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Business / Middle East Business

Egypt central bank moves to curb pound decline

Published: 05 Feb 2013 - 05:22 am | Last Updated: 04 Feb 2022 - 01:24 am

CAIRO: Egypt’s central bank tightened the pound’s trading band in the interbank foreign exchange market and reduced the frequency of foreign currency auctions yesterday, apparent moves to slow the currency’s decline as a new central bank governor takes office.

Hisham Ramez took up his new position on Sunday with the pound trading at a record low against the US dollar because of political instability linked to the country’s transition from decades of army-backed autocracy.

A foreign exchange dealer at a Cairo bank said banks may now only buy or sell dollars or their equivalent to other banks in a band of 0.01 pound above or below the weighted average bid at the central bank’s regular currency auctions. Previously, the limit had been 0.5 percent above or below the average bid.

But analysts doubted the moves would halt the fall in the pound and expected the country to have to continue running down its financial reserves.

Political strife has triggered a flight into dollars and other foreign currencies, putting renewed pressure on Egypt’s stock of foreign currency which the central bank warned in December had fallen to a critically low level.  

This prompted the central bank on December 30 to introduce a system of regular auctions of dollars to get the exchange rate under control, and since then it has allowed the pound to slide by eight percent against the dollar.

The pound was last bid at 6.6995 on the interbank market  yesterday, strengthening slightly from its closing level of 6.7153 in the previous session. But it is changing hands at least several piastres weaker among unlicensed traders in Cairo.

In another move coinciding with Ramez’s move into office, the central bank also signalled it would reduce the number of foreign currency auctions held on a weekly basis to two from three. This means the price of the currency will be revised only twice this week instead of last week’s three times.

The central bank sold $73.1m at its 17th such auction yesterday, and said the next one would be tomorrow.

After introducing the foreign currency sales on December 30, the central bank had initially held daily auctions. It later reduced the frequency to three a week, holding the auctions on Sundays, Tuesdays and Thursdays.

Reuters