflation would stabilise sustainably at its 2% medium-term target. The Governing Council’s interest rate decisions would continue to be based on its assessment of the inflation outlook in light of the incoming economic and financial data, the dynamics of underlying inflation and the strength of monetary policy transmission. Exceptional uncertainty also underscored the importance of following a data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach to determining the appropriate monetary policy stance.

    Given the pervasive uncertainty, the possibility of rapid changes in the economic environment and the risk of shocks to inflation in both directions, it was important for the Governing Council to retain a two-sided perspective and avoid tying its hands ahead of any future meeting. The nature and focus of data dependence might need to evolve to place more emphasis on indicators speaking to future developments. This possibly suggested placing a greater premium on examining high-frequency data, financial market data, survey data and soft information such as from corporate contacts, for example, to help gauge any supply chain problems. It was also underlined that scenarios would continue to be important in helping to assess and convey uncertainty. Against this background, it was maintained that the rate path needed to remain consistent with meeting the target over the medium term and that agility would be vital given the elevated uncertainty. At the same time, the view was expressed that monetary policy should become less reactive to incoming data. In particular, only large shocks would imply the need for a monetary policy response, as the Governing Council should be willing to tolerate moderate deviations from target as long as inflation expectations were anchored.

    Turning to communication, members concurred that, in view of the latest inflation developments and projections, it was time to refer to inflation as being “currently at around the Governing Council’s 2% medium-term target” rather than saying that the disinflation process was “well on track”. It was also agreed that external communication should make clear that the alternative scenarios to be published were prepared by staff, that they were illustrative in that they only represented a subset of alternative possibilities, that they only assessed some of the mechanisms by which different trade policies could affect growth and inflation, and that their outcomes were conditional on the assumptions used.

    Taking into account the foregoing discussion among the members, upon a proposal by the President, the Governing Council took the monetary policy decisions as set out in the monetary policy press release. The members of the Governing Council subsequently finalised the monetary policy statement, which the President and the Vice-President would, as usual, deliver at the press conference following the Governing Council meeting.

    Monetary policy statement

    Monetary policy statement for the press conference of 5 June 2025

    Press release

    Monetary policy decisions

    Meeting of the ECB’s Governing Council, 3-5 June 2025

    Members

    • Ms Lagarde, President
    • Mr de Guindos, Vice-President
    • Mr Centeno
    • Mr Cipollone
    • Mr Demarco, temporarily replacing Mr Scicluna
    • Mr Elderson
    • Mr Escrivá*
    • Mr Holzmann
    • Mr Kazāks
    • Mr Kažimír*
    • Mr Knot
    • Mr Lane
    • Mr Makhlouf
    • Mr Müller
    • Mr Nagel
    • Mr Panetta
    • Mr Patsalides
    • Mr Rehn*
    • Mr Reinesch
    • Ms Schnabel
    • Mr Šimkus
    • Mr Stournaras
    • Mr Villeroy de Galhau
    • Mr Vujčić
    • Mr Wunsch*
    • Ms Žumer Šujica, Vice Governor of Banka Slovenije

    * Members not holding a voting right in June 2025 under Article 10.2 of the ESCB Statute.

    Other attendees

    • Ms Senkovic, Secretary, Director General Secretariat
    • Mr Rostagno, Secretary for monetary policy, Director General Monetary Policy
    • Mr Winkler, Deputy Secretary for monetary policy, Senior Adviser, DG Monetary Policy

    Accompanying persons

    • Ms Bénassy-Quéré
    • Ms Brezigar
    • Mr Debrun
    • Mr Gavilán
    • Mr Gilbert
    • Mr Horváth
    • Mr Kaasik
    • Mr Koukoularides
    • Mr Lünnemann
    • Mr Madouros
    • Mr Markevičius
    • Ms Mauderer
    • Mr Nicoletti Altimari
    • Mr Novo
    • Ms Raposo
    • Mr Rutkaste
    • Ms Schembri
    • Mr Šošić
    • Ms Stiftinger
    • Mr Tavlas
    • Mr Välimäki

    Other ECB staff

    • Mr Proissl, Director General Communications
    • Mr Straub, Counsellor to the President
    • Ms Rahmouni, Director General Market Operations
    • Mr Arce, Director General Economics
    • Mr Sousa, Deputy Director General Economics

    Release of the next monetary policy account foreseen on 28 August 2025.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Sweden: Europe’s fight against plastic pollution gets boost as EIB backs Swedish innovation packaging company PulPac

    Source: European Investment Bank

    Unsplash

    • EIB lends Swedish sustainable-packaging company PulPac €20 million to advance alternatives to single-use plastics
    • Funding is to scale fibre-based technology that company sell internationally
    • Operation supports EU’s green goals

    The European Investment Bank (EIB) is lending €20 million (around 220 million Swedish kronor) to Swedish sustainable-packaging company PulPac to tackle global plastic pollution. The EIB financing will support development and commercialisation of a fibre-based technology developed by PulPac as an alternative to single-use plastics.

    Gothenburg-based PulPac is scaling up its patented Dry Molded Fiber technology, which produces rigid packaging from renewable cellulose fibre. The technology represents a disruptive improvement over traditional wet molding — currently the dominant method for fibre-based packaging — by enabling faster production with significantly lower environmental impact.

