The
rupee fell 2% on Monday, and 3% on Tuesday, despite last week's
staff level agreement reached with the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) that would pave the way for a disbursement of $1.17
billion under resumed payments of a bailout package.
On Wednesday morning the rupee was trading at 225 per dollar,
having ended Tuesday at 221.99 after Fitch ratings agency
revised its outlook for Pakistan sovereign debt from stable to
negative - though it affirmed Long-Term Foreign-Currency and
Issuer Default Rating at "B-".
"There is panic in the market, I fear it (the rupee)will go down
further," Zafar Paracha, Secretary General of a foreign exchange
association, the Exchange Companies of Pakistan, told Reuters.
Paracha said he did not see any reason for the depreciation in
the rupee other than a possible IMF pre-conditions. Neither the
government or the IMF have said anything about the need for any
further depreciation of the currency, though Pakistan recently
adopted a market-based exchange rate under advice from the IMF
under the economic reforms agenda.
"The recent movement in the rupee is a feature of a
market-determined exchange rate system," the State Bank of
Pakistan said in a series of Twitter posts late Tuesday night,
adding that rupee's depreciation against dollar is in large part
a global phenomenon.
Pakistan faces economic turmoil, with fast depleting foreign
reserves, a declining currency and widening fiscal and current
account deficits, and the rupee has lost 18% of its value since
Dec. 21.
Reserves have fallen to as low as $9.8 billion, hardly enough to
pay for 45 days of imports.
Pakistan has also passed through another bout of political
instability, with the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz
Sharif taking over from ousted premier Imran Khan in April.
On Tuesday, sovereign dollar bonds issued by Pakistan suffered
sharp losses to record lows after Fitch's move, while the
Pakistan Stock Exchange's KSE100 Index .KSE fell 2.36%.
(Writing by Gibran Peshimam; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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