Dollar receipts at Egypt Central Bank improved

Egypt copy

 

Bloomberg

Egypt’s external finances improved following the Nov. 3 decision to float the pound, the central bank said, as inflows from investments,
remittances and exports picked up.
The balance of payments surplus grew to $5.1 billion in the October to December period, from $1.9 billion in the previous quarter, the regulator said in a statement on its website. The trade deficit narrowed to $9.2 billion from $9.6 billion a year earlier, while workers’ remittances increased 12 percent to $4.6 billion.
Egypt removed restrictions on its currency four months ago in a bid to end a foreign currency crisis that crippled economic growth, paving the way to a $12 billion International Monetary Fund loan. Foreign currency inflows to the equity and debt markets have been growing while the government managed to increase borrowing from international financial institutions and friendly nations.
Foreigners purchased a net $395 million in stocks in the period after selling a net $135 million a year earlier. They were net buyers of Treasury bills at $632 million versus net sellers of $10 million a year earlier.
Data for the full second half of 2016 were less encouraging. The current account, which measures incoming and outgoing goods, services and transfers, registered a deficit of $9.6 billion versus $9.4 billion a year earlier. Tourism
continued to struggle with revenue falling to $1.6 billion from $2.7 billion.
The current account from October through December improved by 6.4 percent compared with the previous quarter, and by 13.1 percent compared with the year-earlier period, the
central bank said.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend