Arab Times

Saudi foreign reserves rise in June: central bank

First increase in over a year

-

DUBAI, July 27, (RTRS): The Saudi Arabian central bank’s foreign reserves, which the government has been liquidatin­g to cover a budget deficit caused by low oil prices, rose in June for the first time in over a year, official data showed on Thursday.

The central bank’s net foreign assets climbed to $493.3 billion last month from $491.7 billion in May.

On a year-on-year basis, however, they shrank 12.3 percent. They had hit a record high of $737 billion in August 2014 before starting to fall with oil prices.

Analysts said it was not yet clear whether a three-year downtrend in the reserves was ending. The long slide has worried financial markets because the reserves may be needed to defend the Saudi riyal from any speculativ­e attack.

The central bank did not explain the reason for June’s rebound. But the data showed government deposits at the central bank fell last month, suggesting the reason was probably not an increase in state revenues or improvemen­t in Riyadh’s financial health.

Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, said the rise in net foreign assets did not necessaril­y mean their downtrend had ended or that the government would no longer need to draw them down.

She said pressure to liquidate the reserves had eased this year compared with last year because of government austerity measures, and Riyadh’s decision to begin raising money with local currency Islamic bond issues this month could ease the pressure further.

Neverthele­ss, Riyadh is still running a substantia­l budget deficit — officially projected at $52.8 billion this year — so it is likely to need to tap the reserves again at some point, she said.

“Fluctuatio­ns in the speed of the reserve drawdown in recent months don’t seem to have been due to the fundamenta­ls of state spending and revenue. Instead they may have more to do with factors such as the transfer of money to government investment vehicles,” Malik said.

As part of economic reforms, the government has been building up the Public Investment Fund, its main sovereign fund, to help it make big-ticket acquisitio­ns abroad and play a larger role in developing the Saudi economy.

The portion of the Saudi reserves kept in foreign bank deposits fell by $1.7 billion from May to $94.6 billion in June, but foreign securities holdings climbed $2.1 billion to $337.1 billion. The vast majority of the reserves are believed to be denominate­d in US dollars.

The central bank data also pointed to a sluggish Saudi economy. Outstandin­g bank loans to the private sector shrank from a year earlier for the fourth straight month in June; they fell 1.4 percent, after a 0.7 percent drop in May.

 ??  ?? In this Dec 18, 2014 file photo, an Emirati man takes a selfie in front of a new Etihad Airways A380 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Etihad, the flag carrier of the United Arab Emirates, said on July 27, 2017 it lost $1.87 billion
in 2016. (AP)
In this Dec 18, 2014 file photo, an Emirati man takes a selfie in front of a new Etihad Airways A380 in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Etihad, the flag carrier of the United Arab Emirates, said on July 27, 2017 it lost $1.87 billion in 2016. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait