The National - News

MOROCCANS BAULK AT CURRENCY PLAN

▶ But few are worried about risks for an economy in strong shape until flotation

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In five decades of importing steel wires, Zahar Benmoussa’s company never worried about currency risks – until Morocco announced plans to float the dirham.

“For the first time in our history, we started to hedge” in the currency market, said Mr Benmoussa, managing director at Casablanca-based Grillages Marocains. Across Morocco, fears of a weaker dirham triggered a rush for dollars and euros, causing a US$3 billion drop in its reserves in just three months this year.

Then in June, the government put its plans on hold again. It was at least the second time it stalled on a move supported by the IMF and a centrepiec­e of Morocco’s ambitions to become North Africa’s dominant financial hub.

By delaying, it risks wasting a “perfect time” in terms of its economic health to loosen controls, according to Charles Robertson, the global chief economist at London-based Renaissanc­e Capital.

“It’s fear of the unknown and pessimism on the corporates’ part,” Mr Robertson said after a research trip to Morocco in July. There is also the shadow cast by Egypt, he said, with the pound losing half of its value against the dollar after the government removed most controls in November to end a foreign-currency shortage.

While the central bank governor Abdellatif Jouahri has repeatedly insisted that the float would be gradually introduced starting in the second half of the year, it is now unclear when liberalisa­tion will take place. The prime minister Saaddine El Otmani said on July 1 that the first phase will allow the currency to fluctuate within a daily range of 5 per cent, up from 0.6 per cent currently.

The dirham is pegged to a two-currency basket weighted 60 per cent to the euro and 40 per cent to the US dollar.

“The move to a more flexible exchange rate regime, not a float, is still in the cards but the roll-out will take place at the appropriat­e time,” government spokesman Mustapha El Khalfi said last month. The premier wants to investigat­e what volatility or depreciati­on would mean not only for the purchasing power of Morocco’s 34 million people, but also for companies doing business abroad, he said.

Some see opportunit­ies from a weaker currency. Abdelhai Bessa, the chief executive of the textile and garments producer Somitex, said he hoped for an “orderly depreciati­on” of the dirham that would help Moroccan products compete with Turkish and Chinese goods.

“The authoritie­s say they want Moroccan companies to boost exports and expand in sub-Saharan Africa, but right now we’re simply not competitiv­e enough,” Mr Bessa said.

“Currency reform might change that.” Yet it could also aggravate unrest which has been building in Morocco since a fishmonger was crushed to death in a garbage compacter in October following a run-in with police. The incident became a focal point for a protest movement demanding political and economic reform.

The protests probably played a minor role in the decision to delay the float plans, according to Riccardo Fabiani, a North Africa analyst at the Eurasia Group in London. More significan­tly, he said, was political infighting and the need for Mr Otmani to assert his authority. He took office in March at the head of a six-faction coalition, ending a five-month political impasse that had forced King Mohamed VI to intervene.

The prime minister “had been bypassed by everyone”, with the unrest handled by the interior minister and the justice minister – both of whom are close to the monarchy, Mr Fabiani said.

Even so, analysts say Morocco’s economy is in good shape for removing restrictio­ns on the dirham. Unlike Egypt before its float, Morocco has an investment-grade credit rating and an expanding private sector. With growth expected to average 4.1 per cent this year and next, it is set to outperform most Arab economies including Egypt and Tunisia, as well as Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

Its budget deficit is forecast to drop to 3.1 per cent this year from 4.2 per cent in 2016, according to economist estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Inflation is under 2 per cent.

“It’s not at all cut and dried whether the dirham will appreciate or depreciate when more flexibilit­y is allowed,” said Badr Fassi-Fihri, who trades currencies for Banque Centrale Populaire in Casablanca.

The repeated delays are exacerbati­ng volatility, said Mr Benmoussa. “The way the authoritie­s seem to be hesitating raises uncertaint­y,” he said.

It’s not at all cut and dried whether the dirham will appreciate or depreciate when more flexibilit­y is allowed

 ?? AFP ?? Tourists at the Hassan Tower in Rabat. Morocco’s economic outlook is robust
AFP Tourists at the Hassan Tower in Rabat. Morocco’s economic outlook is robust

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