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Pakistan Rupee Falls to Record Against Dollar on Terror Strikes
PAKISTAN - 16 DECEMBER 2009

Dec. 16 -- Pakistan’s rupee fell to a record low against the dollar as investors increased buying of foreign exchange because of a surge in terrorist attacks and accelerating inflation.

Pakistan’s rupee fell 0.1 percent to 84.4725 against the U.S. dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Inflation accelerated for the first time in 10 months in November, reducing the scope for the central bank to continue cutting interest rates.

“Dollars are in high demand today and the fear of further losses is making people convert currency at the year-end, when the terror threat is hurting investment,” Malik Bostan, chairman of the Forex Association of Pakistan, said in Karachi. “Inflation figures for the last month were also not encouraging.”

Consumer prices in South Asia’s second-largest economy rose 10.51 percent from a year earlier after gaining 8.87 percent in October, the Federal Bureau of Statistics said on its Web site in Dec. 10. That was more than the median 10.2 percent forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 11 economists.

Terrorist attacks in Pakistan have surged after the military on Oct. 17 started an offensive against Taliban militants belonging to the Tehrik-e-Taliban group in the country’s northwest tribal region of South Waziristan. The U.S. is pushing Pakistan to expand its operations to include insurgents attacking international troops in neighboring Afghanistan.


Source: Bloomberg
 
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Well the Pakistani experts have other thoughts than terrorism responsible for weaker Rupee,:no::disagree: It's due to oil imports


Forward Dollar Buying Pressures Rupee


Monday, 14 Dec, 2009 | 07:57 AM PST |


In the local currency market, the rupee came under renewed pressure versus dollar this week. Despite rising workers remittances from abroad, heavy dollar purchases by banks to cover oil import payments forced the rupee to breach psychological barrier in the inter-bank as well as open market during the week with dollar crossing Rs84 barrier and the rupee touching historic lows for the year.

The central bank’s decision that commercial banks and private sector will make oil import payments from December 14, resulted in dollar’s forward buying which made dollar expensive, pushing the rupee to its lowest level since October 2008 historic lows.


On the inter-bank market this week, the rupee was seen in the negative territory on the opening day as it shed 45 paisa against the dollar on the buying counter and another 48 paisa on the selling counter. The dollar broke Rs84 barrier and traded at Rs84.12 and Rs84.18 on December 7 after closing last week at Rs83.67 and Rs83.70. The decline in the rupee value persisted on the second trading day. The rupee further shed three paisa on the buying counter and another two paisa on the selling counter to trade at Rs84.15 and Rs84.20 against the dollar on December 8.

The rupee weakness continued on December 9, which posted another five paisa decline against the dollar, changing hands at Rs84.20 and Rs84.25, due to heavy dollar buying by the private sector. However, the parity did not show any change on December 10 and managed to recover some of its losses on the fifth trading day with the rupee gaining 15 paisa and changing hands against the dollar at Rs84.05 and Rs84.10 on December 11. During this week, the rupee in the inter-bank market lost 40 paisa against the dollar.

In the open market, the rupee this week remained depressed as the dollar continued to advance opening the week on a negative note. The rupee had ended last week at Rs83.60 and Rs83.70. It further drifted lower in terms of dollar, shedding 15 paisa to trade at Rs83.75 and Rs83.85 on December 7. On December 8, the rupee further shed 15 paisa and traded against the dollar at Rs83.90 and Rs84.00. The rupee/dollar parity remained unchanged and traded at its overnight level on December 9.

The dollar attained new highs in the open market on December 10 as the rupee breached Rs84 barrier and touched historic lows after shedding 30 paisa against the dollar which traded at Rs84.20 and Rs84.30. Last year in October, the rupee had crossed Rs87 against the dollar. The rupee continued its decline against the dollar in the open market and lost 20 paisa on December 11 when dollar traded at Rs84.40 and Rs84.50, the second highest in 14 months. During the week in review, the rupee in the open market lost 80 paisa against the US currency.

Versus European single common currency, the rupee this week maintained a firm trend. It commenced the week on a positive note, gaining Rs2.15 to trade against euro at Rs122.50 and Rs123.00 on December 7 after closing last week at Rs124.65 and Rs125.15. On December 8, the rupee failed to hold its overnight firmness and shed 90 paisa, changing hands against euro at Rs123.40 and Rs123.90. But the rupee weakness proved short lived as it managed to recover 65 paisa on December 9 when euro traded at Rs122.75 and Rs123.25.

