The International Monetary Fund’s executive board will hold a meeting on Egypt next week as the North African nation awaits final approval for a $3bn loan deal.
The board’s calendar on the IMF website shows a December 16 meeting scheduled on Egypt’s request for an extended arrangement under the so-called Extended Fund Facility.
Cairo and the Washington-based lender reached a staff-level agreement for the 46-month facility in late October. The financing is key to helping shore up Egypt’s economy as it grapples with the fall-out from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
One of the world’s largest wheat importers, Egypt has raced to secure financial backing from its Gulf allies and sharply devalued its currency twice this year. The same day in October that Egypt announced the IMF deal, authorities said they were adopting a flexible exchange-rate for the pound, a policy analysts say has yet to be fully tested.
In a sign investors are betting on a further depreciation, 12-month non-deliverable forwards for the Egyptian pound slumped to 30 against the US dollar on Tuesday for the first time. In the spot market, the pound was steady at 24.6 per dollar.
Egypt is also trying to clear trade backlogs caused by requests from importers seeking hard currency.
“A combination of increased FX price volatility and liquidity injection is needed to clear the existing overhang,” EFG Hermes Research said on Tuesday. That “will help regain the momentum in the FX market, clear the remaining existing backlogs and help accommodate new demand, once import controls are removed.”
A weaker currency is driving up prices for the nation of about 104mn people, with inflation data due this week expected to show the further impact of the pound’s plunge.
Egypt’s net international reserves climbed slightly in November, as the North African country awaits the final approval of an International Monetary Fund loan key to shoring up the economy.
The figure reached $33.5bn, compared with $33.4bn at the end of October, the central bank said on Tuesday.
Three major declines in Egypt’s reserves earlier this year have starkly illustrated the economic impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on the Arab world’s most populous nation.
Egypt’s Gulf allies have already pledged more than $20bn in deposits and investments for the country that’s dealing with a surge in fuel and food import bills and an exodus of portfolio investment. More funding would ease pressure on Egypt’s pound, which has already seen two dramatic falls this year, in March and late October. The central bank said it has adopted a more flexible foreign-exchange regime.
People line up at a temporary tent with government subsidised goods in Cairo (file). A weaker currency is driving up prices for the nation of about 104mn people, with inflation data due this week expected to show the further impact of the pound’s plunge.