Man who circulated Mai TT’s daughter Fifie Felisha’s nudes now in hot soup

THE ex-boyfriend of Fifie, real name Felisha Muzeya (18), has appeared in court on allegations of circulating her nudes on social media. Fifie is the daughter of prominent socialite, Mai TT. Amir Edwin Mhaka (19), of Cabs Budiriro 4 Extension, appeared…

THE ex-boyfriend of Fifie, real name Felisha Muzeya (18), has appeared in court on allegations of circulating her nudes on social media. Fifie is the daughter of prominent socialite, Mai TT. Amir Edwin Mhaka (19), of Cabs Budiriro 4 Extension, appeared before Harare magistrate Ms Caroline Matanga, charged with transmitting intimate images without the owner’s […]

The post Man who circulated Mai TT’s daughter Fifie Felisha’s nudes now in hot soup first appeared on My Zimbabwe News.

Zimbabwe’s big businesses are losing the fight for dollars

Source: Zimbabwe’s big businesses are losing the fight for dollars – Moneyweb Retailers have been obliged to sell items at prices that are often significantly more expensive in US dollar terms than those same items for sale on the street. Image: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg From the tiny space he rents in the central business district […]

The post Zimbabwe’s big businesses are losing the fight for dollars appeared first on Zimbabwe Situation.

Source: Zimbabwe’s big businesses are losing the fight for dollars – Moneyweb

Retailers have been obliged to sell items at prices that are often significantly more expensive in US dollar terms than those same items for sale on the street.

Image: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg

Image: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg

From the tiny space he rents in the central business district of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, Brian Tinotenda can look across the street and see the supermarket where he used to work.

Along with nearly two dozen other informal traders, Tinotenda pays roughly $200 a month for the small space from which he sells toiletries and foodstuff such as rice, cooking oil and cornmeal – the same products he sold at the Spar Group before starting his own business in 2021. While there are many differences between his new job and his last, one of the big ones is that now all of his wares are priced in US dollars.

The Zimbabwean government is hoping to change that. Earlier this month, it introduced a new currency, the ZiG, short for Zimbabwe Gold. The ZiG is backed by 2.5 tons of gold and about $100 million in foreign currency reserves held by the central bank, and a single ZiG is worth about 7 US cents, the price of a milligram of gold.

The move is an effort to stabilise the volatile exchange rate that has roiled the country’s retail sector and given an upper hand to informal traders like Tinotenda. For more than a decade, Zimbabwe has been struggling with a currency crisis sparked by the government’s decision to keep printing money. That has fueled hyper-inflation, which in 2008 reached the official rate of 500 billion percent. To get things under control, the country adopted greenbacks for more than a decade, before switching back to Zimbabwean dollars in 2019.

Businesses have been forced to use Zimbabwean dollars at an official exchange rate which is widely seen as overvalued. Image: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg

The trouble is that, while businesses have been forced to use Zimbabwean dollars at an official exchange rate set by the central bank – which is widely seen as overvalued – traders have stuck with the more stable American dollar. This has meant that retailers have been obliged to sell items at prices that are often significantly more expensive in US dollar terms than those same items for sale on the street.

The policy has been a boon to informal traders, as 80% of all commerce is conducted in US dollars. It’s also been a serious liability for major retailers such as the Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed Pick n Pay Stores and rival OK Zimbabwe, which has operated in the country for 82 years. With inflation soaring — it hit 55% in March — and the local currency prone to wild swings, exchange-rate losses have eroded the value of earnings.

The exchange rate restrictions created a “huge disadvantage” for “compliant businesses who grapple with taxes, licensing, labour costs and rentals,” said Denford Mutashu, president of the Confederation for Zimbabwe Retailers. The IMF has cautioned that they “promote informality, which erodes the tax base and undermines longer-term growth.”

Retailers have been even more blunt. OK Zimbabwe, which makes only 20% of its revenue in US dollars, said the policy puts businesses at risk of “forced death.”

The ZiG is an “effectively revalued” Zimbabwe dollar, said Tony Hawkins, a Harare-based economist and a former economics professor at the University of Zimbabwe. To support the new currency and spur growth curtailed by high borrowing costs, the central bank reset interest rates from 130%, a world record, to 20%. And so far, the ZiG is off to a promising start — in its first week it gained 1% against the US dollar.

That’s a significant change from the Zimbabwean dollar it’s replacing. When the dollar was handed its death sentence on April 5, it was one the world’s worst performing currencies, trailing behind only the Lebanese pound. It lost value every single trading day of this year.

Another factor that authorities hope will help the ZiG succeed is that businesses will no longer be forced to stick to a fixed exchange rate. Assuming the currency stays stable, said John Mushayavanhu, Governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, retailers now run the risk of driving themselves “out of the market” if they raise prices too much.

The majority of Zimbabwe’s 6.3 million working people are informally employed. Image: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg

While businesses rush to adapt to the ZiG, one of the biggest concerns is whether it will create a parallel currency market — which could threaten its exchange rate stability. If the ZiG’s value were to rise or fall in the informal sector, for instance, that could have an effect on the the prices of goods and services, which could then be reflected in the official exchange rate. According to the Harare-based brokerage firm IHS Securities, it’s just a matter of time before this takes place.

It’s likely that “some form of parallel market will emerge as a significant portion of the population remains unbanked,” it said in an April 8 note to clients. “It is yet to be seen what level the parallel rate will settle at.”

The majority of Zimbabwe’s 6.3 million working people are informally employed, according to the country’s national statistics agency. Wholesale and retail trading of goods such as soft drinks, perfumes and even diapers is common, and many traders work out of “tuck-shops” — tiny spaces in densely packed buildings. Those who want to avoid overhead costs might sell from the trunk of a car or by the side of the road.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe estimates that the informal sector generates $14 billion in annual revenue. The World Bank has called Zimbabwe’s black economy — which operates on a strictly cash basis — the world’s second-largest after Bolivia. Impromptu markets and tuck-shops are so popular that some major retailers have linked them to a decline in foot traffic.

In downtown Bulawayo’s central business district, informal traders sit along a row of sky-blue make-shift tents hawking bales of second-hand clothes and electronics. Known as “mabhero,” the bales come from neighbouring countries such as Mozambique and Zambia, where traders buy goods in US dollars to bring back to Zimbabwe. Clothes are laid out in piles on the ground for pedestrians to stop and pick through.

These mabhero sellers are eating into the margins of larger clothing competitors such as Edgars Stores Zimbabwe and Truworths Zimbabwe. Sales have declined due to “cheap and fake imports selling at below local and international manufacturing costs,” said Truworths in a March financial results release, adding that it “cannot viably compete.”

Such cross-border imports aren’t limited to clothes: On social media, some sellers even offer contraband Starlink terminals. These Space X-made kits, which aren’t yet legal in Zimbabwe, sell for between $1 000 and $1 250 US.

As retailers continue to lose ground to informal sellers, many are hoping the ZiG will offer relief. Because it isn’t pegged to a fixed exchange rate, Maxen Karombo, chief executive officer of OK Zimbabwe, said he’s optimistic about it. “This should bode well for all in retail,” Karombo wrote in response to questions, “as we now compete on the basis of value.”

John Mushayavanhu holds specimens of Zimbabwe’s new ZiG currency during a news conference on April 5. Image: Cynthia R Matonhodze/Bloomberg

Mike Kamungeremu, president of the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce, said the plan is to “give ZiG a chance” and to review the new currency’s effectiveness and impact by June.

Still, as Imara Asset Management, the country’s biggest independent brokerage, observed in a recent quarterly note, breaking up with the US dollar will be a challenge. As the informal market has grown, some big manufacturers now prefer to operate in it.

Among the businesses that straddle both sectors are Zimbabwe’s two largest bread manufacturers, who supply tuck-shops and roadside traders with bread every morning. The wholesale price for a loaf of bread is 80 US cents, Tinotenda explained, and most informal traders price them at $1.