    The company will focus on food and retail applications, including coffee cup lids, plates, cutlery, bottles, fashion hangers, and pharmaceutical packaging.

    The European Union is working to reduce plastic pollution as part of a global effort to protect the environment — particularly marine ecosystems, wildlife, and human health. As part of this initiative, the EU has banned the sale of ten single-use plastic items, including plates, cutlery, straws, and cotton buds, and is actively promoting environmentally friendly alternatives.

    “By supporting PulPac, we are backing an innovative and scalable solution that can make a real difference in the global effort to reduce plastic waste and accelerate the green transition,” said EIB Vice-President Thomas Östros. “This financing underlines the EU’s commitment to supporting next-generation technologies with global potential.”

    The EIB financing for PulPac is structured as a venture debt loan – a form of growth financing tailored to innovative companies. It is provided under the InvestEU programme, which supports the EU’s green transition and efforts to spur innovation, industrial resilience and sustainable economic growth.

    “We are honoured by the EIB’s backing and its recognition of Dry Molded Fiber as a core part of the shift towards sustainable packaging,” said PulPac Chairman Niclas Möller. “This partnership is both a financial milestone and a strong validation of our strategy to build a global licensing platform for fibre-based alternatives to plastic.”

    The investment will accelerate PulPac’s research and development over a five-year period (2025–2029), with a focus on next-generation food service and retail packaging. The project aims to enhance material efficiency, improve product performance, and increase cost competitiveness, while supporting the global scale-up of Dry Molded Fiber through PulPac’s licensing-based business model.

    “The EIB has shown great flexibility in tailoring a financial structure that supports industrial innovation,” said PulPac Chief Financial Officer Roderick Sundell. “With this support, we can scale faster, expand our technology portfolio and bring cost-efficient, sustainable packaging to global markets.”

    Background information

    EIB

    The European Investment Bank (ElB) is the long-term lending institution of the European Union, owned by its Member States. Built around eight core priorities, the EIB finances investments that contribute to EU policy objectives by bolstering climate action and the environment, digitalisation and technological innovation, security and defence, cohesion, agriculture and the bioeconomy, social infrastructure, the capital markets union and a stronger Europe in a more peaceful and prosperous world. 

    The EIB Group, which also includes the European Investment Fund (EIF), signed nearly €89 billion in new financing for over 900 high-impact projects in 2024, boosting Europe’s competitiveness and security.   

    All projects financed by the EIB Group are in line with the Paris Climate Agreement, as pledged in the organisation’s Climate Bank Roadmap. Almost 60% of the EIB Group’s annual financing supports projects directly contributing to climate change mitigation, adaptation, and a healthier environment.   

    Fostering market integration and mobilising investment, the Group supported a record of over €100 billion in new investment for Europe’s energy security in 2024 and mobilised €110 billion in growth capital for startups, scale-ups and European pioneers. Approximately half of the EIB’s financing within the EU is directed towards cohesion regions, where per capita income is lower than the EU average. 

    High-quality, up-to-date photos of the organisation’s headquarters for media use are available here.

    The InvestEU programme provides the European Union with long-term funding by leveraging substantial private and public funds in support of a sustainable recovery. It also helps to crowd in private investment for the European Union’s strategic priorities such as the European Green Deal and the digital transition. InvestEU brings all EU financial instruments previously available for supporting investments within the European Union together under one roof, making funding for investment projects in Europe simpler, more efficient and more flexible. The programme consists of three components: the InvestEU Fund, the InvestEU Advisory Hub, and the InvestEU Portal. The InvestEU Fund is deployed through implementing partners that will invest in projects using the EU budget guarantee of €26.2 billion. The entire budget guarantee will back the investment projects of the implementing partners, increase their risk-bearing capacity and thus mobilise at least €372 billion in additional investment.

    PulPac

    PulPac is the home of Dry Molded Fiber – a resource-efficient fibre-forming technology that transforms cellulose fibres into responsible packaging with minimal environmental impact. By making our cutting-edge technology accessible worldwide, we enable brands and manufacturers to meet growing market demands for eco-friendly packaging. As a leader in fibre-forming innovation, PulPac is building an ecosystem of industry partners and licensees, helping drive the shift toward a circular economy and making sustainability a standard across the globe. 

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Kenya’s largest hospital gets EIB Global support to bolster and green its energy supply

    Source: European Investment Bank

    EIB

    The European Investment Bank’s development arm (EIB Global) will help Kenya’s largest hospital expand and green its energy supply. EIB Global will advise Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi on the installation of a solar-power system.

    The goal of the project is to meet growing demand for electricity at the hospital while increasing its energy independence and reducing its carbon footprint.

    EIB Global will offer the assistance in partnership with German development agency (GIZ) through a grant of 7.3 million Kenyan shillings (€50,000) from a multi-donor initiative run by the World Bank and EIB for cities – the Cities Climate Finance Gap Fund. The support will cover technical studies and a financial assessment regarding the planned installation of the photovoltaic (PV) system.

    The hospital, which is also the largest public health centre in East Africa, has a capacity of 2,400 beds and serves about 2 million patients annually. High grid costs in Kenya are straining the budget of the hospital and power outages are forcing it to rely on diesel generators that meet only about 65% of demand, leaving critically ill patients at risk.

