Egypt’s inflation rate falls 8.7% in July – CAPMAS

Egypt’s annual urban consumer price inflation fell 8.7 percent in July from 9.4 percent in June, the state-run statistics agency CAPMAS said on Thursday, its lowest in nearly four years.

Egypt is approaching the end of an IMF-backed economic reform programme, which included steep subsidy cuts and a currency devaluation and saw inflation rise to a high of 33 percent in 2017.

July’s rate defied analysts’ expectations since it followed a fresh round of fuel subsidy cuts that pushed prices up 16 percent-30 percent.

“The figures are much lower than our expectations but are likely due to the high base effect from last year,” said Radwa El-Swaify, head of research at Pharos Securities Brokerage.

In July 2018, Egypt’s headline inflation rate was 13.5 percent.

“It’s great news for the markets because it reinforces hopes of interest rate cuts in August. I think the central bank now has enough room to restart its monetary easing policy going forward,” said Allen Sandeep, head of research at Naeem Brokerage.

At its last meeting on July 11, the monetary policy committee kept key interest rates on hold at 15.75 percent and 16.75 percent for overnight deposit and lending respectively.

It had last cut its rates in February.

Source: Reuters

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