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Egypt Foreign Reserves Surge to Record After Eurobond Sale

Egypt Foreign Reserves Surge to Record After Eurobond Sale

(Bloomberg) -- Egypt’s foreign reserves surged to a record in February, helped by a recent international bond sale, providing a cash cushion for the country as policy makers begin to cut interest rates.

Reserves jumped by $4.3 billion to $42.5 billion, the central bank said on Sunday. Bank officials said last month’s $4 billion Eurobond sale was only one contributor to the increase. A marked improvement across a range of economic indicators had also provided a boost, Sub-Governor Rami Aboul Naga told Bloomberg News. He did not elaborate.

The increase will help offset the impact of $12 billion in planned debt repayment this year as well as potential capital outflows as a result of lower interest rates on local debt, according to Hany Farahat, senior economist at CI Capital in Cairo. The government is also preparing to raise as much as 1.5 billion euros ($1.2 billion) in the coming weeks, taking advantage of lower borrowing costs in Europe.

Egypt’s foreign reserves have soared since the central bank floated the pound in November 2016 and secured a $12 billion loan deal with the International Monetary Fund to ease a severe dollar shortage that had hampered trade and business activity.

‘Whopping Jump’

“This is a whopping jump in reserves that enhances confidence in the recovery,” Farahat said.

Egypt cut benchmark interest rates last month for the first time since floating the pound, starting a widely anticipated easing cycle after record-high borrowing costs helped to damp inflation and attract $20 billion into local-currency debt.

Falling interest rates in Egypt, coupled with expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will move in the opposition direction, have raised the prospect that overseas investors will lose their appetite for Egyptian local-currency debt.

But the surge in reserves “definitely facilitates the reduction in policy rates this year and minimizes the risk of currency outflows as rates decline,” Farahat said.

--With assistance from Shaji Mathew

To contact the reporter on this story: Mirette Magdy in Cairo at mmagdy1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lin Noueihed at lnoueihed@bloomberg.net, Alaa Shahine, Amy Teibel

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.