    “Our goal is a climate smart future,” said EIB Regional Hub for East Africa Head Edward Claessen.  “We are committed to supporting Kenyatta National Hospital in its transition to green electricity. The forthcoming technical studies will lay the ground for successful implementation of the PV system.”

    Under the support agreement, GIZ experts will carry out the technical and financial evaluations for implementation and maintenance of the solar-power system.

    Kenyatta National Hospital intends to direct savings on energy bills resulting from the planned PV system to areas such as purchasing medical supplies, hiring more staff and upgrading facilities.

    “We are grateful to the European Investment Bank, GIZ and the City Climate Finance Gap Fund for their support through this technical assistance programme,” said Kenyatta National Hospital Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Evanson Kamuri. “This collaboration marks a significant step forward in our commitment to sustainable healthcare delivery. By integrating energy efficiency and climate-smart solutions, Kenyatta National Hospital is not only enhancing operational resilience but also setting a benchmark for environmentally responsible healthcare infrastructure in the region.”

    The EIB Global and GIZ support will lead to concrete recommendations to the hospital on attaining reliable and efficient power supply through the planned PV system. The studies will assess the hospital’s current energy-consumption patterns, evaluate the feasibility of integrating the planned PV system into the hospital power grid, provide financial modelling for installation and maintenance and address regulatory questions.

    The European Investment Bank, through the Cities Climate Gap Fund support cities in the early stages of project development by assessing the actual challenges, understanding the risks and designing fit-for-purpose solutions that resonate with their goals for a climate- smart future.

    Background information

    About EIB Global

    The European Investment Bank (ElB) is the long-term lending institution of the European Union, owned by its Member States. It finances investments that contribute to EU policy objectives.  

    EIB Global is the EIB Group’s specialised arm devoted to increasing the impact of international partnerships and development finance, and a key partner of Global Gateway. EIB Global aims to support €100 billion of investment by the end of 2027 — around one-third of the overall target of this EU initiative. Within Team Europe, EIB Global fosters strong, focused partnerships alongside fellow development finance institutions and civil society. EIB Global brings the EIB Group closer to people, companies and institutions through offices across the world. High-quality, up-to-date photos of the organisation’s headquarters for media use are available here.

    About Gap Fund:

    The Cities Climate Finance Gap Fund is a multi-donor fund, implemented by the World Bank and the EIB in collaboration with GIZ and other city networks. Gap Fund provides much-needed funding for early-stage technical assistance and capacity building so that cities from low- and middle-income countries can operationalise their climate action plans, develop robust project concepts, and access climate finance resources. Since its establishment in 2020, it has supported 183 cities in 67 countries.

    On 20 September 2023, the governments of Germany and Luxembourg announced new funding of € 50 million  for the City Climate Finance Gap Fund (Gap Fund) with an additional €5 million on the horizon, these resources will support the development of low-carbon and climate-resilient urban investments and will nearly double the fund’s capitalization, bringing it to €105 million, making it one of the largest early-stage technical assistance funds for cities and climate.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: How to finance affordable and sustainable housing

    Source: European Investment Bank

    “Housing problems are local problems,” says the European Investment Bank’s Muent. “Lack of supply is very often due to local factors—land availability, planning, etc. What we need is a financial toolbox with generic tools and instruments which can be tailored to local needs and then scaled at regional or national level to deliver hundreds of thousands of homes, not tens.”

    To create just such an instrument, the European Investment Bank has been working with the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Regional and Urban Policy on a new model financial instrument for affordable housing that national and regional authorities can use. This blueprint helps national and regional authorities, or public banks such as National Promotional Banks which often administer this kind of instrument, to channel existing public funds, including EU funds for poorer regions, into the housing sector in a way that encourages more private and public investment.

    The key to the success of such financial instruments is that they allow for flexible combinations of loans and grants—for example, capital grants or interest-rate subsidies—to “de-risk” projects, making them more attractive to a wider range of investors, and to set the right mix of funding to meet local needs.

    “The benefit of the financial instrument is that it introduces more favourable terms through the grant combination,” says Emily Smith, a principal advisor at the European Investment Bank. “If the projects have viability issues, then there’s the option to use some of the resource as a capital grant. You could channel some of it as an interest-rate subsidy, if you want to lower the cost of the financing. You could use capital rebate to reward the achievement of certain performance objectives by writing off part of the loan.”

    This flexible approach allows Member States to adapt the model to their specific needs and market conditions, recognising that housing markets vary significantly from country to country and even from region to region.

    This model financial instrument for affordable housing also aligns with the European Commission’s push to refocus its cohesion funds, which it reserves for economically disadvantaged parts of Europe, on pressing priorities such as housing. The Commission has also clarified other rules to ensure that its structural funds, which are available to all regions, can also be used for housing.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Joint press release: Investment of €3.66 billion from EU emissions trading revenues in cleaner energy systems  

    Source: EuroStat – European Statistics

    European Commission Press release Brussels, 03 Jul 2025 Today, the European Commission and the European Investment Bank announced that €3.66 billion have been disbursed from the Modernisation Fund to support 34 energy related projects in nine EU Member States.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Sara Jacobs Votes Against Trump’s Budget that Strips Health Care, Food Assistance Away From Millions of People

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Sara Jacobs (D-CA-53)

    July 03, 2025

    Rep. Sara Jacobs (CA-51) voted against Republicans’ budget that cuts health care, food assistance, education, and consumer protection in order to pay for tax breaks for the ultra-rich and corporations. The bill now heads to President Trump’s desk for his signature.

