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Egypt pound hits 8-year low on devaluation talk

Egypt pound hits 8-year low on devaluation talk

December 26, 2012 | 10:50 PM

The Egyptian pound hit a near eight-year low yesterday as concerns the government might devalue or bring in capital controls drove many to shift their assets into dollars, traders said. Renewed political strife over the past month has cast doubt on the government’s ability to push through spending cuts and tax hikes, seen as a prerequisite for a $4.8bn International Monetary Fund loan that Egypt needs in order to tackle a financial crisis. Credit agency Standard & Poor’s cut the country’s long-term rating on Monday and said another downgrade was possible if politics undermined efforts to prop up the economy and public finances. Reflecting those concerns a day after the government made it illegal for travellers to carry more than $10,000 out of the country, President Mohamed Mursi yesterday signed into law a new constitution shaped by his Islamist allies. He says the bitterly contested document will help end the turmoil and fix the economy. Market players said the political turmoil along with dwindling foreign exchange reserves had narrowed the country’s options for dealing with a spreading currency crisis. “The fact is that the central bank has only so much in terms of resources available in order to combat the economic situation, where Egypt has a long-term current account deficit (which it also needs to finance),” said an Egypt-based analyst. The pound was bid as low as 6.1775 to the dollar yesterday compared to 6.169 on Tuesday. This was its weakest in almost eight years and took it closer to the all-time low of 6.26 it hit on October 14, 2004. “All customers are rushing to buy dollars after the (S&P) downgrade,” said a dealer at a Cairo-based bank. “We’ll have to wait to see how the market will operate with the US dollar, because as you know there is a rush at the moment.” The planning minister said in remarks published yesterday the government would not implement planned tax increases for two weeks until it completed talks with different sections of society to persuade them of the need for austerity measures. To allow it to seek more popular support for the loan, the government has also asked the IMF to delay by a month a meeting it had scheduled to approve the funds.

December 26, 2012 | 10:50 PM