“But walk into the supermarket, there they sell the same bread for $1.20,” he said. “No one buys it.”

The post Zimbabwe’s big businesses are losing the fight for dollars appeared first on Zimbabwe Situation.

Zimbabwe’s New Central Banker Vows to Regain Investor Confidence 

Zimbabwe’s new central bank governor vowed to restore confidence in the institution that’s repeatedly failed to stabilize prices and the nation’s currency. Source: Zimbabwe’s New Central Banker Vows to Regain Investor Confidence – BNN Bloomberg John Mushayavanhu , Bloomberg (Bloomberg) — Zimbabwe’s new central bank governor vowed to restore confidence in the institution that’s repeatedly […]

The post Zimbabwe’s New Central Banker Vows to Regain Investor Confidence  appeared first on Zimbabwe Situation.

Zimbabwe’s new central bank governor vowed to restore confidence in the institution that’s repeatedly failed to stabilize prices and the nation’s currency.

Source: Zimbabwe’s New Central Banker Vows to Regain Investor Confidence – BNN Bloomberg

John Mushayavanhu

(Bloomberg) — Zimbabwe’s new central bank governor vowed to restore confidence in the institution that’s repeatedly failed to stabilize prices and the nation’s currency.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe is rolling out a ‘Back to Basics’ plan that will initially focus on consolidating the introduction of the nation’s new national currency — the ZiG, John Mushayavanhu said in a circular to staff. It will also seek a “paradigm shift” in culture at the bank to rebuild its credibility and relevance, he said.

“The market has lost confidence and trust in the credibility and impact of the central bank’s policies over the years, and this calls for a focused re-orientation and change in the way we do things in pursuit of our statutory mandate,” Mushayavanhu said in the note.

Mushayavanhu’s first policy measure after taking over as governor was the introduction of the ZiG — short for Zimbabwe Gold — on April 5. The new unit backed by gold and a basket of foreign currencies is the southern African nation’s sixth attempt to create a functioning local currency since 2008. A single ZiG is worth about 7 US cents, the price of a milligram of gold.

The currency has strengthened 1.5% since its introduction and traded at 13.36 per US dollar on Tuesday, according to central bank data.

Dubbed by commercial bankers as “John the Second” after taking over from former Governor John Mangudya last month, Mushayavanhu said other reforms planned by the central bank include “identifying and plugging leakages and restructuring the Reserve Bank’s balance sheet from short-term pressures likely to undermine the efficacy of our policies.”

The bank will also seek to collate and disseminate credible data and appoint a panel to monitor the effectiveness of monetary policy. Along with the new currency, Mushayavanhu also introduced a new interest rate on April 5 — one set at 20%, compared with 130% previously, which was the highest central bank rate in the world.

The ZiG replaced the Zimbabwean dollar, which lost four-fifths of its value against the greenback this year before being replaced, fanning inflation and evoking bitter memories for citizens of the days of hyperinflation.

Zimbabwe stopped publishing local currency inflation data last year, after adopting a measure that better reflects the dominant role the US dollar plays in the economy. Under the measure inflation quickened to a seven-month high of 55.3% in March.

The post Zimbabwe’s New Central Banker Vows to Regain Investor Confidence  appeared first on Zimbabwe Situation.

What Zim’s new ZiG currency means for big retailers like Spar, PnP and OK

Earlier this month Zimbabwe introduced a new currency, the ZiG, short for Zimbabwe Gold. The move is an effort to stabilise the volatile exchange rate that has roiled the country’s retail sector. Source: What Zim’s new ZiG currency means for big retailers like Spar, PnP and OK | Business Zimbabwe Reserve Bank Governor John Mushayavanhu […]

The post What Zim’s new ZiG currency means for big retailers like Spar, PnP and OK appeared first on Zimbabwe Situation.

Earlier this month Zimbabwe introduced a new currency, the ZiG, short for Zimbabwe Gold. The move is an effort to stabilise the volatile exchange rate that has roiled the country’s retail sector.