    Rep. Sara Jacobs said: “The consequences of this bill will reverberate for generations, widening the chasm between our country’s two social classes: the rich and powerful, and everyone else. It will kick 17 million people off their health insurance and close rural hospitals, nursing homes, and health clinics. It will take away health care from 5-year-old Delilah and 2-year-old Cesar, whom I met earlier this year and who rely on Medi-cal to navigate and pay for their many health conditions. This bill will force the biggest cut ever to SNAP – our country’s biggest and best program to address food insecurity – when the San Diego Food Bank already serves 400,000 San Diegans every single month. And it would leave four million children without access to nutrition assistance and 18 million kids at risk of losing their free and reduced-price school lunches. Meanwhile, this bill would explode our deficit and reward the richest Americans and the biggest corporations that don’t need any government help.

    “I fundamentally believe that government can be a force for good and make people’s lives better, but this bill represents government at its worst. It cements inequality by eliminating the few levers that people have to escape and stay out of poverty. It saddles future generations with enormous debt and a sicker and hungrier workforce. And it further erodes the American people’s trust in government, paving the way for further authoritarian power-grabs. I know that people are feeling lost and demoralized right now, but there are still people in Congress – including me – fighting for you.”

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-Evening Report: I’ve seen the brain damage contact sports can cause – we all need to take concussion and CTE more seriously

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alan Pearce, Professor, Adjunct Research Fellow, School of Health Science, Swinburne University of Technology

    AAP Image/The Conversation, CC BY

    Concussion in sport continues to make headlines, whether it be class actions, young men flocking to the highly violent “RunIt” activity or debate about whether Australian rules football should remove the “bump” once and for all.

    Bringing this weighty issue to greater prominence are the former athletes who bravely share their long-term health struggles after careers in sport – cognitive impairments, mental health issues or concerns about neurodegenerative disease, specifically chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).

    Yet for all the progress made by many sports in recent years, it feels like we still have not fully grasped the understanding of CTE – or maybe we don’t want to.

    Remind me again, what is CTE?

    CTE is a neurodegenerative brain disease, just like dementia, motor neurone disease (MND) and Parkinson’s disease.

    Expert groups agree on the links between traumatic brain injury and increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease (and other dementias), and the growing evidence of links to MND and Parkinson’s.

    People who have never had a traumatic brain injury can still regrettably suffer from these diseases. However, while CTE is rare in the general population, those with a history of repetitive impacts to the brain are more at risk.

    These impacts may not be diagnosed brain injuries or concussions, but rather non-concussive impacts (smaller hits that do not produce signs or symptoms of concussion).

    Contrary to anecdotal opinion, an athlete’s concussion history is not the crucial variable in risk and severity of CTE.

    Emerging international evidence, including my own recently published studies, show the risk of developing CTE (and its severity) is linked to exposure: the age a person starts full contact sport and the length of a playing career.

    The grey area of concussion, CTE and mental health

    Currently, CTE cannot be diagnosed in living people.

    However in understanding the progression of the disease in those who have passed away with CTE, families have described signs and symptoms including cognitive impairments such as:

    • Parkinsonism
    • memory loss
    • trouble with planning and organising tasks
    • impulsive behaviours
    • anger and irritability
    • emotional instability
    • substance misuse
    • suicidal thoughts/behaviour.

    While these signs and symptoms can overlap with those we associate with mental health, this does not necessarily mean the affected person had “mental health concerns”.

    The continued awareness in men’s mental health is a good thing broadly but it has sometimes misappropriated CTE as a mental health issue. For example, some fundraising games in the names of athletes who have died with CTE are being channelled to mental health charities and institutes, confusing the wider community.

    Consequently two recent tragic stories, one from the family of deceased former AFL player Shane Tuck and the other from Amanda Green, the widow of the late NRL player and coach Paul Green, needed to be told.

    Their stories contradicted widely held beliefs in the media and among fans that Tuck or Green were suffering with a psychiatric disease prior to their untimely deaths. In fact, they had CTE.

    An uncomfortable conversation

    So, why aren’t we talking about CTE more?

    The answer is, unfortunately it is an inconvenient truth.

    Considering CTE is entirely preventable if we remove exposure risk of repetitive hits to the head, the solution is to further modify many of our most popular sports to make head impacts much rarer.

    There is sizeable opposition to this idea.

    “Now is not the time to discuss such ‘political’ issues,” is the response I usually get from academics and colleagues involved in these sports, and even football loving friends, when I try to raise awareness.

    This continued hesitation only slows the science of CTE further.

    If an athlete’s family has been courageous in donating their brain to the Australian Sports Brain Bank and CTE has been found, the standard response from sports organisations is:

    the (insert sport here) takes athlete health and wellbeing as its greatest priority […] the (insert sport here) has implemented strict concussion protocols and continues research into athletes’ brain health.

    Even a Senate parliamentary inquiry has done little to change the situation.

