Rupee down on buying
KARACHI: The rupee ended down against the dollar on Friday on buying by importers and corporate clients, dealers said.
The rupee depreciated by
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Pakistan News
KARACHI: The rupee ended down against the dollar on Friday on buying by importers and corporate clients, dealers said.
The rupee depreciated by
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Pakistan News
KARACHI: The Karachi share market attracted $42.338 million foreign portfolio investment in July as the market still offers a discount of around 25 pe
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KARACHI: The United Bank Limited (UBL) has announced an interim cash dividend of one rupee per share or 10 percent on the par value of Rs10 for the ha
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KARACHI: United Bank Limited (UBL) has posted a record consolidated profit before tax of Rs 5.125 billion for six months ending June 30, 2010 and declared 10 percent cash dividend.
According to financial results sent to KSE here on Friday, the pre-tax profit of the bank also surged to Rs 8.509 billion in six months of 2010 against Rs 4.597 billion during same period of 2009.
The earning per share also improved to Rs 4.22 during the period under review compared to Rs 3.75 in 2009.
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KARACHI: Sindh government will make special arrangements for the sale of flour at Rs 20 per kilogram under Ramzan Package.
This decision was taken at high level meeting presided over by Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah at CM house here on Friday.
Food Minister Mir Nadir Magsi, Minister for Prices and Supplies Shoaib Bukhari, Minister Syed Sardar Ahmed and secretary Food, Finance, Local Governments and Home also attended the meeting.
The meeting decided that special stalls will be set up outside flour mills all over the province to sell 10 kg bags at concessional rates of Rs 200 per bag.
The meeting was told that Food Department will supply of 120,000 metric tons of wheat to flour mills in Karachi and 100,000 MT of wheat for flour mills in other parts of Sindh. Sindh government will pay a subsidy of Rs 2 billion for this purpose.
Addressing the meeting Chief Minister asked concerned departments to take steps against hoarding of wheat and other necessary food items. Sindh government will provide wheat to flour mills, he added.
The meeting was told that a package for the supply of sugar and oil and ghee at concessional rates will also be considered in next couple of days.
The meeting was told that flour was selling at Rs 28 per kg in the open market.
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Pakistan News
KARACHI: The central bank, tightening the monetary policy Friday, ratcheted up the discount rate by 50 basis points or 0.5 percent to 13 percent with effect from August 2.
Governor State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) Yasin Anwar made the announcement while briefing the media men on the monetary measures being taken for the next two months.
He said the rate of interest is being hiked from 12.5 percent to 13 percent with effect from August 2, 2010 while the rate of inflation will remain between 11 to 12 percent during the current fiscal.
Yasin Anwar said keeping fiscal deficit at 4 percent of GDP would be a challenge.
Inflation is likely to remain higher than the targeted figure in the fiscal 2010, he said, adding, in previous fiscal the rate of inflation was 2.7 percent above the target.
The State Bank of Pakistan had kept the rate unchanged at 12.5 percent on May 24.
The SBP Governor said the foreign investment has been witnessing decline over the past three years.
He pointed out the foreign assets of banks have increased to Rs152 in the past one year.
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KARACHI: The central bank?s decision, regarding the key policy rate on Friday, may lean both ways as the anticipated rise in inflation would force the policymakers to tighten the monetary stance, while improvement in the economic indicators may provide room for relaxing the discount rate, analysts said on Thursday.
They, however, are unanimous that the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) would keep the policy rate unchanged at 12.5 percent due to the prevailing economic conditions.
If the central bank kept the interest rate unchanged, it would be the fourth time in a row. The last change in the monetary policy stance was witnessed when the key rate was cut by 50 basis points to 12.5 percent in November 2009.
In its last announcement in May, the bank kept the discount rate unchanged on the basis that the economy was recovering, but lacked the necessary infrastructure and sufficient macroeconomic stability to build on the momentum.
?Stabilisation efforts over the last one-and-a-half-year have brought dividends in the shape of contraction in the external current account deficit, containment of excessive money growth and reduction in inflation,? the central bank said.
?However, worsening power crisis, which has severely hampered the economic activity and fiscal weaknesses continue to impede sustainable recovery and comprehensive macroeconomic stability. At the same time, inflation has started increasing gradually,? it said.
Experts said that the current scenario is similar to the past and the State Bank would not have room to increase or decrease the interest rate.
?The rate increase would have a negative impact on the manufacturing side and discourage the private sector to grow,? said Ahsan Mehanti, Director, Arif Habib Investments.
?On the other side, the SBP would be cautious about rising prices due to the advent of the holy month of Ramazan and threat of gradual increase in the international oil prices,? he said.
The 12-month headline inflation rose by 11.73 percent by the end of June, which was two percent higher than the actual government estimates, but lower than the SBP prediction, which forecast the inflation to be around 12-12.50 percent during the year.
?Monetary growth is suggesting that the SBP may maintain the status quo,? said Farhan Bashir Khan, research analyst at InvestCap Research.
The changes in the current account would have a direct impact on M2 growth rate (through increase in net foreign assets). The impact was visible in FY10 as the net foreign assets registered an improvement of 29.4 percent year-on-year (Y-o-Y) against the decline of 22.5 percent witnessed in FY09, he said.
?On the domestic front, the situation worsened to some extent. The government borrowing for the budgetary support increased by 19.9 percent Y-o-Y during FY10, while crowding out of the private credit became further prominent as the share of credit to the private sector diminished to 59 percent of the total net domestic assets (NDA) against 63 percent in FY09,? he said.
Higher domestic financing envisioned in the Budget FY11 should continue to divert chunk of the incremental money supply towards the government. This would rule out the possibility of a rate cut.
?However, we also cannot subscribe to a rate increase as it would severely hurt improving trend of the private credit, without achieving its critical objective of curtailing inflation,? the analyst said.
In the last country report on Pakistan released in June, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) suggested the central bank that the monetary policy should be geared at restoring the trend towards price stability.
?Inflation must not become entrenched at the current levels as it will increase poverty, impede economic recovery and harm long-term growth prospects,? the IMF said.
?The SBP should raise the policy rate promptly if inflation pressures do not abate as expected,? it said.
In the last four monetary policy decisions, the SBP tried to balance price stability with the need to support a nascent recovery. After reducing discount rate in November 2009, the central bank kept it unchanged in view of sticky core inflation, uncertain fiscal outlook with greater domestic financing needs to compensate for external financing shortfalls and expected inflationary pressure from higher energy and food price.
In the following announcement in March, it also kept the discount rate unchanged, trying to strike a balance between the imperative of reducing inflation, ensuring financial stability and supporting the economic recovery.
Historically, the policy rates started picking up due to fragile economic conditions in FY07 as the SBP increased the discount rate from 10 percent to 13 percent in July-December 2008.
The economic deterioration forced the central bank to further increase it by 200 basis points to 15 percent in an interim announcement in November 2008. It was the month, when the country approached the IMF for an emergency assistance due to adverse security developments, large exogenous price shocks, including oil and food, global financial turmoil and policy inaction during the political transition to the new government.
The GDP growth slowed down to 5.8 percent in FY08 and inflation growth hit a record high of 25 percent.
The IMF approved $7.6 billion for economic recovery, which was augmented to $11.3 billion in August 2009.
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LAHORE: The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) former chairman Khalid Mirza has declined a government offer to oversee the restructuring of the
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Pakistan News
LAHORE: Export of leather garments continued to slide during the last fiscal year as it registered a fall of 10.31 percent to $860.244 million from $9
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ISLAMABAD: An institution of the Planning Commission has completed a report about progress towards millennium development goals, but its findings rema
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