Egypt’s foreign reserves surged to $36.143 billion at the end of August from $36.036 billion a month earlier, the central bank said in a statement on Wednesday.
In July, the country’s foreign reserves had recorded highest since December 2010, after the Egyptian central bank received in mid-June $1.25 billion, the second and final disbursal of the first $4 billion tranche of a $12 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund.
The disbursal aimed to support the central bank’s cash reserve of foreign currency.
Egypt’s foreign reserves have been rising since it clinched a $12 billion three-year loan from the International Monetary Fund in November in a bid to lure back foreign capital.
Egypt roughly had $36 billion in reserves before an uprising in 2011 ushered in a period of political turmoil, scaring away tourists and foreign investors, key sources of hard currency.