Egitto 6.875% 30.04.2040 ISIN XS0505478684

Adds analyst, quotes, updates figures)
By Patrick Werr
CAIRO, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Egypt's currency weakened on Thursday by about 2.3% against the U.S. dollar, though bankers said trading was thin and demand for dollars high following the third effective devaluation of the pound in less than a year.

The pound
closed at 27.11 per dollar, according to the central bank, after fluctuating more than usual. Black market dealers on the street were offering 30.5 pounds to the dollar.

On Wednesday the pound slid by 6.34%, according to central bank figures, its biggest one-day move since October when it was last allowed to drop sharply as a new financing package with the International Monetary Fund was announced. The pound has weakened by 42.4% over the last year.

Currency flexibility was a key component of the 46-month, $3 billion financial IMF package.

"This is a heavily managed exchange rate and the decline is taken as a controlled move by local authorities," said Chris Turner of ING.

A year ago the pound traded in a tight band below 16 per dollar. After the central bank allowed the pound to depreciate sharply last March and October, it soon resumed trading within a band, moving only about 0.01 pounds per dollar per day.

"In our view, recent movements may represent final steps towards a more flexible exchange rate regime in Egypt, perhaps akin to a managed float," said JP Morgan's Ayomide O Mejabi.

Egypt's international market government bonds
gave back some of Wednesday's gains, while non-deliverable forwards (NDF) that traders use to price in future currency moves forecast further falls for the pound in the next 3-12 months
.

HUGE BACKLOG
Despite last year's devaluations a shortage of foreign currency has continued to hamper imports in recent months.

In an attempt to ease the import crunch, authorities announced last week they had phased out restrictions on access to import financing that had been in place since February.

On Thursday, two bankers said trade in the pound was thin and demand for dollars remained high as banks struggle to clear a huge backlog of orders.

The demand for dollars includes a mix of imports both already on their way and others newly ordered, one of the bankers said.

Egypt was already under financial pressure when the war in Ukraine began, hurting tourism revenues, raising commodity import bills and leading foreign investors to pull more than $20 billion out of the country.

Deutsche Bank said in a note that Wednesday's devaluation and an interest rate hike by the central bank last month "clearly show an approach to re-attract (structural) foreign inflows into local markets".

As the pound fell on Wednesday, state-owned banks introduced one-year savings certificates bearing a 25% return.

These should suck liquidity out of the market while helping some Egyptians protect savings against an expected surge in inflation, which is already at five-year highs.

There were long queues outside banks on Thursday to snap up the certificates.

"I have a bit of savings so I thought I should do it," said one man who gave his name as Rami and was queuing outside a bank in Cairo with his wife. He said he was searching for employment after returning from abroad a couple months ago.

"I don't really have other options [for investment]. The return is very good of course," he said. "What's happening with prices is known. It's really bad," his wife added.


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(Reporting by Patrick Werr, Karin Strohecker, Marc Jones, Sarah El Safty, Moaz Abd-Alaziz, Enas Alashray, and Nadine Awadalla; Editing by Aidan Lewis and Hugh Lawson)
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Egypt commits to IMF to slow projects, increase fuel prices
Oggi 15:00 - RSF
By Patrick Werr
CAIRO, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Egypt committed to a flexible currency, a greater role for the private sector and a range of monetary and fiscal reforms when it agreed to a $3 billion financial support package with the International Monetary Fund, according to an IMF staff report released on Tuesday.

In a letter of intent to the IMF dated Nov. 30, the government said it sought the support after the war in Ukraine increased existing vulnerabilities amid tighter global financial conditions and higher commodity prices.

Among its pledges is one to slow investment in public projects, including national projects, so as to reduce inflation and conserve foreign currency, without specifying where cuts might fall.

The government has been on an infrastructure spending spree over the last few years, building an extensive network of roads and bridges as well as new cities. It has also started work on high-speed railways and a nuclear power plant, each with a cost of tens of billions of dollars.

The IMF board of directors approved the 46-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF) on Dec. 17.

Under the letter of intent, Egypt said it would allow most fuel product prices to rise until they were in line with the country's fuel index mechanism to make up for a slowdown in such increases over the last fiscal year.

It pledged not to intervene in foreign currency markets to stabilise or guarantee the exchange rate, except in cases of excessive volatility. Egypt's pound has been allowed to fluctuate more than before since its third devaluation in less than a year last week.

Egypt also agreed to make its monetary policy more efficient by giving up most of its subsidised lending schemes and ensuring that interbank interest rates remain "steadfastly tied" to the central bank's interest rate corridor.

Under the facility, the IMF will provide Egypt with about $700 million in the fiscal year that ends in June.

The World Bank will cover $1.1 billion of the year's remaining $5.04 billion financing gap, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank $400 million, the African Development Bank $300 million, the Arab Monetary Fund $300 million, the China Development Bank $1.0 billion and public asset sales $2.0 billion, the letter said.