    In fact, while most sports have tried to become safer through rule changes, progress more broadly has plateaued or even regressed in recent years.

    Take one recent example in the NRL, when some in the rugby league community made light of the multiple concussions suffered by Victor Radley. After playing his 150th game, he posed smiling with a t-shirt detailing the number of concussions he had suffered during his career. His club, the Sydney Roosters, posted the photo on Instagram before it was later removed.

    Even more worrying is a new controversial activity called “RunIt”, which involves two men running full speed at each other with the intention of knocking over (or more aptly knocking out) the opponent.

    A recent death of a New Zealand teenager playing RunIt has highlighted the dangers.




    Read more:
    Head knocks and ultra-violence: viral games Run It Straight and Power Slap put sports safety back centuries


    What more can be done?

    With the help of the Concussion Legacy Foundation, experts around the world, including myself, have produced a CTE prevention protocol. This does not mean banning any sports but rather modifying components that will reduce exposure risk.

    Here are five ideas I believe would make a difference.

    1. Reducing contact loads in training, particularly in pre-season training.

    2. Modify contact sports for children until the age of 14. This potentially removes six to eight years of incidental and unnecessary hits to kids’ heads. They can still play and learn all the fundamental motor skills and enjoy the psychological benefits of sport before graduating to the full version of the game at 14.

    3. Influential media commentators need to upskill themselves around CTE and to not be afraid to mention CTE rather than deferring to “concussion protocols”.

    4. Medical and allied health practitioners do not regularly screen for concussion or contact sport playing history when assessing a patient who is struggling with movement disorders, chronic headaches/fatigue or cognitive/behavioural impairments. Repetitive head impact history should be screened just like alcohol and drug use history.

    5. When an athlete suddenly and tragically dies, we need to include, along with emergency help lines, information for help and support for those unsure about CTE.

    Unfortunately, if we don’t have the political will to acknowledge CTE and act, more families will be grieving tragic deaths of athletes. These families may not even be aware of CTE.

    This does not make me anti-sport, but pro-athlete. Let’s all become pro-athlete for the sake of our sports and the people who play them.

    Alan Pearce is currently unfunded. Alan is a non-executive director for the Concussion Legacy Foundation (unpaid position) and Adjunct research manager for the Australian Sports Brain Bank (unpaid position). He has previously received funding from Erasmus+ strategic partnerships program (2019-1-IE01-KA202-051555), Sports Health Check Charity (Australia), Australian Football League, Impact Technologies Inc., and Samsung Corporation, and is remunerated for expert advice to medico-legal practices.

    ref. I’ve seen the brain damage contact sports can cause – we all need to take concussion and CTE more seriously – https://theconversation.com/ive-seen-the-brain-damage-contact-sports-can-cause-we-all-need-to-take-concussion-and-cte-more-seriously-259785

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Nigerian business leverage African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to grow the country’s intra-African trade opportunities

    Source: APO – Report:

    Nigeria is working towards fast-tracking implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to unlock opportunities for businesses in the country across the continent.

    Nigeria’s Minister of the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, Hon. Jumoke Oduwole noted that intra-African trade has been improving.

    “Intra African trade exports grew by over 13% from last year supported by new trade corridors and the initial success of AfCFTA’s guideline initiatives. Nigerian businesses are already key participants, exporting, ceramics, garments, pharmaceuticals and agro products across the continent,” Hon. Jumoke said in a keynote address to government officials, the Nigerian trade community, business leaders and investors attending the Nigeria IATF2025 Business Roadshow.

    “As we talk about expanding and unlocking new trade markets, we must recognize the creative economy as a serious trade frontier. Platforms such as Creative Africa Nexus (CANEX) led by Afreximbank are proving that African culture is bankable not just beautiful.” She added.

    The event that was attended by over 700 people focused on promoting intra-African trade under the theme: ‘Harnessing Regional and Continental Value Chains: Accelerating Africa’s Industrialisation and Global Competitiveness through AfCFTA.’

    The Nigeria IATF2025 roadshow is one of the five in a series of five high-level events in key cities including Nairobi, Accra, Johannesburg, and Algiers ahead of the fourth edition of the biennial Intra-African Trade Fair (IATF) that will be held in Algiers, Algeria from 4 – 10 September 2025 under the theme ‘Gateway to New Opportunities’. IATF is Africa’s premier trade and investment event that serves as a crucial platform for fostering economic growth, collaboration, and innovation across the continent.

    Addressing the forum, Executive Director/CEO of the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Nonye Ayeni noted that IATF offers an unparalleled platform for the exchange of trade and investment information and is Africa’s marketplace of ideas, opportunities, and partnerships.

    “With frameworks like AFCFTA and platforms like IATF we now have the tools to bridge the trade gap, boost Intra African trade and tremendously grow our economies in a sustainable and inclusive way. We need to build structured, sustainable and competitive value chains that can power inclusive growth both here in Nigeria and across the continent in Africa. We know that AfCFTA promises to be the largest single market in the world, connecting 1.3 billion people across 54 countries in Africa,” Ms Ayeni said.

    Building on this, Executive Vice President, Intra-African Trade and Export Development at Afreximbank, Mrs. Kanayo Awani highlighted the tangible results borne out of the trade fair across the continent and in Nigeria specifically.

