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

      SBP cuts policy rate by 50bps to 10.5% against expectations

      Headlines

      PIA rejects social media claim of crew going missing on Canada…

      Automobile

      Motorbike, three-wheeler sales rise nearly 32% in 5MFY26

      Headlines

      National Grid Company commissions 500kV Lahore North Grid Station with Rs20.7…

      Headlines

      Tribunal upholds CCP order in poultry cartel case, orders PPA to…

  • Featured
    • Editor’s picks

      From cricket fandom to financial hustle — what Pakistan’s 2025 searches…

      Mergers & Acquisitions

      Systems Ltd will acquire Confiz

      Editor’s picks

      The Engro Succession: Smart continuity or a postcard to the past?

      Editor’s picks

      Amoxil recall hits GSK Pakistan revenue in otherwise strong year

      Editor’s picks

      Why Pakistan’s banks won’t finance the solar revolution

  • Opinion
    • AllCommentEditorial
      Comment

      Agriculture at crossroads: Are we ready?

      Comment

      Myth-busting the narrative on the 11th NFC Award

      Comment

      Promoting Made in Pakistan

      Comment

      The decline of centralized grids

  • Tech
    • AllArtificial Intelligence
      Artificial Intelligence

      OpenAI warns upcoming AI models may pose “high” cybersecurity risk

      Tech

      Cloudflare restores services after minor outage disrupts Coinbase and Claude AI

      Headlines

      Cloudflare outage disrupts access to popular websites like LinkedIn and Canva

      Artificial Intelligence

      Apple appoints Indian-origin Amar Subramanya as new vice president of AI

  • World
  • Satire

Pakistan’s gross external financing needs stand around $30 billion: Moody’s

According to the rating agency, the current account deficit for FY19 would total 4.6% of GDP which would be slightly narrower than the 5.8 percent deficit clocked in FY18

By
Mohammad Farooq
-
18/10/2018
0
684
Facebook
Twitter
Linkedin
WhatsApp
Email

    LAHORE: Moody’s on Wednesday projected Pakistan’s gross external financing needs at around $30 billion for the fiscal year 2019, due to the widening current account deficit.

    According to the rating agency, the current account deficit for FY19 would total 4.6% of GDP which would be slightly narrower than the 5.8 percent deficit clocked in FY18.

    Moreover, despite the central bank depreciating the Pakistani rupee by around 25% against the greenback and increasing policy rate by a cumulative 275 basis points since December last year and fiscal authorities implementing one-off measures such as a tax amnesty scheme to incentivize capital repatriation, the current-account deficit remains wide.

    It said an International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme would be credit positive for Pakistan because of access to a cheap, stable source of external financing would provide immediate assistance to the government’s external financing requirements.

    Moody’s said support and technical assistance from the Washington-based lender would assist macroeconomic rebalancing and the government’s structural reform agenda.

    However, it cautioned that external and fiscal challenges remain, especially in light of investments, imports and external borrowing related to projects under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

    It added the external and macroeconomic imbalances had risen since Pakistan’s previous program with the IMF which concluded in late 2016.

    The rating agency highlighted foreign exchange reserves adequacy had fallen to a low level, barely enough to provide two months of goods imports and below the IMF’s minimum adequacy threshold of three months.

    Regarding the financing gap which excludes foreign exchange reserves, Moody’s said it is likely to total $8-9 billion taking into consideration the government’s borrowing plans and their expectations for capital inflows which include portfolio and foreign direct investment (FDI) flows.

    As per Moody’s, the IMF would plug the financing gap but provide a strong signal to other official sector creditors that will be crucial to meet financing requirements over the coming years.

    “This is particularly the case if a more front-loaded program provides greater market confidence when Pakistan’s upcoming Eurobond and sukuk repayments totalling $1 billion each are due in April and December 2019, respectively,” said Moody’s.

    Furthermore, the rating agency said an IMF program will give crucial policy and technical assistance to the newly elected government, led by Prime Minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, in advancing its structural reform agenda.

    While talking about the external and fiscal risks, Moody’s said, “will remain significant, absent further macroeconomic adjustments.”

    It said the import bill will remain elevated due to higher oil prices and ongoing implementation of CPEC projects, which will likely amount to 9%-10% of GDP in FY19.

    Moody’s stated higher government spending had contributed to the macroeconomic imbalance and projected the fiscal deficit to slightly narrow to 5.4% of GDP in FY19 compared to 6.4% in FY18 and notwithstanding the government’s recently announced mini-budget to cut development spending and raise revenue through import duties and other administrative measures.

    “The government’s export package in June 2018 was extended for three years through fiscal 2021 and aims to boost export competitiveness and incentivize investment in export-oriented production by removing customs duty on exported goods, reducing sales taxes on exporters’ inputs and providing subsidies on certain raw materials. Although this extension will benefit exports, they remain half the level of goods imports,” said the rating agency.

    • TAGS
    • fiscal deficit
    • foreign exchange reserves
    • Moody's Rating
    • Pakistan External Financing needs
    • Pakistan's current account deficit
    • Rupee depreciation
    • State Bank of Pakistan (SBP)
    Facebook
    Twitter
    Linkedin
    WhatsApp
    Email
      Mohammad Farooq
      The author is an Assistant News Editor at Profit by Pakistan Today. His works have been published in Dawn, Express Tribune, LiveMint India, Huffingtonpost India and The News on Sunday. He tweets @MohammadFarooq_

      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

      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.