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From South Africa to Kenya: African Regulators Tighten FX and CFD Rules to Protect Retail Investors and Align with FATF Standards
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From South Africa to Kenya: African Regulators Tighten FX and CFD Rules to Protect Retail Investors and Align with FATF Standards

African regulators intensified forex and CFD oversight in 2025, targeting scams and aligning with FATF anti-money laundering standards from South Africa to Kenya. South Africa’s FSCA imposed stricter licensing, real-time reporting, client fund segregation, and enhanced KYC/AML, with 2024/25 enforcement debarring 131 individuals and withdrawing 382 licenses. Kenya’s CMA and Nigeria’s SEC banned unregulated brokers, launched education campaigns, and mandated AML checks, while the new Virtual Asset Service Providers Act requires VASPs’ digital compliance. Ghana’s push for retail forex licensing formalizes margin trading amid rising scams. These measures raise barriers for non-compliant brokerages but foster market maturity, attracting authorized players like EBC Financial Group. FSCA’s 2025-2028 strategy prioritizes conduct oversight for online platforms, with ongoing audits and penalties deterring misuse of client funds. Social media fraud warnings highlight impersonator brokers targeting retail traders, prompting public alerts. Forex leverage caps and transparency rules mirror EU MiFID III trends, impacting cross-border operations. Brokerage firms face higher capital needs but benefit from investor trust, boosting volumes in regulated pairs like USD/ZAR. Regional ties to Europe and U.S. amplify scrutiny: SARB’s exchange guidelines guide corporate flows. Latin America’s trade resilience offers forex opportunities, as African exports stabilize currencies. U.S. tariffs indirectly support commodity prices, aiding African FX. Alignment with global standards positions Africa for institutional inflows, though short-term disruptions hit unlicensed players. Retail protection trumps volume, ensuring sustainable growth amid Trump’s dollar-strong policies.

December Tailwinds: European Indices Extend Traditional ‘Santa Rally’ Amid Easing Inflation and Rate-Cut Hopes
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December Tailwinds: European Indices Extend Traditional ‘Santa Rally’ Amid Easing Inflation and Rate-Cut Hopes

December’s “Santa Claus rally” gained momentum in 2025, with European markets posting consistent gains rooted in decades of seasonal patterns and institutional buying. The EURO STOXX 50 has averaged 1.87% December returns since 1987, positive 71% of the time—second only to November—while the DAX shows 2.18% averages with 73% win rates. Late-month surges dominate: from December 15 to year-end, EURO STOXX delivers 2.12% on average (76% positive), fueled by fund managers’ year-end rebalancing. Easing eurozone inflation and ECB rate-cut bets extend this tailwind, contrasting early-year sideways trading. Fund manager behavior drives much of the phenomenon, as “price maintenance” prompts buying of strong performers to enhance client reports. Seasonax analyst Christoph Geyer notes this intensifies in range-bound years like 2025’s DAX since May, with mid-November to early-January patterns favoring 6%+ gains in 34 of 46 years. U.S. parallels reinforce credibility: S&P 500 December gains occur 74% of the time at 1.44% average. Country indices align—CAC 40 at 1.57% (70% positive), IBEX 35 at 1.12%—building late-December steam. Brokerage trading volumes spiked in derivatives tied to these indices, with forex pairs like EUR/USD reflecting rate divergence hopes. European stocks’ undervaluation, per Yahoo Finance, supports earnings-driven upside at 21.4% growth. Global spillovers include U.S. Wall Street’s sideways churn ahead of Fed decisions, impacting cross-Atlantic flows. African and Latin brokerage sectors watch closely, as euro strength aids commodity-linked currencies. While past performance offers no guarantees, 2025’s setup—easing inflation, technical breakouts, and positioning—mirrors historical catalysts. Risks like U.S. tariffs under Trump could cap gains via dollar appreciation, but seasonal forces prevail. Investors eye U.S. inflation for confirmation, blending festive stats with macroeconomic reality.

UK Teesside Gas Firm Calls for Energy Profits Levy Overhaul
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UK Teesside Gas Firm Calls for Energy Profits Levy Overhaul

A major gas company based in Teesside has called for an overhaul of the UK’s energy profits levy, warning that current policies risk job losses and deter critical investment in infrastructure. The firm argues that the levy, designed to tax excess profits from high energy prices, creates uncertainty and disincentives for future projects. It urges the government to revise the framework to balance raising revenue with maintaining competitiveness and energy security. The plea comes as the UK prepares for winter energy demands amid volatile markets.

Shell Exits UK Offshore Wind Projects After Strategic Review
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Shell Exits UK Offshore Wind Projects After Strategic Review

Shell has announced its exit from two offshore wind projects off the UK coast following a strategic review aligning with broader portfolio adjustments. The decision underscores Shell’s focus on maximizing capital efficiency while navigating challenges in the offshore wind sector, including supply chain disruptions and rising costs. Industry analysts foresee continued consolidation and partnerships as key features shaping the UK’s renewables landscape in coming years.

Europe’s Energy Giants Report Better-than-Expected Q3 Results
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Europe’s Energy Giants Report Better-than-Expected Q3 Results

Europe’s major energy companies have posted stronger-than-expected financial results for the third quarter of 2025, driven by high refining margins and robust LNG demand. Companies like Shell, TotalEnergies, and BP benefited from optimized supply chains and spot market gains. The surge in liquefied natural gas demand, especially from Asia and the US, helped offset declining European gas prices. Executives remain cautious, monitoring potential demand shifts as renewable capacity expands and regulatory pressures increase.

US Urges Europe to Maintain Oil and Gas Supplies Over Renewables
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US Urges Europe to Maintain Oil and Gas Supplies Over Renewables

The US government has urged European countries to continue prioritizing oil and gas supplies over a rapid shift to renewables, stressing energy security risks amid geopolitical tensions. US officials argue that while green energy is essential for the long term, Europe must ensure stable fossil fuel deliveries in the near term to avoid shortages and price spikes. The call comes amid a challenging winter outlook and concerns that some European nations may accelerate renewable adoption at the expense of traditional energy sources. Critics caution that this approach risks delaying climate goals but recognize the imperative for energy reliability.

Brian-Niccol
Chairman & CEO, Starbucks

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