Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Gulf-wide currency revaluation against the weak dollar would reach up to 5-10 per cent

Dubai - With the surge in inflation across the Gulf Co-operation CouncilGulf Co-operation CouncilCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf member-economies, a GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf-wide currency revaluation against the weak dollar would reach up to 5-10 per cent from an earlier forecast of 3-5 per cent, according to EFG-Hermes, Egypt's biggest investment bank.

"The rise in inflation also has socio-political connotations and adds to the probability of GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf currency reform," the bank said in GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf Economics: Further into Negative, a report written by Dubai-based Monica Malik, senior economist at EFG-HermesEFG.

It also reiterated a 60-per cent probability that the UAE or Qatar, or both, may abandon the dollar-peg and move the dirham or rial to a currency basket during the first six months due to the "aggressive interest rate cuts" done by the US Federal Reserve this week.

But EFG-HermesEFG-HermesEFG-Hermes UAE pointed out that the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf countries, which move as a bloc, would more likely revalue their currencies than shift their peg to a currency basket.

It said that linking the currencies of the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf countries to a basket of currencies would provide "greater money flexibility" which a one-time revaluation against the greenback could not. "We maintain our view...of a move away from the US peg in H12008 by one or more states (the UAE and/or Qatar) or the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf as a whole," it added.

Market analysts have said that the slash in interest rates in the UAE and other GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf members, which followed the US Fed's 75 basis points (bps) cut in interest rates to 3.5 per cent to ward off a recession, would stoke imported inflation across the Gulf region due to the depreciation of dollar-pegged currencies against the other currencies.

"The US rate cuts illustrate just how out-of-sync the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf and the US economies are...." EFG-HermesEFG-HermesEFG-Hermes UAE said, stressing that economic fundamentals have remained and interest rates low in the Gulf region despite strong economic activity on the ground and high credit growth and liquidity in the banking sector.

"These factors will continue to add to the inflationary environment," it said. It added that lending rates, which the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf countries had kept at bay, would only have a limited impact on stemming credit growth.

"Firstly, given the strong level of liquidity in the banking sector, borrowing from the central bank is limited," it stressed. "Secondly, inter-bank rates are lower than central bank lending rates, thereby also reducing the incentive of commercial banks to borrow from the central banks."

Some estimates put at 10 per cent the UAE inflation last year from the 19-year high of 9.3 per cent in 2006 because of the weakening dollar while while EFG-HermesEFG-HermesEFG-Hermes UAE said that inflation in Saudi Arabia surged to 6.5 per cent by end-2007, adding that Oman and Kuwait had also reached multiyear-high inflation rates.

Aside from Kuwait, which unshackled its dinar from the greenback in May, the currencies of Saudi Arabia (rial), Bahrain (dinar), the UAE (dirham), Oman and Qatar (both rial) are all pegged to the dollar.

"The aggressive rate cuts in the US increases the probability of currency reform in the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf said. "We have highlighted in our research that key factors in the timing of a move from the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf will be aggressive interest rate cuts in the US and/or marked weakening in the US dollar."

The UAE and its Gulf neighbours said earlier that there would be no unilateral move to a currency basket from any of the GCCGCCCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf members.

JOSE FRANCO

© Khaleej Times 2008

GCC currency may be linked to euro-led basket,

22/Jan/2008

The Gulf states are discussing pegging a planned common currency to a euro-dominated basket rather than to the US dollar, the head of the Federation of GCC Chambers has said.

“There is discussion between GCC countries about moving from a dollar peg to a more flexible currency basket made up predominantly of euros,” Abdulrahim Hasan Naqi, secretary-general of the FGCCC, said in an interview in Abu Dhabi.

“The euro is attractive for the future GCC currency because the European Union is close in structure to the GCC,” Naqi said, adding that no official studies into the subject had been conducted so far. Presently, five GCC countries - Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Oman and Bahrain - peg their currencies to the dollar. Kuwait was the first to break ranks this year when it de-pegged from the weakening greenback.

Pressure has increased on GCC central banks to de-peg their currencies from the dollar as they battle accelerating inflation. “GCC countries should work together to fight inflation. Our suggestion is to buy together from outside as it will be cheaper in higher volumes, to invest in factories for food outside and to import from cheaper countries and to control our currencies,” Naqi said.

Oil-rich GCC countries have officially played down talks of de-pegging from the weakening dollar and publicly said any revaluation against the greenback will be done in unison.

“If GCC currencies do move to a currency basket the euro is likely to be an important currency but oil is priced in dollars so should make up a large part of the basket,” said Monica Malik, an economist at EFG-Hermes. On Friday, the euro traded at $1.4622 compared to its record high of $1.4967 in November.

http://www.gulfbase.com/site/interface/NewsArchiveDetails.aspx?n=51708