Egypt said it had secured assurances that $28 billion in deposits by Gulf states in the Egyptian central bank would not mature before September 2026, and would not be used to buy equities or debt.

(Reporting by Patrick Werr, Editing by Aidan Lewis and Ed Osmond)
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UPDATE 2-Egypt's December inflation accelerates to annual 21.3%
Oggi 08:13 - RSF
(Adds analyst quotes)
CAIRO, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Egyptian annual urban consumer inflation in December rose to 21.3% from 18.7% in November, exceeding analyst expectations, data from the statistics agency CAPMAS showed on Tuesday.

The inflation figure was the highest since December 2017, when it hit 21.9%. The price rises followed a currency devaluation in October and restrictions on imports.

The median forecast in a Reuters poll of 15 economists had projected inflation of 20.50%. Five economists also forecast that core inflation, due later on Tuesday, would come in at a median 23.6%, up from 21.5% in November.

The central bank allowed the Egyptian pound to depreciate by about 14.5% on Oct. 27 and let its value continue to weaken slowly and incrementally in November and December.

"Food and beverages were up 4.6% month-on-month (adding to the 4.5% in November), impacted mainly by bread and cereals, dairy, vegetables and meat," said Allen Sandeep of Naeem Brokerage.

This goes somewhat towards absorbing a 25% devaluation in late October but portends more inflation to come, Sandeep said.

"Now combined monthly inflation has risen by around 7% over three months. This is close to a 30% pass through to the urban CPI index. With the new round of devaluation ongoing, which we expect to be roughly 15%, we can expect annual CPI to touch 25% by February."
Egypt's surging prices will add to pressure on the central bank's Monetary Policy Committee to raise interest rates when it next meets on Feb. 2.

(Reporting by Nadine Awadalla and Patrick Werr; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Jon Boyle)
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Egypt orders ministries to curb spending amid foreign currency crunch
Oggi 11:25 - RSF
CAIRO, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Egypt's government has instructed ministries to cut non-essential spending until the end of the fiscal year in June as it tries to cope with continuing pressure on its currency and rising inflation.

The decision, dated Jan. 4 and published in the official gazette this week, includes the postponement of any new national project heavily reliant on foreign currency, and requires ministries to seek finance ministry approval on foreign currency expenditure.

The health, interior, foreign, and defence ministries are exempted, as well as agencies tasked with expenditure on subsidised food products and energy.

Some activities listed as non-essential spending include travel, marketing, and conferences, as well as grants and training for employees. The decision included no detail on how much money could be saved.

The move comes as Egypt has continued to face a foreign currency shortage despite allowing the Egyptian pound to depreciate sharply in recent months, most recently last week.

Egypt has spent heavily on large infrastructure projects in recent years. These include a new capital city east of Cairo and extensive road building, which helped sustain economic activity through the COVID-19 pandemic but have also faced criticism.

As Egypt came under financial pressure in early 2021 the central bank imposed curbs on import financing, causing a heavy backlog of goods at ports.

The reversal of the curbs was a key requirement of a 46-month financial support package from the International Monetary Fund confirmed in December. Greater exchange rate flexibility was another condition of the IMF deal.

(Writing by Sarah El Safty Editing by Aidan Lewis and Raissa Kasolowsky)
(([email protected];))
 
Egypt orders ministries to curb spending amid foreign currency crunch
Oggi 11:25 - RSF
CAIRO, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Egypt's government has instructed ministries to cut non-essential spending until the end of the fiscal year in June as it tries to cope with continuing pressure on its currency and rising inflation.

The decision, dated Jan. 4 and published in the official gazette this week, includes the postponement of any new national project heavily reliant on foreign currency, and requires ministries to seek finance ministry approval on foreign currency expenditure.

The health, interior, foreign, and defence ministries are exempted, as well as agencies tasked with expenditure on subsidised food products and energy.

Some activities listed as non-essential spending include travel, marketing, and conferences, as well as grants and training for employees. The decision included no detail on how much money could be saved.

The move comes as Egypt has continued to face a foreign currency shortage despite allowing the Egyptian pound to depreciate sharply in recent months, most recently last week.

Egypt has spent heavily on large infrastructure projects in recent years. These include a new capital city east of Cairo and extensive road building, which helped sustain economic activity through the COVID-19 pandemic but have also faced criticism.

As Egypt came under financial pressure in early 2021 the central bank imposed curbs on import financing, causing a heavy backlog of goods at ports.

The reversal of the curbs was a key requirement of a 46-month financial support package from the International Monetary Fund confirmed in December. Greater exchange rate flexibility was another condition of the IMF deal.

(Writing by Sarah El Safty Editing by Aidan Lewis and Raissa Kasolowsky)
(([email protected];))

Mi ricorda l'argentina...
 

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