Source: What Zim’s new ZiG currency means for big retailers like Spar, PnP and OK | Business

Zimbabwe Reserve Bank Governor John Mushayavanhu presented his monetary policy statement, during which he announced the launch by the central bank of the ZiG (Zimbabwe Gold). (Jekesai Njikizana/ AFP)

Zimbabwe Reserve Bank Governor John Mushayavanhu presented his monetary policy statement, during which he announced the launch by the central bank of the ZiG (Zimbabwe Gold). (Jekesai Njikizana/ AFP)
  • Earlier this month Zimbabwe introduced a new currency, the ZiG, short for Zimbabwe Gold.
  • The move is an effort to stabilise the volatile exchange rate that has roiled the country’s retail sector.
  • While businesses rush to adapt to the ZiG, one of the biggest concerns is whether it will create a parallel currency market — which could threaten its exchange rate stability.
  • For more financial news, go to the News24 Business front page.

 


From the tiny space he rents in the central business district of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second-largest city, Brian Tinotenda can look across the street and see the supermarket where he used to work.

Along with nearly two dozen other informal traders, Tinotenda pays roughly $200 (R3 800) a month for the small space from which he sells toiletries and foodstuff such as rice, cooking oil and cornmeal – the same products he sold at the Spar Group before starting his own business in 2021. While there are many differences between his new job and his last, one of the big ones is that now all of his wares are priced in US dollars.

The Zimbabwean government is hoping to change that. Earlier this month, it introduced a new currency, the ZiG, short for Zimbabwe Gold. The ZiG is backed by 2.5 tons of gold and about $100 million in foreign currency reserves held by the central bank, and a single ZiG is worth about 7 US cents, the price of a milligram of gold.

The move is an effort to stabilise the volatile exchange rate that has roiled the country’s retail sector and given an upper hand to informal traders like Tinotenda. For more than a decade, Zimbabwe has been struggling with a currency crisis sparked by the government’s decision to keep printing money. That has fuelled hyper-inflation, which in 2008 reached the official rate of 500 billion percent. To get things under control, the country adopted greenbacks for more than a decade, before switching back to Zimbabwean dollars in 2019.

The trouble is that, while businesses have been forced to use Zimbabwean dollars at an official exchange rate set by the central bank – which is widely seen as overvalued – traders have stuck with the more stable American dollar. This has meant that retailers have been obliged to sell items at prices that are often significantly more expensive in US dollar terms than those same items for sale on the street.

The policy has been a boon to informal traders, as 80% of all commerce is conducted in US dollars. It’s also been a serious liability for major retailers such as the Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed Pick n Pay Stores Ltd. and rival OK Zimbabwe Ltd., which has operated in the country for 82 years. With inflation soaring — it hit 55% in March — and the local currency prone to wild swings, exchange-rate losses have eroded the value of earnings.

The exchange rate restrictions created a “huge disadvantage” for “compliant businesses who grapple with taxes, licensing, labour costs and rentals,” said Denford Mutashu, president of the Confederation for Zimbabwe Retailers. The IMF has cautioned that they “promote informality, which erodes the tax base and undermines longer-term growth.”

Retailers have been even more blunt. OK Zimbabwe, which makes only 20% of its revenue in US dollars, said the policy puts businesses at risk of “forced death.”

The ZiG is an “effectively revalued” Zimbabwe dollar, said Tony Hawkins, a Harare-based economist and a former economics professor at the University of Zimbabwe. To support the new currency and spur growth curtailed by high borrowing costs, the central bank reset interest rates from 130%, a world record, to 20%. And so far, the ZiG is off to a promising start — after more than a week of trading, it has gained 1.5% against the US dollar.

That’s a significant change from the Zimbabwean dollar it’s replacing. When the dollar was handed its death sentence on April 5, it was one of the world’s worst performing currencies, trailing behind only the Lebanese pound. It lost value every single trading day of this year.

Another factor that authorities hope will help the ZiG succeed is that businesses will no longer be forced to stick to a fixed exchange rate. Assuming the currency stays stable, said John Mushayavanhu, Governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, retailers now run the risk of driving themselves “out of the market” if they raise prices too much.

