Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Foreign reserves dip in September before bond settlement

„■ Foreign currency assets fell US$ 777mn in Sept. „■ CB had US$ 991mn foreign debt to settle in Sept. „■ CB continues to remain net buyer of forex assets

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Sri Lanka’s gross official foreign reserves fell in September before Central Bank settled a billion dollar bond on October 4, but the monetary authority continued to purchase dollars from the foreign currency market.

Foreign currency assets in September fell by US$ 777.3 million as the Central Bank had US$ 991.2 million in foreign currency liabilitie­s to be settled during the month.

The slippage in the foreign currency assets for September occurred after the Central Bank accumulate­d foreign assets for three consecutiv­e months in a raw till August as the country’s foreign exchange earnings strengthen­ed since May amid rebound in merchandis­e exports, lower imports and higher than expected worker remittance­s.

These inflows and the lower trade deficit of US$ 2.2 billion expected for 2020 from the lower oil bill and the temporary suspension of nonessenti­al imports will soften the impact from the disrupted inflows from tourism trade.

The trade deficit in the first eight months fell by a billion dollars t o US$ 3.8 billion, the latest data on the external sector performanc­e of the country showed with imports shrinking by 20 percent over the same period last year.

Sri Lanka had foreign reserves of US$ 7.6 billion at the end of 2019 and it depleted mainly due to scheduled foreign debt repayments and weak foreign inflows from merchandis­e exports and services caused by the pandemic.

The current reserves are adequate to cover 4.7 months of imports to the country at a time when imports remain subdued as restrictio­ns remain on certain goods, which are non-essential in nature and others, which can be produced at home.

While the reserves by now would have further come down as a result of the billon dollar settlement of the sovereign bond on October 2, Sri Lanka awaits the receipt of the second tranche of the US$ 1.2 billion syndicated loan from China Developmen­t Bank this month, which amounts to US$ 700 million.

Also, the government expects up to US$ 1.2 billion from multilater­al and bilateral funds and another US$ 500 million from alternate bond issuances in Samurai and Panda markets. Further, talks are currently ongoing for another US$ 1.0 billion swap facility with the Reserve Bank of India.

Meanwhile, the Central Bank has continued to be a net buyer of foreign currency as it purchased a net US$ 54.75 million in foreign exchange in September after it purchased US$ 93 million and US$ 162.5 million during August and July respective­ly.

The Central Bank has maintained the value of the rupee so far this year without sacrificin­g its foreign currency assets as the rupee depreciate­d by only 1.4 percent against the United States dollar from the beginning of the year up to October 09.

After last week’s bond settlement, Sri Lanka has only US$ 438.6 million in remaining foreign currency debt maturing during the rest of the year.

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