    “In just three editions, IATF has achieved what once felt aspirational: over $100 billion in trade and investment deals, more than 70,000 participants, and 4,500+ exhibitors from across 130 countries. This is not just a conference, it is Africa’s trade engine, designed to connect our producers, unlock demand, and operationalise the promise of the AfCFTA. And in every edition—whether in Cairo, Durban, or beyond, Nigeria has not just participated. Nigeria has led. At IATF2023 alone, Nigerian enterprises generated over $11 billion in signed deals, the highest of any country,” Mrs Awani added.

    IATF is a platform for boosting trade and investment in Africa. The last edition held in Cairo attracted nearly 2,000 exhibitors from 65 countries and generated US$43.7 billion in trade and investment deals.

    Some of the activities lined up for the week-long IATF2025 include a trade exhibition by countries and businesses; the CANEX programme with a dedicated exhibition and summit on fashion, music, film, arts and craft, sports, literature, gastronomy and culinary arts; a four-day Trade and Investment Forum featuring leading African and international speakers; and the Africa Automotive Show for auto manufacturers, assemblers, original equipment manufacturers and component suppliers.

    Special Days will also be held at IATF2025, dedicated for countries as well as public and private entities to showcase trade and investment opportunities, and tourism and cultural attractions, as well as Global Africa Day to highlight commercial and cultural ties between Africa and its diaspora, featuring a Diaspora Summit, market and exhibition, cultural and gastronomic showcase.

    Also planned is a business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-government (B2G) platform for matchmaking and business exchanges; the AU Youth Start-Up programme showcasing innovative ideas and prototypes; the Africa Research and Innovation Hub @ IATF targeting university students, academia and national researchers to exhibit their innovations and research projects; the Trade Exhibition offering large corporations and SME’s the opportunities to showcase their goods and services, the Trade and Investment Forum, a four day conference featuring sessions and training discussing trade opportunities and barriers.

    Others include the Creative Africa Nexus (CANEX), a showcase of African and Diaspora creative talent, the Special Days segment offering countries, private and public sectors the opportunity to sponsor their special event on specific days, the Africa Automotive show, a platform for auto manufacturers to exhibit their products and interact with potential buyers, IATF Virtual, an interactive online platform that will continue after the live event is over, Diaspora Day highlighting the commercial and cultural ties between Africa and its diaspora and the African Sub-Sovereign Governments Network (AfSNET) to promote trade, investment, educational and cultural exchanges at the local level. The IATF Virtual platform is already live, connecting exhibitors and visitors throughout the year.

    To participate in IATF2025 please visit www.IntrAfricanTradeFair.com.

    – on behalf of Afreximbank.

    Media contact:
    media@intrafricatradefair.com 
    press@afreximbank.com

    About the Intra-African Trade Fair:

    Organised by African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), in collaboration with the African Union Commission (AUC) and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat, the Intra-African Trade Fair (IATF) is intended to provide a unique platform for facilitating trade and investment information exchange in support of increased intra-African trade and investment, especially in the context of implementing the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA). IATF brings together continental and global players to showcase and exhibit their goods and services and to explore business and investment opportunities in the continent. It also provides a platform to share trade, investment and market information with stakeholders and allows participants to discuss and identify solutions to the challenges confronting intra-African trade and investment. In addition to African participants, the Trade Fair is also open to businesses and investors from non-African countries interested in doing business in Africa and in supporting the continent’s transformation through industrialisation and export development.

    Media files

    .

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Ghana: Statement on the Payment of US$349.52 Million Eurobond Debt Service

    Source: APO


    .

    The Ministry of Finance wishes to officially inform the public that the Government of Ghana has, through the Bank of Ghana, successfully effected a payment of US$349,523,674.56 in respect of Eurobond debt service obligations today, Thursday, 3rd July 2025.

     Since the conclusion of Ghana’s Eurobond debt restructuring in October 2024, the Government of Ghana has cumulatively serviced US$1,174.64 million in Eurobond debt payments as follows:

    • In October 2024, the government made an initial payment of US$475.60 million, covering obligations due under the restructuring agreement, including the first post-restructuring debt service.
    • In January 2025, the government paid US$349.52 million.
    • And now, in July 2025, a further US$349.52 million has been paid

    This brings Ghana fully up to date on all scheduled Eurobond debt service obligations for 2025.

    Looking ahead to 2026, a total debt service of US$1,409.06 million is scheduled.

    This timely payment reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to macroeconomic stability, prudent debt management, and constructive engagement with external creditors.

    It is expected to:

    • Positively influence Ghana’s credit ratings trajectory in the months ahead, as it demonstrates continued discipline in debt servicing post-restructuring.
    • Boost investor confidence in Ghana’s sovereign credit profile and economic recovery programme.
    • Support foreign exchange market stability, as it has been incorporated into the Bank of Ghana’s reserves and liquidity management strategy.

    Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Ministry of Finance – Republic of Ghana.

