City
Epaper

Pakistani rupee's weakness 'still has further to run'

By IANS | Updated: January 31, 2023 12:50 IST

Islamabad, Jan 31 Fitch Solutions on Tuesday predicted that the Pakistani rupee's weakness still has "further to run", ...

Open in App

Islamabad, Jan 31 Fitch Solutions on Tuesday predicted that the Pakistani rupee's weakness still has "further to run", which will have broader economic implications for the country - already gripped by a major economic crisis, with the rupee plummeting, inflation soaring and energy in short supply.

The New York-based research agency, in its quick view, noted that the rupee's devaluation was triggered by the decision among local foreign exchange companies to remove the self imposed cap on the exchange rate on January 25. The News reported.

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) initially intervened, but the significant depreciation in the rupee "is a clear sign the authorities have effectively loosened their grip on the currency."

Fitch Solutions mentioned that their current forecast for the rupee to reach Rs 248 per dollar by year-end "is therefore now looking out of date", The News reported.

Following massive depreciation of 14.36 per cent (or Rs38.74) in the last three days (Thursday-Monday), compared to Wednesday's close at Rs 230.89, the rupee's steep fall hit brakes as it was changing hands with the greenback at Rs 268.20 in the interbank market (as of 11.04 a.m.).

"We believe that the rupee's weakness still has further to run particularly with Pakistan's balance of payments positions likely to remain weak for several more months," it noted.

The agency said that there remains a "considerate amount of uncertainty at this juncture" therefore it is difficult to gauge the extent to which the latest devaluation has caused investor sentiment to soar further, The News reported.

"We will therefore firm up our rupee forecasts over the coming weeks, once the dust settles," the quick view mentioned.

In its analysis, Fitch warned that a continued weakening in the rupee will have broader economic implications too in the near term, "it could exacerbate imported inflationary pressure and may eventually result in steeper policy rate hikes from the SBP".

The report added that Fitch expects Pakistan''s economy to contract by 0.3 per cent in the fiscal year 2022-23.

Fitch, however, mentioned that the rupee's devaluation will help Islamabad secure further disbursements from the IMF, which would be a positive for the longer-term outlook as it would help ease Pakistan's balance of payments strains.

The world's fifth-biggest population has less than $ 3.7 billion as reserves in the State Bank - enough to cover just three weeks of imports, The News reported.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Fitch Solutions, Inc.pakistanislamabadState Bank Of PakistanDhs punjabState of bank of pakistan
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalChandigarh BJP Office Blast: Two Suspects Arrested for Grenade Blast; Drone Used to Smuggle Chinese Hand Grenade From Pakistan

InternationalUS State Department Announces Permanent Closure of Peshawar Consulate in Pakistan

InternationalSaudi Arabia Destroys 21 Drones, 3 Ballistic Missiles in First Week of Middle East War

InternationalMiddle East Crisis: Saudi Arabia-Pakistan to Take Joint Military Action Against Iran Attacks in KSA?

CricketPakistan Player Misbehaved With Hotel Staff During T20 World Cup 2026

Politics Realted Stories

PoliticsKhowang 2026: Tea belt constituency becomes upper Assam's political hotspot

PoliticsShowdown in Keralam's "cultural capital" as BJP bets on Padmaja Venugopal to break Left Front fortress

PoliticsAssam polls: BJP's Dhekiajuli candidate to interact with over 1 lakh voters through social media

PoliticsMamata Banerjee has introduced politics of division, but it won't work anymore: Dilip Ghosh

PoliticsThrissur West Police register case following election flying squad seizure of illegal distribution kits