On December 10, the rupee overnight firmness persisted for the second day in a row, as it posted another 65 paisa gain and traded at Rs122.10 and Rs122.60 against euro. But in the fifth trading session, the rupee reacted negatively versus euro as it posted fresh losses on December 11, shedding Rs1.80 on the buying counter and another Rs1.60 on the selling counter to trade at Rs123.70 and Rs124.20. On cumulative basis, however, the rupee this week managed to gain 95 paisa against the European single common currency.

On the international front, the dollar hit its highest level against the euro in more than a month on December 7. In New York, the euro was trading at $1.4810, down about 0.3 per cent, after earlier hitting $1.4757, its lowest level since November 4. The dollar fell 1 percent to 89.52 yen. The euro hit a 2009 high above $1.5140 last month and an all-time high above $1.60 in mid-2008. Yen strength was mostly tied to a reversal after the dollar’s 2.5 per cent gain against the Japanese currency last weekend. Sterling fell to its weakest in 10 days against a broadly firmer dollar in London, trading 0.1 per cent lower at $1.6428, having earlier hit a 10-day low of $1.6314.

On December 8, the euro slipped against the dollar, weighed by concerns about Greece’s fiscal health after Fitch downgraded the country’s credit rating. In early New York trade, the euro was down 0.5 per cent at $1.4746, while the dollar stayed weak against the yen, however, falling 1.4 per cent to 88.23 yen. Sterling weakened on deepening concern over Britain’s fiscal health. It hit a six-week low of $1.6254, before closing the day at $1.6300, down 0.9 per cent.

On December 9, the dollar fell against the euro, snapping a three-day advance. In early New York trade, the euro was up 0.2 per cent at $1.4734, having swung between a low of $1.4670 and a peak of $1.4782 according to Reuters data. The dollar fell 0.6 per cent on the day to 87.88 yen, edging closer to a 14-year low hit late last month, when fears over Dubai’s debt problems prompted investors to cut carry trades and risk exposure. Sterling rose 0.3 per cent to $1.6327, having earlier hit a near eight-week low of $1.6167.

On December 10, the US dollar was unchanged against the euro despite concern about euro zone deficits. The yen fell after separate reports showed the US trade deficit narrowed in October while the four-week moving average of US jobless claims fell for a 14th straight week. The traded at $1.4726. Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.4 per cent at 88.20 yen though off the session peak of 88.45 yen. Sterling briefly hit a high for the session of $1.6377. It had pulled back some of those gains to trade at $1.6321 against the dollar, up 0.2 per cent on the day,

At the close of the day on December 11, the dollar held steady while the yen lost ground in Tokyo. The dollar rose half a per cent on the Japanese currency, although it was well within ranges of the past month. Against the sterling, the dollar firmed across the board after stronger-than-expected US retail sales and consumer sentiment data boosted optimism about the outlook for the world’s largest economy. The dollar rose 0.5 per cent to 88.68 yen and the euro was steady at $1.4725. In London, sterling was down 0.3 percent against the dollar at $1.6236, having earlier hit a high of $1.6339.

DAWN.COM | Economic & Business | Forward dollar buying pressures rupee

I know the obsession of westren media of terrorism in Pakistan but the intent of this report really looks to scare of Investors who Invest here in Pakistan.
 
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Can someone explain to me how the dollar can strengthen by around 5% against the Euro while the rupee only depreciates around 1% against the dollar? Did the rupee appreciate?

before:

$1=€1.51
$1=Rs. 83.4

Now:

$1=€1.43
$1=Rs. 84.2
 
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Pak Rupee traded at record low of 85.34 against dollar
PAKISTAN - 27 MAY 2010

KARACHI: Trading of the Pakistani Rupee was at a record low against the dollar on Thursday because of the pressure from import payments. Dealers said they expect the currency to remain under pressure.

“The rupee has been traded between the levels of 85.25/35,” said a currency dealer.

Another dealer said the Rupee was traded at 85.34 against the dollar.

The Rupee’s previous record low was set in February when it eased to 85.15.


Source: DAWN Media Group
 
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Pak Rupee traded at record low of 85.34 against dollar
PAKISTAN - 27 MAY 2010

KARACHI: Trading of the Pakistani Rupee was at a record low against the dollar on Thursday because of the pressure from import payments. Dealers said they expect the currency to remain under pressure.

“The rupee has been traded between the levels of 85.25/35,” said a currency dealer.

Another dealer said the Rupee was traded at 85.34 against the dollar.

The Rupee’s previous record low was set in February when it eased to 85.15.
Source: DAWN Media Group

what was rupee at the time of indepandance ?
 
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y is it so surprising.... we are a deficit country. which means over a period ur rupee value will keep goin down unless u turn into a surplus country.
 
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Another big Achievement of PPP government Rupee 85.34 against dollar. :hitwall:

that means almost 2PKR = 1 INR.
but what is the price of toor dal , vegetable oil, petrol, rice in your country?
what is the price of cell phone calls .
how much is electricity
 
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Why are you becoming sad about depriciation of your currency. It will be a great opportunity for your exporters to retain higher profit margin. That will help them to expand business. Government should try to capitalise it.

However, imported goods will be costlier. That is little worrying.
 
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when Zia plane was crashed, at that time dollar was just 18, then PPP join the government and give "Kattora" in the hands of Pakistanis, and succeed to get highest loan (with the help of PML(N)) till 1999. I remember one time in 1998 dollar even touched 67, then dropped back to 54, and when Mushraf joins it was 59. It goes into musharaf's achievement that dollar didn't changed with in 7 yrs. When our beloved democracy joined back now it is 85 :)

so in 1988 dollar was: 18 Rupees
1999 : 59 Rupees
2007 : 63 Rupees
2010 : 85 Rupees

Clearly shows how corrupt our Democracy is....

several years after the independence, i think in 1955 pak rupee was 4.76 compare to us $!!

It was 1 rupee in 1947, and pound was around 3 rupee

Can someone explain to me how the dollar can strengthen by around 5% against the Euro while the rupee only depreciates around 1% against the dollar? Did the rupee appreciate?

Basically the value of the dollar against rupee should not be changed at all, as Pakistani Rupee has been plugged with Dollar like gulf countries.
 
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Rupee recovers




Saturday, May 29, 2010
By our correspondent

KARACHI: The rupee recovered 11 paisas against the dollar on Friday after a three-day downward rally, dealers said.

The rupee ended 85.08 against the greenback from the previous day’s close of 85.19.

The rupee continued to gain value in a rally that started in the second session of the last day over the news that US had released $288 million coalition support fund.

The local currency lost 60 paisas against the dollar from May 25-27 over high demand of dollars for payments by importers and corporate sector.

The dollar hit four-month high on May 26 as rupee depreciated to 85.15 in the interbank market.

The kerb market on Friday witnessed dull activity as buyers and sellers were reluctant to trade dollar over uncertainty, dealers said and added that the sellers were eying better value, as buyers saw rupee appreciating.

Before the Friday’s gain, the rupee was gradually depreciating against the greenback and it lost Rs1.29 or 1.54 percent since May 12 when the dollar was traded at 83.90.

The record devaluation of rupee against the dollar was witnessed in October 2008, when the local currency fell to Rs86.

In the year 2008 the country faced serious economic challenges due to law and order situation and political uncertainty. The country approached to International Monetary Fund (IMF) for urgent assistance.

Therefore, the IMF in November 2008 approved $7.6 billion 23-month Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) for economic revival of the country. The loan was enhanced to $10.66 billion in August 2009 to provide further assistance.

After the IMF assistance the rupee managed to gain and gradually improved to 79.10 against the dollar on December 2008.

The weak economic situation, however, persist and the local currency again started devaluing against the greenback and stood at 84.30 on December 2009 and further fell to 85 in February 11, 2009.


Rupee recovers
 
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that means almost 2PKR = 1 INR.
but what is the price of toor dal , vegetable oil, petrol, rice in your country?
what is the price of cell phone calls .
how much is electricity

1 INR = 1.8 PKR
Petrol is 70 Rs/ltr and it might come down on the 1st of june.
Daal and rice 's prices are the highest at the moment in the history.
While vegetable oil depends on the international prices.
and the cheapest thing in Pakistan is Cell phone calls and SMS. And one thing interesting that we don't have roaming charges here in pakistan no matter where you are in whole of pakistan, no roaming charges.
 
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Fracker how can you blame democracy for this . I think there is no relation between rupee rate with democracy . I agree that at the time of musharaf it was 59 but point to be remember is that there was no economic crisis like this, and every country is suffering some type of economic related issue .
There are issue in India also like inflation , which is related to day to day life of the people .
Remember one thing that all the currency in the world is falling against the dollar
 
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