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IMF board, citing increased credit exposure risks, raises reserve target

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WASHINGTON - The Executive Board of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has agreed to raise the medium-term target for the fund’s precaution­ary reserves given a sharp increase in financial risks since 2018, the IMF has said.

The fund’s 24 executive directors increased the target to Special Drawing Rights 25 billion, or around $36 billion, from SDR 20 billion, or $29 billion, after a regular biannual review conducted at the end of October, the IMF said in a statement.

SDRs are the IMF’s own unit of currency.

The review, delayed by a few months to permit an assessment of the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, showed a significan­t increase in the fund’s credit exposure and related risk since the last review in 2018, compounded by the pandemic.

“Credit outstandin­g has nearly doubled, including a surge in emergency financing without conditiona­lity, and commitment­s under precaution­ary arrangemen­ts are higher than at the last review,” the IMF said in its statement.

It said credit had become more concentrat­ed and scheduled repurchase­s were larger and more bunched.

The current target for precaution­ary balances of SDR 20 billion was also likely to drop below the indicative range this fiscal year and next.

Given these developmen­ts, directors agreed to keep the minimum floor for precaution­ary balances - which include general and special reserves and a special contingent account - at SDR 15 billion and raise the medium-term target to SDR 25 billion, while continuing to monitor the situation carefully. – REUTERS.

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