Sign in Subscribe
  • E-Papers
    • Profit Magazine
    • Pakistan Today
  • Headlines
  • Featured
  • Opinion
    • Comment
    • Editorial
  • Tech
    • Artificial Intelligence
  • World
  • Satire
Sign in
Welcome!Log into your account
Forgot your password?
Create an account
Sign up
Welcome!Register for an account
A password will be e-mailed to you.
Password recovery
Recover your password
Search
Sign inSubscribe
Profit Profit by Pakistan Today
Profit Profit
  • E-Papers
    • Profit Magazine
    • Pakistan Today
  • Headlines
    • Headlines

      Floods replenish reservoirs as IRSA limits Rabi 2025-26 water shortage to…

      Headlines

      IMF flags Rs400bn revenue shortfall as Pakistan revises fiscal and macroeconomic…

      Headlines

      Industry calls for policy, infrastructure, and financing reforms to boost EV…

      Headlines

      CCP launches inquiry into deceptive marketing in real estate sector

      Headlines

      Pakistan calls for UNESCO reform and strategic realignment

  • Featured
    • Cover story

      Why P&G is leaving Pakistan

      Consumer Goods

      Tepid growth for Colgate Palmolive Pakistan

      Editor’s picks

      Trump tariffs expected to boost PEL’s exports to the US

      Editor’s picks

      Pension Reckoning

      Energy

      One more round of circular debt restructuring and why it still…

  • Opinion
    • AllCommentEditorial
      Comment

      Pakistan’s high-stakes crypto experiment

      Comment

      Do Pakistani businesses know how to diversify their business portfolios?

      Comment

      Pakistan’s tax myth: It isn’t the people, its the government

      Comment

      Market maker or market wrecker?

  • Tech
    • AllArtificial Intelligence
      Artificial Intelligence

      Experts project 7–12% GDP growth, 1 million jobs from Pakistan’s new…

      Headlines

      Air Link announces expansion plans with new production facility at Sundar…

      Tech

      OpenAI partners with Etsy, Shopify on ChatGPT payment checkout

      Headlines

      Islamabad IT Park to create 10,000 jobs, completion expected by December…

  • World
  • Satire

Pakistan’s new rupee devaluation shows economic risk before election

Growing speculation Pakistan may return to IMF for loans

By
Agencies
-
12/06/2018
0
514
Facebook
Twitter
Linkedin
WhatsApp
Email

    ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani rupee slumped 3.8 percent against the dollar on Monday before slightly recovering in what appeared to be the third currency devaluation in seven months by the central bank amid fears of a balance of payments crisis.

    The rupee’s decline to 119.85 per U.S. dollar threatens to squeeze consumers just days before the Eid holiday, which ends the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan, and ahead of a general election set for July 25.

    The apparent devaluation shows signs of vulnerability in Pakistan’s nearly $300 billion economy, as dwindling foreign reserves and a widening current account deficit trigger speculation about going back to the International Monetary Fund for loans for the second time since 2013.

    The State Bank of Pakistan said on Monday the rupee’s fall was a “market-based adjustment”, adding it was monitoring the situation “and stands ready to ensure stability in the financial markets and curb the emergence of speculative pressures.”

    Ashfaque Hasan Khan, an economist with the National Institute of Science and Technology, said the interim government that now holds the reins during the election campaign might itself be forced to go to the IMF.

    Khan said the interim government needs to take policy decisions to curb imports and increase exports, but so far the caretaker government has not taken enough steps.

    “If we rely exclusively on the rupee devaluation to address our balance of payment crises, this will have disastrous consequences,” he said.

    The outgoing government led by the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz has touted its stewardship of the economy as a reason to bring the party back to power, but foreign reserves are now at a low of two months’ worth of imports.

    The PML-N policy for years was to keep the rupee relatively stable in what was widely considered a managed float, but as the current account deficit widened and foreign reserves dropped to about half their peak, the policy shifted.

    Since December, the rupee has fallen by about 14 percent.

    The rupee closed at 119.85 per U.S. dollar on Monday after opening at 115.63. Earlier in the day, it traded close to 121 per dollar, traders said.

    “On Monday the central bank didn’t intervene (to support the rupee) and allowed the market to determine the rupee value,” Samiullah Tariq, director of research at Arif Habib Securities, told Reuters

    Withdrawal of support would have the effect of devaluing the currency as the SBP is the most influential player in the thinly traded local foreign exchange market and controls what is widely considered a managed float system.

    In December and in March, the rupee was devalued, each time by about 5 percent, by the central bank.

    Pakistan’s economy is expected to expand by close to 6 percent this year, the fastest pace in more than a decade, but a widening of the current account deficit has brought new worries.

    The current account deficit now stands at $14 billion, around 5.3 percent of gross domestic product, an SBP official said.

    The economic outlook has been hurt by the fast depletion of foreign currency reserves, which now stand at just over $10 billion.

    Pakistan is currently in discussions with China for loans to ease pressure on its foreign currency reserves.

    Over the weekend, the shortage of foreign currency widened the spread at which the rupee is traded in the open market and the interbank market to 4 rupees.

    “Whatever has happened again today is the reflection of growing pressure on the balance of payments side,” Khan told Reuters.

    “It also exposes the outgoing government claims that … they are leaving the economy in good shape. That, unfortunately, isn’t the case.”

    Pakistan’s currency woes came as another South Asian country was hit by concerns about trade deficits and external factors including rising oil prices and the strong U.S. dollar.

    The Sri Lankan rupee slipped to a fresh record low of 159.80 per dollar on Monday, dragged down by a lack of support for the local currency form exporters, dealers said.

    • TAGS
    • BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
    • Current Account Deficit (CAD)
    • Forex Reserves
    • Rupee devaluation
    • State Bank of Pakistan
    • Trade deficit
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Linkedin
    WhatsApp
    Email
      Agencies

      RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

      Headlines

      Debt servicing drains $237mn from SBP’s forex reserves in a week

      Headlines

      SBP’s Forex reserves increase by $77m to $7bn

      Top News Updates

      Naya Pakistan Certificates rate of return revised again to foster investment

      Whatsapp Newsletter
      Email Newsletter News Tips
      Profit by Pakistan Today
      Publishing Editor: Babar Nizami -- Editor Multimedia: Umar Aziz Khan -- Senior Editor: Abdullah Niazi -- Editorial Consultant: Ahtasam Ahmad -- Business Reporters: Taimoor Hassan | Shahab Omer l Zain Naeem | Shahnawaz Ali | Ghulam Abbass | Ahmad Ahmadani | Aziz Buneri -- Sub-Editor: Saddam Hussain -- Video Producer: Talha Farooqi -- Director Marketing : Mudassir Alam | Regional Heads of Marketing: Agha Anwer (Khi) | Kamal Rizvi (Lhe) | Malik Israr (Isb ) -- Manager Subscriptions: Irfan Farooq -- Pakistan’s #1 business magazine - your go-to source for business, economic and financial news.
      Contact us: [email protected]
      • Privacy policy
      Copyright © 2025. Pakistan Today. All Rights Reserved.