Gulf News

Pakistan hires UAE banks for $200m loan

Country needs to raise funds to offset a drop in internatio­nal reserves

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The government of Pakistan is raising a $200 million (Dh734 million) syndicated loan with three UAE banks, banking sources familiar with the matter said, as Islamabad clings to external funding to stave off the pressure of balance payments.

The loan, with a one-year maturity, is being arranged by Commercial Bank of Dubai, Emirates NBD, and Noor Bank, said the sources. Pakistan needs to raise funds to offset a drop in internatio­nal reserves and to fill a fiscal deficit which the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund estimates at 5.5 per cent of gross domestic product this year.

Pakistan’s Finance Minister Miftah Ismail confirmed Pakistan was borrowing $200 million and said it would help the country’s debt repayments.

“We are raising this money to boost our reserves,” he said. “As we pay out money to different institutio­ns, we need to rebuild our reserves.”

Esmail added that the loan may rise to $350 million in coming weeks, and that Pakistan would retire an equivalent amount in local-currency borrowing. “This will change our debt profile but it will not increase our overall debt,” he added.

The three UAE banks are now syndicatin­g the debt facility to other lenders, said the sources.

Pakistan’s economic growth has surged to above 5 per cent, but many analysts expect the country to seek a new IMF bailout this year because of a ballooning current account deficit and a significan­t decline in foreign currency reserves.

Pakistan raised a $2.5 billion bond late last year through a $1 billion sukuk and a $1.5 billion convention­al bond.

The country has been very active in the loan market recently, as balance of payment pressure mount. It raised a $700 million 10-year loan late last year with a partial guarantee from the Internatio­nal Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t, a unit of the World Bank.

It was once again in the market earlier this year for a $450 million one-year loan led by Credit Suisse and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.

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