Egypt’s foreign reserves hit $44.5B by end of October

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Mon, 05 Nov 2018 - 09:48 GMT

BY

Mon, 05 Nov 2018 - 09:48 GMT

CBE governor Tarek Amer- Reuters photo

CBE governor Tarek Amer- Reuters photo

CAIRO – 5 November 2018: Egypt’s foreign reserves increased by $40 million by the end of October 2018 to reach $44.501 billion, compared to $44.459 billion by the end of September 2018, according to the Central Bank of Egypt (CBE).

The state’s foreign reserves started to rebound after the delivery of the $12 billion three-year International Monetary Fund loan program in 2016.

The IMF Executive Board approved in November 2016 a three-year extended fund facility (EFT) loan to Egypt worth $12 billion to support its economic reform program.

On Oct. 31, IMF and Egypt reached a staff-level agreement to offer Egypt the fifth installment of IMF’s $12 billion extended fund facility arrangement, amounting to $2 billion.

By receiving the fifth installment, the total disbursements under the program will reach about $10 billion.

The current average of foreign reserves covers about eight months of Egypt's commodity imports, which is higher than the global average of about three months of commodity imports.

Egypt spends an average of $5 billion monthly on imports with an annual total of more than $60 billion.

Foreign currencies in Egypt’s foreign reserves include the U.S. dollar, euro, Australian dollar, Japanese yen and Chinese yuan.

The main function of the foreign exchange reserve, including its gold and various international currencies, is to provide commodities, repay the installments on interest rates of external debt, and to cope with economic crises.

Egypt embarked on a bold economic reform program that included the introduction of taxes, such as the value-added tax (VAT), and cutting energy subsidies, with the aim of trimming the budget deficit.

The country floated its currency in November 2016 before it clinched a $12 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

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