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Security: Hayward Man Sentenced to Seven Years for Bankruptcy Fraud and Contempt of Court

    Source: US FBI

    Bernard Seidling Hid Approximately $20 Million in Assets During Bankruptcy, Including More Than One Million in Cash That He Stashed Under His House

    MADISON, WIS. – Bernard Seidling, 74, Hayward, Wisconsin, was sentenced yesterday by Chief U.S. District Judge James D. Peterson to seven years in federal prison for bankruptcy fraud and criminal contempt of court. He was also ordered to pay a $500,000 fine. A jury convicted Seidling of these crimes after a four-day trial in federal court in Madison.

    “Seidling was a recurring and shameless financial predator,” said U.S. Attorney O’Shea. “I am grateful to our tireless prosecutors and the many partners who worked to hold him accountable: the U.S. Trustee’s Office, the FBI, the Wisconsin Department of Justice – Division of Criminal Investigations, and the U.S. Postal Inspectors.”

    “Mr. Seidling’s sentence reflects the FBI’s commitment to ensuring public trust by pursuing individuals who defraud others for personal gain,” said FBI Milwaukee Special Agent in Charge Michael Hensle. “The FBI will continue to work diligently with our partners to pursue justice and combat any fraud which negatively impacts financial institutions and the American people.”

    Seidling filed for bankruptcy in 2022. On the schedules he filed at the beginning of the case, Seidling falsely stated he had no real estate, retirement accounts, trusts, partnerships, or business-related property, and that he had only one bank account with a balance of $195. In reality, Seidling had approximately $20 million in assets hidden behind dozens of sham trusts and partnerships. Seidling’s schedules also stated he had not sold real estate in the past two years, when in fact he sold a waterfront home in Key West, Florida, for more than $3 million in 2021.

    Over Seidling’s objection, the bankruptcy court converted the case from a reorganization to a liquidation. At that point, Seidling began falsely representing that he could not meaningfully participate in the bankruptcy due to his physical and mental health, and Seidling argued the bankruptcy court should indefinitely pause the proceeding. During the period of Seidling’s alleged incapacitation, he continued to manage his businesses, conduct banking activity, and play tennis at a club in Key West, where he lived during the winter months. Seidling also represented himself and participated in state court litigation during this time.

    Regarding the contempt conviction, Seidling violated an order issued by the bankruptcy court. That order prohibited Seidling from transferring assets held by 37 of Seidling’s businesses, plus any other business entity Seidling was associated with, while the bankruptcy proceeded. The order further prohibited Seidling from directing or instructing anyone else to transfer assets. Seidling violated the order by transferring real estate and draining bank accounts. He hid more than $1,000,000 in cash in a crawl space under his house. Seidling also used an unwitting individual to transfer a parcel of real estate.       

    At sentencing, Judge Peterson explained that a number of reasons warranted the above-guideline sentence, including the length and scope of Seidling’s criminal conduct. In addition to the charged conduct, Judge Peterson found that Seidling committed perjury during his testimony at the criminal trial. Judge Peterson commented that he had never seen a more “systematically dishonest defendant” who “resolutely resisted taking responsibility” for his actions.

    Seidling’s criminal history also played a role in the sentence. Seidling had two prior federal convictions: a 1991 conviction for interference with commerce by threats or violence and a 2009 conviction for 50 counts of mail fraud. The 2009 conviction involved Seidling using small claims court to obtain judgments against victims without serving the victims with process. Drawing a connection between that case and the present one, Judge Peterson noted Seidling was skilled at using courts to extort people. Given this history, Judge Peterson found Seidling was a danger to reoffend.

    Throughout the criminal case, Seidling was represented by a court-appointed attorney. In order to obtain representation at public expense, a defendant must represent that he cannot afford representation. Judge Peterson found Seidling’s claim of indigency was false, and the court ordered Seidling to reimburse the U.S. Treasury for the cost of his defense.

    The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Wisconsin Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation, and the United States Postal Inspection Service. The United States also received assistance from the Office of the United States Trustee. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Meredith P. Duchemin and Megan R. Stelljes handled the prosecution. 

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Hayward Man Sentenced to Seven Years for Bankruptcy Fraud and Contempt of Court

    Source: US FBI

    Bernard Seidling Hid Approximately $20 Million in Assets During Bankruptcy, Including More Than One Million in Cash That He Stashed Under His House

    MADISON, WIS. – Bernard Seidling, 74, Hayward, Wisconsin, was sentenced yesterday by Chief U.S. District Judge James D. Peterson to seven years in federal prison for bankruptcy fraud and criminal contempt of court. He was also ordered to pay a $500,000 fine. A jury convicted Seidling of these crimes after a four-day trial in federal court in Madison.

    “Seidling was a recurring and shameless financial predator,” said U.S. Attorney O’Shea. “I am grateful to our tireless prosecutors and the many partners who worked to hold him accountable: the U.S. Trustee’s Office, the FBI, the Wisconsin Department of Justice – Division of Criminal Investigations, and the U.S. Postal Inspectors.”

    “Mr. Seidling’s sentence reflects the FBI’s commitment to ensuring public trust by pursuing individuals who defraud others for personal gain,” said FBI Milwaukee Special Agent in Charge Michael Hensle. “The FBI will continue to work diligently with our partners to pursue justice and combat any fraud which negatively impacts financial institutions and the American people.”

