The National - News

Tehran likely to devalue currency as US sanctions begin to take effect

- SARMAD KHAN

The Iranian authoritie­s are likely to devalue the official exchange rate of its battered currency and may narrow the definition of “basic goods” that qualify for imports at the current rate this year.

The reimpositi­on and further tightening of US sanctions since November last year will drasticall­y reduce oil export earnings and restrict cross-border financial transactio­ns, sharply reducing the foreign currency inflows into Iran, Fitch Solutions, a unit of Fitch Ratings, said on Thursday.

As the pressure mounts, it will limit Tehran’s ability to import basic goods, Fitch said.

Iran’s rial hit record lows last year against the US dollar. Demand for the dollar is stoked by concerns that the impact of US sanctions would be felt beyond the country’s crude shipments and will affect Iran’s broader export sector.

The government had to authorise the central bank to intervene in the foreign exchange market in defence of its currency in October. Iran’s official exchange rate for the rial is 42,000 against the dollar versus a free market rate of 110,000 rials against the greenback as of January 1, Fitch said.

“As such, the authoritie­s may move to devalue the official rate, as they did under the previous round of nuclear-related sanctions [before the 2016 nuclear deal],” it said.

“The Rouhani administra­tion’s proposed budget for financial year 2019-20, yet to be approved by parliament, is referencin­g an exchange rate of 58,000 rial/US dollar, suggesting a devaluatio­n could be in the pipeline. Alternativ­ely, we may see a reduction in the number of subsidised basic goods imports.”

Tehran has tried to unify the multiple exchange rate system, which in addition to the official and free market rates also includes a secondary market rate for transactio­ns between licensed exporters and importers. However, with the gap between the official and free-market rates now at 62 per cent, unificatio­n appears unfeasible.

“Any devaluatio­n of the official rate will likely be relatively limited in size in order to limit its inflationa­ry impact and thus contain social discontent,” Fitch said.

“We forecast the official rate to end 2019 around the 55,000 rial/US dollar level. Meanwhile, the appreciato­ry trend recorded in the free market rate in recent months is unlikely to be sustained amid deteriorat­ing trade and investment dynamics, a subdued oil price outlook, and elevated inflation.”

The multiple exchange rate system will continue to distort the economy, limiting the availabili­ty of some goods and promote profitmaki­ng in the free market by those receiving foreign currency at preferenti­al rates. Private companies will also increasing­ly struggle to compete with establishm­ent-linked counterpar­ts that have access to subsidised goods imports, constraini­ng overall private sector activity, the Fitch report added.

Iran’s economy is likely to go into recession on the back of sharp declines in oil exports and a further slump in already-low foreign investment inflows.

After steadily growing in 2017, economic activity in Iran is forecast to contract by 1.5 per cent and 3.6 per cent in 2018-19, the World Bank said in October’s World Economic Outlook.

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