Facebook Instagram Twitter
  • E-papers
  • Headlines
  • Featured
  • Opinion
    • Comment
    • Editorial
  • Tech
  • World
  • Satire
  • Sign in
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
Logo
Sign in
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Sign inSubscribe
Logo Business, Economic & Financial News
  • E-papers
  • Headlines
    • Searle Company appoints new Chairman of the Board

      14/01/2026

      PSX plunges as KSE-100 slides over 1,500 points amid global market shifts

      14/01/2026

      FBR includes taxpayers from AJK and G-B in Active Taxpayers’ List

      14/01/2026

      Pakistan faces tough choices after Trump’s threat of 25% tariff on doing business with Iran: report

      14/01/2026

      Pakistan moves to resolve $250 million dispute with foreign investors over APL pipeline

      14/01/2026
  • Featured
    • Agriautos poised to ride the auto sales wave in 2026

      12/01/2026

      For GSK, declining costs boost margins as much as rising prices

      12/01/2026

      Do Pakistani exporters still have hope?

      12/01/2026

      The wages of Dar’s destructiveness

      12/01/2026

      Ghazi Fabrics to sell land for almost as much as it makes selling clothing

      12/01/2026
  • Opinion
    • CommentEditorial

      Agriculture at crossroads: Are we ready?

      15/12/2025

      Myth-busting the narrative on the 11th NFC Award

      03/12/2025

      Promoting Made in Pakistan

      01/12/2025

      The decline of centralized grids

      24/11/2025

      Pakistan’s economic gridlock: Why ignoring the SME sector keeps the economy stagnant

      20/10/2025
  • Tech
    • After strong 2025, grown stalls at Symmetry Group

      05/01/2026

      Supernet announces major push towards regional expansion

      05/01/2026

      Punjab highway patrol launches Cyber Patrol unit for social media monitoring

      24/12/2025

      TPL Trakker revenue drops 43% in 2025

      27/10/2025

      Supernet’s post-connectivity pivot: doubling revenue at the cost of thinner margins

      23/06/2025
  • World
    • Oil prices pause gains as Venezuela shipments resume but Iran concerns loom

      14/01/2026

      Asian stocks inch higher, fragile yen spurs intervention worries 

      14/01/2026

      Gold near record-highs on Fed rate cut bets; silver cracks $90

      14/01/2026

      Iranians tap Musk’s Starlink to skirt internet blackout, sources say

      13/01/2026

      Trump says nations doing business with Iran face 25% tariff on US trade

      13/01/2026
  • Satire
  • Sign in

Pakistan seeks record IMF bailout of $10-12 billion: Financial Times

According to Western analysts, the local currency is still overvalued and needs to further depreciate by 10 percent

By
Monitoring Desk
-
30/07/2018
0
1711
Facebook
Twitter
Linkedin
WhatsApp
Email

    LAHORE: As the economy teeters due to depleting foreign exchange reserves, rising twin and current account deficits, Pakistan is planning to seek a $10-12 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), a government advisor said.

    While talking to the Financial Times, one government advisor told “We are in a rough area and need help. I can’t imagine we could do that without the IMF’s support.”

    The advisor went onto state the country would require a loan in the range of $10 to $12 billion, over double the $5.3 billion amount obtained from the IMF during the course of the previous bailout in 2013.

    This will be the largest ever bailout Pakistan has ever obtained from the IMF if the agreement gets reached.

    However, analysts cautioned Imran Khan would find it hard to deliver on his promises of spending public money on giving access to health-care for all, expanding the social safety net due to the country’s economic situation.

    The country obtained over $5 billion of loans from China during last FY18 and a 20 depreciation of the rupee against the dollar to keep it afloat.

    According to Western analysts, the local currency is still overvalued and needs to further depreciate by 10 percent.

    Pakistan’s forex reserves have eroded drastically in recent months, as rising oil prices have jacked up the cost of imports, while exports remain sluggish.

    Analysts believe a return to the IMF is unavoidable and will have damaging repercussions on short-term economic growth and Imran Khan’s political reputation.

    Moreover, analyst say in demand for the IMF bailout, the Washington-based lender agency will extract major concessions from the upcoming government including increasing power tariffs, reducing subsidies for the agriculture sector and divesting state-owned enterprises (SOEs).

    According to IMF estimates, Pakistan’s fiscal deficit could touch 7 percent compared to a target of 4.1 percent which means it could demand deep cuts in planned public spending.

    • TAGS
    • Asad Umar
    • current account deficit
    • foreign exchange reserves
    • IMF bailout
    • Imran Khan
    • International Monetary Fund (IMF)
    • Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI)
    • Pakistan's economy
    • Trade deficit
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Linkedin
    WhatsApp
    Email
      Monitoring Desk
      Monitoring Desk
      Our monitoring team diligently searches the vast expanse of the web to carefully handpick and distill top-tier business and economic news stories and articles, presenting them to you in a concise and informative manner.

      RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

      Headlines

      SBP-held reserves decrease by $74mn due to external debt repayments

      Headlines

      SBP sees uptick of $14.4mn in foreign reserves 

      Headlines

      Pakistan’s forex reserves increase by $4mn to $13.4bn

      Logo

      Business, Economic & Financial News

      Facebook
      Instagram
      TikTok
      Twitter
      • E-papers
      • Headlines
      • Featured
      • Opinion
      • Tech
      • World
      • Satire
      • Sign in

      Subscribe

      To get email updates from Today News.