    Seidling filed for bankruptcy in 2022. On the schedules he filed at the beginning of the case, Seidling falsely stated he had no real estate, retirement accounts, trusts, partnerships, or business-related property, and that he had only one bank account with a balance of $195. In reality, Seidling had approximately $20 million in assets hidden behind dozens of sham trusts and partnerships. Seidling’s schedules also stated he had not sold real estate in the past two years, when in fact he sold a waterfront home in Key West, Florida, for more than $3 million in 2021.

    Over Seidling’s objection, the bankruptcy court converted the case from a reorganization to a liquidation. At that point, Seidling began falsely representing that he could not meaningfully participate in the bankruptcy due to his physical and mental health, and Seidling argued the bankruptcy court should indefinitely pause the proceeding. During the period of Seidling’s alleged incapacitation, he continued to manage his businesses, conduct banking activity, and play tennis at a club in Key West, where he lived during the winter months. Seidling also represented himself and participated in state court litigation during this time.

    Regarding the contempt conviction, Seidling violated an order issued by the bankruptcy court. That order prohibited Seidling from transferring assets held by 37 of Seidling’s businesses, plus any other business entity Seidling was associated with, while the bankruptcy proceeded. The order further prohibited Seidling from directing or instructing anyone else to transfer assets. Seidling violated the order by transferring real estate and draining bank accounts. He hid more than $1,000,000 in cash in a crawl space under his house. Seidling also used an unwitting individual to transfer a parcel of real estate.       

    At sentencing, Judge Peterson explained that a number of reasons warranted the above-guideline sentence, including the length and scope of Seidling’s criminal conduct. In addition to the charged conduct, Judge Peterson found that Seidling committed perjury during his testimony at the criminal trial. Judge Peterson commented that he had never seen a more “systematically dishonest defendant” who “resolutely resisted taking responsibility” for his actions.

    Seidling’s criminal history also played a role in the sentence. Seidling had two prior federal convictions: a 1991 conviction for interference with commerce by threats or violence and a 2009 conviction for 50 counts of mail fraud. The 2009 conviction involved Seidling using small claims court to obtain judgments against victims without serving the victims with process. Drawing a connection between that case and the present one, Judge Peterson noted Seidling was skilled at using courts to extort people. Given this history, Judge Peterson found Seidling was a danger to reoffend.

    Throughout the criminal case, Seidling was represented by a court-appointed attorney. In order to obtain representation at public expense, a defendant must represent that he cannot afford representation. Judge Peterson found Seidling’s claim of indigency was false, and the court ordered Seidling to reimburse the U.S. Treasury for the cost of his defense.

    The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Wisconsin Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation, and the United States Postal Inspection Service. The United States also received assistance from the Office of the United States Trustee. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Meredith P. Duchemin and Megan R. Stelljes handled the prosecution. 

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Oxfam reaction to Brazil, Mexico and Colombia’s launch of a care investment initiative

    Source: Oxfam –

    Oxfam has joined the new care initiative launched today by the governments of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia and others, at the Fourth Financing for Development Conference in Seville. The coalition will push for increased investment in care, with the goal of reducing inequalities. Oxfam Mexico Executive Director Alexandra Haas said: 

    “This initiative seeks to close the gap that for centuries has been disadvantaging women around the world. Women take on 76% of unpaid care work globally and are the most affected by cuts to public services. This unequal distribution of care is rooted in the gendered division of labor and in the colonial power imbalances between Global North and South, and in an economic structure that puts the interests of the super-rich at the expense of everyone else.  

    “This agenda is not advancing at the speed we’d like, because it requires funding. But if governments don’t invest, care work will fall once more on the shoulders of women, particularly low-income and racialised women. It’s time for states to take on responsibility through the provision of high-quality, sufficient and well-funded public services.  

    “We’re concerned about the role of the private sector in the provision of universal public services. Let’s be cautious. Progress will come from collaboration between governments, institutions and civil society. Services like healthcare are a human right and a public good, not a commodity. We hope the role of the private sector is through their paying their fair share of taxes, that can be used to fund and sustain public services.  

    “Seville is just a starting point, not the destination. This initiative can pave a route for more global coalitions that put care and the fight against inequalities at the center, from the FFD to COP30 and G20.”  

    Oxfam’s media briefing note, “From Private Profit to Public Power: Financing Development, Not Oligarchy” can be downloaded here. 

    The CareSPA initiative is led by UN Women together with Brazil, Colombia and Mexico, with the support of the Global Care Alliance and the backing of Spain, Uruguay, Nepal, Canada, Norway and Germany. Institutional partners include the ILO (International Labour Organization), CAF (Development Bank of Latin America), ECLAC, UNDP, UNFPA and IDRC, together with civil society organisations such as GIESCR, Coordinadora de Organizaciones para el Desarrollo and Equimundo. 

    The Platform will discuss in the coming months the potential implementation of a set of specific actions to drive systemic change. Among them: 

     - Promoting gender-responsive budgeting and strengthening public financing capacity for care systems.  

    – Improving the generation and use of care-related data to inform evidence-based policy-making and investment planning.  

    – Scale up care services and systems through a sustainable and equity-driven approach, promoting shared gender and social responsibility.  

    – Foster international cooperation, capacity development and knowledge sharing to support the transformation of care systems. 

    The statistic on 76% of care work comes from a 2024 WHO report. 

    MIL OSI NGO