Vendor on the streets of Cairo, Egypt with an enlarged US dollar advertisement in the background. Egypt is facing a renewed economic crisis due to its alliance with imperialism., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Egypt pounds dips, avoids panic after weekend violence
Reuters, Sunday 27 Jan 2013
There's no panic, but rather a 'cautious' trade decline in local Egyptian currency Sunday following a bloody weekend that has so far left 41 dead
Egypt's pound weakened against the dollar on Sunday, as street violence and deaths added to the political crisis, extending a steady decline at the central bank's foreign exchange auctions since their launch last month.
One analyst said trading was cautious but not panicked after a weekend of flare-ups across Egypt that killed at least 41 people. Repeated eruptions of violence have weighed heavily on the pound, which has been hitting fresh lows against the dollar.
At 6.500 to the dollar, the pound has lost about 7 per cent of its value since the auctions began at the end of December. It is about 12.5 per cent weaker than before the uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
At the latest auction on Sunday, the central bank said it had accepted bids worth $48.1 million with a cut-off price of 6.6235 Egyptian pounds to the US dollar.
"There is an overall sense of caution as the market absorbs the current developments on the street, but no panic or overreaction," said Youssef Kamel, a fixed income analyst at financial firm Rasmala.
Egypt's economy, battered by two years of political and street turmoil, has been helped by injections of cash from Gulf and other donors. But delays in securing a $4.8 billion International Monetary Fund loan have worried investors.
On the interbank market, the pound weakened to 6.500, around the maximum allowed under central bank rules that let the currency move in a band of 0.5 per cent either side of the weighted average of bids at the most recent auction.
The auctions were launched in a bid to preserve Egypt's foreign reserves, which have fallen to a critical level of around $15 billion, covering roughly three months imports.
The bank usually holds three foreign currency auctions a week. The last auction was on Tuesday of last week, however, because Thursday when it usually holds its third weekly auction was a holiday.
Sunday's auction was the 14th such sale
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