logo
Egypt's Pound, Stocks Take Blows From Worsening Mideast Conflict

Egypt's Pound, Stocks Take Blows From Worsening Mideast Conflict

Mint9 hours ago

(Bloomberg) -- Egypt's pound weakened and its stock market plunged the most in five years as the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran stoked fears of a wider regional war.
The pound was trading at 50.74 per US dollar at Cairo's banks by 12:45 p.m. on Sunday, down from about 49.8 last week.
The benchmark EGX30 index, meanwhile, tumbled as much as 7.7% on its first day of trading since Israel struck Iranian nuclear and military facilities. It later pared some of those losses.
Import-dependent Egypt, which is trying to turn around its economy after securing a $57 billion global bailout, is particularly vulnerable to the economic shockwaves stemming from the Middle East's latest round of conflict.
Egypt's sovereign dollar bonds, along with those of Israel and Jordan, posted some of the biggest losses in emerging markets Friday after Israel began the airstrikes. The Egyptian note due in 2059 lost 1.5 cents on the dollar, its biggest single-day loss since April. The declines came after recent rallies took average total returns on Egyptian bonds to 5.5% this year.
Cairo-based investment bank EFG Hermes said there were indications of about $500 million in portfolio outflows from the local debt market on Thursday, after the US ordered some of its diplomatic staff to leave the region.
The weekend's escalation will likely cause further outflows and weakness for the pound in the coming days, Mohamed Abu Basha, the bank's head of macro analysis, said in a note. It also increases the chances of Egypt's central bank keeping interest rates on hold at its July 10 meeting, he said.
Israel shuttered its biggest natural gas field on Friday, stopping flows to Egypt and forcing Cairo in turn to cut supplies to some industries and switch to diesel at some power stations. Egyptian authorities also said Saturday they'd postpone the long-anticipated inauguration of its flagship antiquities museum that was set for July 3, until the fourth quarter.
The Egyptian pound has been closely watched by investors since authorities allowed it to plummet about 40% in March 2024 to tackle a chronic foreign-exchange shortage and secure an expanded International Monetary Fund program. Keeping a flexible exchange rate regime is one of the main targets of the Washington-based lender's $8 billion loan pact.
The stock market's drop was its most since March 2020, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Among the biggest decliners were EFG Holding, which was down about 12% by 11 a.m., and property developer the Talaat Moustafa Group, which fell 5.3%.
--With assistance from Tarek El-Tablawy, Srinivasan Sivabalan and Omar Tamo.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Donland deal: How Pakistan got Trump's attention again
The Donland deal: How Pakistan got Trump's attention again

Economic Times

time25 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

The Donland deal: How Pakistan got Trump's attention again

ET Online Pakistan has entered Donald Trump's mind and occupied some head space by doing what it does best - please, pamper and satisfy all needs of the moment, be it delivering terrorists or minerals. Like it or not, Pakistan is in the room, if not at the table, even as Trump and Modi will bump into each other at the ongoing G7 Summit at Kananaskis, Canada. It anticipated contours of Trump's second coming better, adjusted its posture, made the right offers and made them early. The effort is bolstered by more than 10 different lobbying firms working the system, including one headed by Trump's former bodyguard Keith Schiller.A unique quirk: Trump seems to like generals in uniform. Be sure he's thinking of army chief Asim Munir and not Shehbaz Sharif when he talks of Pakistan's 'great leaders' in his frequent remembrances of the India-Pak ceasefire he 'crafted'. A detail: contrary to reports in the hyper media, Munir was not invited to attend the parade to celebrate 250 years of the US army. India is struggling to adjust to a presidency that is less institutional, less structured and less focused. It's about getting the Kremlinology right, the sophisticated art of reading cryptic and crypto signals, and flying close to the sons (even Barron Trump). Outrage - however satisfying - will not help get over the Trump hump. Nor would cancelling defence orders in a fit of pique and losing the long game. Better to use the relationship to build capacity. It's good to remember that US-Pak relations were factored in when India decided to strengthen relations with Washington back in the day and negotiate the nuclear deal. They have remained a reality even though New Delhi thought it had put Pakistan in the diplomatic isolation ward. It kept bouncing back with American and British help and a permanent cadre of sympathetic bureaucrats, including retired ambassadors, in both capitals. Official India learnt to deal with the pain even if IT cell warriors and rabid TV anchors didn' says an analyst, the question remains the same: 'Does India want to - or will it - give Pakistan a veto on US- India ties?' The answer from New Delhi so far seems to be 'no' even as anger rises and political pain grows. Pakistan will do anything to please Trump and Sons. India will Pakistan's play. Over the past few years, with the Afghanistan war over and US interest waning, the army-ISI combine realised that Pakistan was no longer a frontline state. Joe Biden paid little attention and never dialled Islamabad. As American focus moved to the Indo-Pacific and rivalry with China, Pakistan knew it wasn't going to be part of the Quad, although it made some half-hearted elite understood they couldn't vie with India. But they were 'happy just to be heard and not be considered irrelevant'. The militablishment went back to the original drawing board - counterterrorism cooperation - to keep parts of the US government engaged. The easiest doors to open were at the State Department and was dismissive of Pakistan. But note that his administration approved $450 mn to 'sustain' Pakistan's F-16 fleet, including engine hardware upgrades and classified software support. The package was said to be for counterterrorism operations. In a replay, Trump approved $397 mn in February for the same fleet, despite announcing a wide freeze on foreign aid. He made an the background, Rawalpindi slowly took control of Pakistan's China policy from the politicians and worked to dispel the notion the country was (completely) in Beijing's camp. Americans wanted to believe the myth for their own reasons. For the Pakistan army, maintaining ties to America, enjoying the free military training and keeping tabs on Pentagon's thinking have always been priorities. To say nothing of serving as an important window for China in to the point, Pakistani generals never let US Centcom lose sight of the fact that their country was/is always available as a strategic staging area for US operations. Which brings us to the present. Munir and Centcom commander Michael Kurilla go back a long way. Both assumed their current positions in 2022 and have hosted each other more than shouldn't be a surprise that last week, the American general called Pakistan 'a phenomenal partner' in the fight against IS-Khorasan. Kurilla clearly thinks the military partnership with Pakistan can, and should, exist separately from the one with was the first person Munir called to say that the Abbey Gate bomber Mohammad Sharifullah, a.k.a. Jaffar, had been caught. He then requested that the message be passed on to the president. Result: a special mention in Trump's address to so it will go. Until it won't. Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. How a nudge from Cyrus Mistry helped TCS unlock a USD1 billion opportunity Operation Sindoor, Turkey, Bangladesh played out as India hosted global airlines after 42 years Benchmarked with BSE 1000, this index fund will diversify your bets. But at a cost. How individual bankruptcy law can halt suicides by failed businessmen Explainer: The RBI's LAF corridor and its role in rate transmission Stock picks of the week: 5 stocks with consistent score improvement and return potential of more than 32% in 1 year Defence stocks: Black & white, and many shades of grey. 10 stocks with an upside potential of up to 30% Stock Radar: 40% drop from highs! Swiggy stocks make a rounding bottom pattern; time to buy the dip?

