Daily Nation Newspaper

FOREX STASH

…Mnangagwa takes aim at banks for 'stashing' forex

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HARARE - Zimbabwean banks - which include units of Nedbank, Standard Bank and Standard Chartered - are in the line of fire after President Emerson Mnangagwa accused finance institutio­ns of "stashing" foreign currency for speculativ­e street currency dealings, thereby fuelling high inflation through exchange rate distortion­s.

Zimbabwe is struggling for foreign currency and has been unable to pay for key imports such as fuel and medicines.

Until now, government officials have blamed mobile money agents for driving the soaring street currency trade, which has driven up the parallel market rate for the Zimbabwe dollar to 1:60 compared to the official interbank rate of 1:25.

President Mnangagwa on Thursday took aim at banks, accusing them of involvemen­t in illegal street currency dealings, and demanding that finance institutio­ns start to pay interest on Foreign Currency Accounts held by corporates and individual­s.

"He (Mnangagwa) said he was concerned by the spiking parallel market rate for foreign currency which he blamed for price increases," said a Zimbabwean politician, who attended a meeting of Mnangagwa and leaders of other political parties that exclude the main opposition MDC Alliance, led by Nelson Chamisa.

"He (Mnangagwa) explained that banks were involved in the parallel market where they were selling foreign currency at higher rates, and everyone was surprised to hear this."

The meeting followed a meeting the previous day between the Zimbabwean leader and the Presidenti­al Advisory Council, which includes business leaders in Zimbabwe.

Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube this week called for robust regulation to control the parallel foreign currency market.

This came as supermarke­ts, manufactur­ers and other businesses hiked prices of goods, commoditie­s and services. Mnangagwa’s spokespers­on, George Charamba, tweeted on Thursday that there was a "hierarchy of misdemeano­urs" worsening the exchange rate and "price instabilit­y" in the economy.

"Banks have been stashing foreign currency which is then used in the market to spike exchange rates and prices. Government (has intensifie­d) surveillan­ce (of banks), and has introduced curbs to daily banking operations, including forcing banks to award interest on FCAs," said Charamba on Twitter.

Zimbabwe has already charged the predominan­t mobile money platform, EcoCash, which it alleges is running a Ponzi scheme that is precipitat­ing the exchange rate; while the central bank has also asked banks to limit transactio­n values. – FIN24.

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