Foreign Reserves Increase For The First Time Since 2011

Central Bank of Egypt said foreign reserves rose slightly last month, their first gain since a revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak.

The central bank has spent heavily to support Egypt’s currency through the political turmoil since Hosni Mubarak’s overthrow in February 2011, which prompted foreign investors to scurry for the exit and hammered tourism.

Foreign reserves – which stood at $36 billion in December 2010 and fell every month since the uprising began – edged up to $15.21 billion at the end of April from $15.12 billion at the end of March, the bank said.

Some economists are expecting a sharp drop in the pound as reserves appear close to danger level and long-awaited help from foreign donors including the International Monetary Fund has been repeatedly delayed.

Few are willing to rule out devaluation for now and foreign participation in Egypt’s stock market remains small, but a partial recovery in tourism and a tendency for Egyptians to keep bank deposits in local currency are positive signs.

“We are less worried about the decline in reserves than the markets seem to be,” Renaissance Capital said in a recent research note. “We still see a lower probability of devaluation or depreciation in the short term.”

It said it still expected Egypt to seal a long-delayed $3.2 billion loan from the IMF and reserves could also be helped by incoming foreign investment such as France Telecom’s planned purchase of Mobinil shares, Reuters reported.

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