Adani's Haifa port unaffected by Iranian missile strikes, operations normal: Sources
Adani's Haifa port unaffected by Iranian missile strikes, operations normal: Sources

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Adani's Haifa port unaffected by Iranian missile strikes, operations normal: Sources

JERUSALEM: The Indian billionaire Gautam Adani-led group's Haifa port in Israel was unharmed by the Iranian ballistic missile attack, with cargo operations progressing unhampered, sources said. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Late on Saturday night, Iran targeted Israel's Haifa port and a nearby oil refinery in response to Tel Aviv's attack on Iranian nuclear and other targets earlier this week. Shrapnels fell in the chemical terminal at the port and some other projectiles fell at the oil refinery, two sources aware of the matter said. They claimed there were no injuries. Adani's port, however, was not impacted by the strike. A piece of interceptor shrapnel was also found at the Kishan West (Haifa port) but there were no injuries, they said. Cargo operations at the Adani-operated port were unhampered. "There are eight ships in the port now, cargo operations are normal," a source said. The Iranian ballistic missile attack did not inflict any damage to the port or its operations, the sources claimed. The Adani group did not immediately offer any comments on the issue. Israeli government authorities could not be immediately reached for comments. Haifa port serves as a crucial maritime hub, handling over 30 per cent of Israel's imports. It is owned by Adani Ports, which controls a 70 per cent share. The missiles may have caused damage to a major oil refinery close to the port but there was no official comment on the impact on it. Haifa is less than 2 per cent of the volume handled by Adani Ports and SEZ and contributed about 5 per cent of the revenue. APSEZ handles a total cargo of 10.57 million tonnes. Israel attacked Iran early Friday, targeting its nuclear, missile and military infrastructure. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Iran later launched retaliatory strikes on Israel. The two countries traded strikes for a third day on Sunday as the Middle East region braced for a protracted conflict. Iran said Israel struck two oil refineries, raising the prospect of a broader assault on Iran's heavily sanctioned energy industry that could affect global markets. Some Iranian missiles evaded Israeli air defences to strike buildings in the heart of the country.

Wall Street week ahead: Spotlight on Israel-Iran conflict, Fed rate decision, oil prices
Wall Street week ahead: Spotlight on Israel-Iran conflict, Fed rate decision, oil prices

Mint

timean hour ago

  • Mint

Wall Street week ahead: Spotlight on Israel-Iran conflict, Fed rate decision, oil prices

Major focus of the Wall Street investors in the week ahead will be on the Israel-Iran conflict and US Federal Reserve's monetary policy decision. Last Friday, Israel launched massive assault on Iran's nuclear amd military sites. On Saturday, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to continue to strike hard at Iran and said the goal of the Israeli operation is two fold - to foil Iran's nuclear ambitions and to stop its ballistic missiles programme. Due to the conflict, oil prices rallied on worries about the crude supply. The price of a barrel of benchmark US crude soared 7.3% to $72.98. Brent crude, the international standard, rose 7% to $74.23 for a barrel. Iran is one of the world's major producers of oil. If a war becomes wider, it could slow the flow of Iranian oil and keep the price of crude and gasoline higher across the world. The US central bank's Monetary Policy Committee is widely expected to leave the key rate unchanged. Next week, market participants will also see the release of data on the US retail sales, housing starts and building permits. On June 16 (Monday), a report on Empire State manufacturing survey for June will be released. On June 17 (Tuesday), separate reports on US retail sales for May, Import Price Index for May, Industrial Production for May, and Home Builder Confidence Index for June will be released. On June 18 (Wednesday), separate reports on housing starts for May, building permits for May, and FOMC interest-rate decision will be declared. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will hold a press conference. On June 20 (Friday), separate reports on Philadelphia Fed manufacturing survey for June and US leading economic indicators for May will be released. Following companies are due to report first quarter results in the week ahead — Lennar, Jabil Inc., Kirkland's, Vince, Accenture, Kroger, and CarMax. US stocks slumped on Friday on worries over escalating conflict in the West Asia following Israel's attack on Iranian nuclear and military targets. The S&P 500 declined 1.13% to end the session at 5,976.97 points. The Nasdaq fell 1.30% to 19,406.83 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 1.79% to 42,197.79 points. In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.41% from 4.36%. Gold prices jumped as investors searched for safe-heaven to park their funds. An ounce of gold rose 1.4%.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store