Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CB becomes net purchaser of dollars in September despite foreign exchange shortage

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Although the Central Bank had one of the toughest spells in defending the rupee against the US dollar, it managed to emerge as a net purchaser of dollars in September—though by a little—from a net seller in August, during when Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange shortage came to a head.

According to data available through September, the Central Bank had bought dollars worth US$ 48.3 million from the domestic foreign exchange market and had sold US$ 44.92 million, recording to a net absorption of just US$ 3.38 million.

During August, the Central Bank sold dollars worth US$ 225.50 and bought US$ 49.38, becoming a net seller of US$ 176.12 million, bringing an end to a six-month long streak of being a net purchaser of dollars.

Purchasing dollars from the domestic foreign exchange market is one way the country can rebuild its foreign exchange reserves via nondebt creating inflows.

The Central Bank currently purchases 10 percent each from worker remittance­s and export earnings out of the converted proceeds under the mandatory export proceeds conversion rule to bolster reserves.

It expects to collect up to US$ 150 million from the remittance­s and export proceeds in the three months through December 2021 and a further US$ 250 million in the three months through March 2022 under its road map for the next six months as part of its envisaged inflows.

While inflows from the remittance­s have shrunk about 10 percent so far this year from a year ago levels due to the availabili­ty of parallel exchange rates and exporters resorting to delay their conversion­s expecting further weakness in the rupee, concerns mounted over Central Bank’s ability to collect dollars from these two key sources at the expected levels.

However, direct interventi­ons by the Central Bank in releasing dollars and the simultaneo­us actions to restore confidence among market participan­ts since mid-september have largely abated anxieties and uncertaint­ies that existed in the domestic foreign exchange market.

Last week, the Central Bank said the disparity between the official foreign exchange rates and the grey market rates had significan­tly narrowed, and expressed belief that the decline seen in the remittance income would start reversing from October onwards.

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