While businesses rush to adapt to the ZiG, one of the biggest concerns is whether it will create a parallel currency market — which could threaten its exchange rate stability. If the ZiG’s value were to rise or fall in the informal sector, for instance, that could have an effect on the prices of goods and services, which could then be reflected in the official exchange rate. According to the Harare-based brokerage firm IHS Securities Ltd., it’s just a matter of time before this takes place.

It’s likely that “some form of parallel market will emerge as a significant portion of the population remains unbanked,” it said in an April 8 note to clients. “It is yet to be seen what level the parallel rate will settle at.”

A street market price of 16 ZiG per dollar was being quoted Tuesday by ZimPriceCheck.Com, a website that tracks official and parallel exchange rates.

The majority of Zimbabwe’s 6.3 million working people are informally employed, according to the country’s national statistics agency. Wholesale and retail trading of goods such as soft drinks, perfumes and even diapers is common, and many traders work out of “tuck-shops” — tiny spaces in densely packed buildings. Those who want to avoid overhead costs might sell from the trunk of a car or by the side of the road.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe estimates that the informal sector generates $14 billion in annual revenue. The World Bank has called Zimbabwe’s black economy — which operates on a strictly cash basis — the world’s second-largest after Bolivia. Impromptu markets and tuck-shops are so popular that some major retailers have linked them to a decline in foot traffic.

In downtown Bulawayo’s central business district, informal traders sit along a row of sky-blue make-shift tents hawking bales of second-hand clothes and electronics. Known as “mabhero,” the bales come from neighboring countries such as Mozambique and Zambia, where traders buy goods in US dollars to bring back to Zimbabwe. Clothes are laid out in piles on the ground for pedestrians to stop and pick through.

These mabhero sellers are eating into the margins of larger clothing competitors such as Edgars Stores Zimbabwe and Truworths Ltd Zimbabwe. Sales have declined due to “cheap and fake imports selling at below local and international manufacturing costs,” said Truworths in a March financial results release, adding that it “cannot viably compete.”

Such cross-border imports aren’t limited to clothes: On social media, some sellers even offer contraband Starlink terminals. These Space X-made kits, which aren’t yet legal in Zimbabwe, sell for between $1 000 and $1 250 US.

As retailers continue to lose ground to informal sellers, many are hoping the ZiG will offer relief. Because it isn’t pegged to a fixed exchange rate, Maxen Karombo, chief executive officer of OK Zimbabwe, said he’s optimistic about it. “This should bode well for all in retail,” Karombo wrote in response to questions, “as we now compete on the basis of value.”

Mike Kamungeremu, president of the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce, said the plan is to “give ZiG a chance” and to review the new currency’s effectiveness and impact by June.

Still, as Imara Asset Management, the country’s biggest independent brokerage, observed in a recent quarterly note, breaking up with the US dollar will be a challenge. As the informal market has grown, some big manufacturers now prefer to operate in it.

Among the businesses that straddle both sectors are Zimbabwe’s two largest bread manufacturers, who supply tuck-shops and roadside traders with bread every morning. The wholesale price for a loaf of bread is 80 US cents, Tinotenda explained, and most informal traders price them at $1.

“But walk into the supermarket, there they sell the same bread for $1.20,” he said. “No one buys it.”

The post What Zim’s new ZiG currency means for big retailers like Spar, PnP and OK appeared first on Zimbabwe Situation.

THREE MEN CHARGED WITH HUMAN TRAFFICKING

Regional Magistrate Vimbai Mutukwa has denied bail to three
Chipinge men charged with trafficking 36 women and children across the border
into South Africa. She denied them bail last Thursday after concluding that
they are of no fixed aboard and

are f…

Regional Magistrate Vimbai Mutukwa has denied bail to three Chipinge men charged with trafficking 36 women and children across the border into South Africa. She denied them bail last Thursday after concluding that they are of no fixed aboard and are flight risks due to the gravity of their case. Richman Sande (29), Striton Maphosa (32) and Lovemore Sithole (32) all of Nyazi Village under Chief