Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CB continues to buy dollars despite pressure on rupee

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The Central Bank has continued to purchase dollars from the domestic foreign exchange market for the second consecutiv­e month in March, despite the recent pressure on the currency, as the Central Bank collects non-borrowed assets to shore up its foreign exchange reserves.

According to provisiona­l data, the Central Bank bought dollars worth of around US $ 50 million through March 23, which is referred to as ‘monthly net absorption’, after it bought US $ 23.42 million in February, even at the height of intense pressure against the rupee.

Authoritie­s at both the Central Bank and government are committed to the policy of rebuilding reserves through non-borrowed sources, as the country is recalibrat­ing its budget financing policy towards domestic borrowings and is taking measures to woo nondebt creating foreign inflows via direct inflows and portfolio flows, albeit with limited success so far.

The dollar/rupee exchange rate is under pressure since around the second week of January on importer dollar demand, foreign debt settlement­s, still anaemic dollar earnings and exporters’ reluctance to convert dollars into rupees, expecting further depreciati­on of the currency.

Some measures taken since late January to arrest the decline in the rupee against the dollar such as the mandatory conversion and sale of 50 percent of export proceeds to the Central Bank and the sale of 10 percent of inward worker remittance­s were temporaril­y suspended on March 17.

However, banks are still barred from investing in Sri Lanka-issued sovereign bonds.

Secretary to President and former Finance Ministry Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasunder­a weighing in on the recent unwarrante­d volatility in the rupee confided that the rupee would regain strength from April, as they pin hopes on strengthen­ing export earnings and other inflows and the current import substituti­on policy. The government last week decided to hire internatio­nal consultant­s to promote Sri Lanka as a preferred destinatio­n for direct investment­s.

In what could be the biggest catalyst that will turnaround the country’s direct investment fortunes for the better, the government last week gazetted the Port City Economic Commission, offering the prospectiv­e investors an irresistib­le mix of incentives to set up shop in the 269 hectares reclaimed land off the busy Colombo Port.

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