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JPMorgan resumes dollar clearing in Angola after 10-year hiatus

US bankโ€™s comeback signals renewed confidence in Angolaโ€™s financial reforms
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Global investment bank JPMorgan Chase & Co. has resumed dollar clearing services in Angola, marking its return to the southern African nation after a decade-long absence.

The move makes JPMorgan the first US bank to re-enter the Angolan market since major international lenders withdrew in the mid-2010s over compliance concerns.

The service will allow Angolan banks to settle US dollar transactions directly, restoring a critical link for trade, remittances, and foreign investment in Africaโ€™s second-largest oil producer. The decision underscores growing confidence among international financial institutions in Angolaโ€™s reform agenda.

About ten years ago, most global banksโ€”citing anti-money laundering and corruption risksโ€”halted dollar clearing for Angolan institutions. The pullout severely restricted the countryโ€™s access to US dollar liquidity, complicating payments for imports, debt obligations, and oil-related transactions.

Since then, Angola has undertaken significant economic and governance reforms, including currency liberalisation, improved fiscal transparency, and enhanced oversight of its banking sector.

Despite these efforts, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) placed Angola on its โ€œgrey listโ€ in October 2024, subjecting it to increased monitoring for potential illicit financial flows.

Even with that designation, JPMorganโ€™s return is being viewed as a vote of confidence in Angolaโ€™s reform trajectory and a potential catalyst for renewed foreign participation in its financial system.

โ€œJPMorganโ€™s direct dollar clearing for Angola marks a critical juncture in its financial reintegration, signalling international validation of its reformed economic governance,โ€ Mโ€™zรฉe Fula Ngenge, an Economist and Investment Strategist based in Luanda, told African Business Magazine.

He added that the move would reduce transactional friction and improve liquidity access in an economy still heavily dependent on oil exports. โ€œIt simultaneously subjects Angolan institutions to intensified international regulatory scrutiny,โ€ Ngenge noted.

For Africaโ€™s second biggest oil producer, JPMorganโ€™s return could help ease currency pressures, boost investor confidence, and strengthen its banking systemโ€™s credibility. Analysts say it may also encourage other global institutions to reconsider their exit from the Angolan market.

The development represents not just a restoration of financial connectivity but also a symbolic step toward Angolaโ€™s re-entry into the global banking mainstream, a decade after being effectively cut off from direct US dollar clearing.

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