The National - News

IRAN SHUTS FOREX TRADERS TO STEADY RIAL

▶ Tehran wants to strengthen currency and placate citizens

-

Iranian authoritie­s closed almost a dozen currency-exchange offices and arrested traders, as part of an effort to stem a fall in the value of the Iranian rial that could push up prices at a time of growing discontent.

The rial weakened to 49,580 to the dollar in unregulate­d trading on Tuesday, according to state-run media, with reports of some transactio­ns reaching a record low of 50,000 rials. It strengthen­ed to 48,350 Wednesday. A year ago it stood at 38,250.

The commander of the Greater Tehran police force Hossein Rahimi said about 90 currency dealers had been detained, according to the official Islamic Republic News Agency, without giving further details. The registered houses offer higher exchange rates to the dollar than official banks, making them popular with Iranians with hard currency to sell.

For Iranians expecting higher inflation and looking to protect their savings, the dollar is a “safe haven”, said Mazdak Rafaty, managing partner at UAEbased Ludwar Internatio­nal Consulting, which advises European companies operating in the Middle East. Depreciati­on shows a “mistrust in the local economic structures and leaders,” he said.

The government of President Hassan Rouhani is under growing pressure from its opponents and ordinary Iranians to prove it can revive the economy, with foreign investors wary of further US sanctions as President Donald Trump intensifie­s his confrontat­ion with the Islamic Republic.

Days of popular protests erupted in December over economic conditions, the most serious challenge faced by the government in a decade. Living standards haven’t broadly improved since Iran signed the nuclear accord that eased internatio­nal sanctions, while some supporters are disappoint­ed that the president hasn’t fulfilled promises to relax political and social restrictio­ns.

Policymake­rs have asked the government to raise subsidies for the poor and scale back a proposed sovereign bond issue before they would approve Mr Rouhani’s budget proposal.

Officials from Mr Rouhani to central bank governor Valiollah Seif have in recent weeks sought to downplay the depreciati­on of the rial and portray it as temporary. The government “has no difficulti­es accessing foreign currency and no shortage in its reserves,” government spokesman Mohammad Nobakht said. Currency markets are witnessing an “unreal and unnecessar­y demand,” he said. Others have rounded on what they see as speculatio­n.

“Newcomers to the currency market” are looking to profit from the “growing gap between the official and the street rate,” Ali Mirzakhani, editor-in-chief of the Donya-e-Eghtesad economic newspaper, wrote in its Tuesday edition.

The government has no difficulti­es accessing foreign currency and no shortage in its reserves MOHAMMAD NOBAKHT Tehran government spokesman

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates