What's new

Pakistan to receive one of the biggest loan tranche worth $3.28 billions

sovereign ratings keeps on changing...India rating is also not very good.
It is good enough for an emerging economy.
BTW check India local banks bailout and credit ratings and compare that with local Pakistan banks.

https://qz.com/1187854/how-india-will-pour-in-33-billion-to-save-its-banks-explained/

Fitch Sees $14 Billion Bank Bailout Easing India Downgrade Woes


KARACHI: Pakistan’s banking sector remained sound and stable in 2017, with total assets growing to Rs18.34 trillion ($159.5 billion) from Rs15.83 trillion the previous year.

http://www.arabnews.com/node/1271156/business-economy
Again, you can go to the moody rating for comparing the bank ratings of both. As of bailout package is concerned, it's good for the economy as it will help the banks to lend more. Basically, that's what China does. It has no short-term effects on the government.

As of the downgrade woes are concerned, it's for the banks. Even if the downgrade happens it will not fall to junk bond category.

And speaking of India's total debt, a large chunk of these debts are in Rupee by Foreign institutional investors and another large chunk of ECB's are long-term loans. The rupee bonds are usually invested back into the country.
 
.
Again, you can go to the moody rating for comparing the bank ratings of both. As of bailout package is concerned, it's good for the economy as it will help the banks to lend more. Basically, that's what China does. It has no short-term effects on the government.

As of the downgrade woes are concerned, it's for the banks. Even if the downgrade happens it will not fall to junk bond category.


It will spur inflation...not good for common man.

The Narendra Modi government’s lifeline for the banks has come at a time when the sector is piled with bad loans. Its gross non-performing assets (NPA) are expected to rise to Rs9.5 lakh crore by March 2018, up from Rs8 lakh crore in the same month last year, according to industry body Assocham and rating agency Crisil. NPAs are loans on which the borrower has either stopped repaying the principal or the interest—or both.

https://qz.com/1187854/how-india-will-pour-in-33-billion-to-save-its-banks-explained/
 
.
Sir, I feel your comment is not good. Even India's external debt is too high. Our banking sector is struggling due to NPAs. Every country got its own problems and working on resolving it. Pakistan is a developing country just like us and they too have a growth rate of about 6%.
I was just replying to the above poster from the article he posted bro and I am no sir. I am still young. Thanks.
 
.
With double-digit growth, govt’s debt rises to Rs22.9tr

The federal government’s debt grew at double-digit pace to Rs22.9 trillion, a net addition of Rs2.14 trillion in just eight months, far higher than the annual budget deficit limit parliament approved at the start of the fiscal year.


The State Bank of Pakistan’s (SBP) latest central government debt bulletin for the period of July-February revealed that the finance ministry incurred debt, which was far more than it was required, abandoning the path of fiscal prudency.

The SBP data showed that the federal government’s debt ballooned to Rs22.9 trillion by the end of February. There was a net increase of Rs2.14 trillion in the total central government debt in the first eight months of the fiscal year, which was 10.3% higher than that in June 2017.

For the current fiscal year 2017-18, parliament had approved the budget deficit target of 4.1% of GDP or Rs1.48 trillion. However, the net addition of Rs2.14 trillion to the federal government debt in just eight months was equal to 6% of GDP.

Risks to Pakistan’s economic outlook have increased: IMF

One reason was that in December the government devalued the rupee against the US dollar by 5%, which increased the external debt in rupee terms.

However, SBP’s first-half report revealed another pattern. “The domestic borrowings also increased slightly during the (first half) period, due to the buildup of government’s deposits with the banking system, which increased to Rs168.3 billion during first half of the fiscal year,” according to the central bank report released on Friday. In a footnote, the SBP noted that during the first half of the last fiscal year, the buildup of deposits was only Rs33.1 billion.

The status of the government’s deposits for July-February period was not known.

The growing debt burden has triggered a national debate on sustainability of the country’s macroeconomic framework.

The federal government’s total domestic debt increased to roughly Rs16 trillion -an addition of Rs1.1 trillion or 7.4% in eight months. The domestic debt structure underwent a drastic change, which has already exposed the government to refinancing risks.

The share of short-term public debt increased alarmingly to 50.7% or Rs8.1 trillion by the end of February. At the same time last year, the short-term domestic debt stood at 44% or Rs6.6 trillion. The short-term debt grew Rs1.53 trillion or 23.4% in eight months. The rise in short-term debt was the result of growing dependence on borrowing through sale of market treasury bills (MTBs).

The federal government’s total borrowing through MTBs increased to almost Rs5 trillion, up 21.6% or Rs882 billion in eight months.

Similarly, the MTBs issued to replenish cash rose to Rs3.2 trillion, a net addition of Rs652 billion from July through February. The mounting short-term debt suggests that banks were not willing to provide long-term loans in anticipation of increase in interest rates, according to analysts.

Another reason was that the federal government started relying on the central bank for financing its deficit, which changed the debt structure. The change in the composition of domestic debt suggests that the government could not fully implement its second Medium-Term Debt-Management Strategy 2016-19 that intends to lengthen the maturity profile to reduce the refinancing risk.

In contrast to short-term debt, the country’s long-term debt decreased 5.3% to Rs7.86 trillion. Its share was 56% in the total domestic debt at the end of June 2017, which reduced to 49.3% by February this year.

The share of bonds issued by the federal government shrank from Rs4.8 trillion to Rs4.2 trillion despite an overall increase in public debt. A net reduction of Rs541 billion or 11.3% in bonds’ holdings indicates that banks are not willing to lock funds for longer periods.

However, the debt acquired through the sale of prize bonds increased from Rs747 billion to Rs808 billion at the end of February 2018.

In its first half yearly report, the central bank wrote that with the expectation of monetary tightening that prevailed throughout the first half, banks’ interest in PIB auctions was almost nonexistent. In absolute terms, banks offered only Rs158.4 billion in PIB auctions during the first half compared to Rs9.1 trillion offered in T-bills auctions, according to the central bank. Within treasury-bills, around 85.6% of the offers were for 3-month treasury-bills only.

The external debt during the first eight months of the fiscal year also increased by 17.6% to Rs7 trillion.
There was a net increase of Rs1.03 trillion in the external debt from July through February. One reason for that was the depreciation of rupee against the US dollar. These figures are exclusive of Rs691 billion IMF debt, which is the responsibility of the central bank.

Foreign exchange: SBP’s reserves drop $107m, stand at $12.1b

In its half yearly report, the SBP stated that strengthening of other currencies against US dollar also resulted in $669.3 million as revaluation losses. The dollar weakened against euro and SDR by 4.9% and 2.3% respectively, which added significantly to dollar value of Pakistan’s external debt.

Published in The Express Tribune, April 8th, 2018.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/1680194/2-double-digit-growth-govts-debt-rises-rs22-9tr/
 
.
With the Cpec development; what are the prospects for an increase in foreign exchange earning exports in the next three years? The Cpec loan payments will start in a few years and then the economy will really be screwed unless the government can get on the ball.
 
.
With the Cpec development; what are the prospects for an increase in foreign exchange earning exports in the next three years? The Cpec loan payments will start in a few years and then the economy will really be screwed unless the government can get on the ball.

I don't think Pakistan will be in a position to pay back the loans. The investment till now has been in early harvest projects like Power Plants. We know the issue of circular debt and rampant theft of electricity, so these projects will never be able to generate enough money to pay back loans but China knows that. What the Chinese want over Pakistan in the long run is to make it a compliant state. Compliant to the Interests of the Chinese. In return for deferring loan repayments, China will get a say in all strategic matters. Also Pakistan may have to lease Agricultural land to China for long periods, which is already envisaged under CPEC.

All this should not be a problem though as Pakistan would want China to have significant interest in the Pakistani Territory as a hedge against Indian Aggression. Just the China will replace the US. But unlike the US, the chinese know how to extract their pound of flesh.
 
.
I don't think Pakistan will be in a position to pay back the loans. The investment till now has been in early harvest projects like Power Plants. We know the issue of circular debt and rampant theft of electricity, so these projects will never be able to generate enough money to pay back loans but China knows that. What the Chinese want over Pakistan in the long run is to make it a compliant state. Compliant to the Interests of the Chinese. In return for deferring loan repayments, China will get a say in all strategic matters. Also Pakistan may have to lease Agricultural land to China for long periods, which is already envisaged under CPEC.

All this should not be a problem though as Pakistan would want China to have significant interest in the Pakistani Territory as a hedge against Indian Aggression. Just the China will replace the US. But unlike the US, the chinese know how to extract their pound of flesh.
Lol
Indians are dreaming this for five decades
 
.
Lol
Indians are dreaming this for five decades

5ac4cc0bbd07d.jpg


Are we really, Zia? Are we?
Is that the Pakistani Flag he is Stomping on?
Also pray tell us what punishment was been handed out to them? Oh yes. NONE.

One Belt, One Road, One Thrashing: How China took Pakistan hostage

Unlike many in India, I derive no pleasure from the squalid little news clip that shows workers from China beating Pakistani cops and civilians at a Chinese work-camp outside the Punjabi town of Khanewal. Pakistan’s news media described the policemen as having been “thrashed”, a word reflecting the humiliation and feelings of emasculation that have swept through that country in the aftermath of the event.

This violent act of criminal assertiveness on foreign soil lays bare the contempt that the Chinese have for the Pakistanis. The Chinese workers wanted to leave their camp to let off steam at a local brothel. The police who were there to ensure the workers’ security tried to stop them from leaving unescorted, hence the brawl.

The cops’ submissiveness in the face of this assault shows the extent to which Pakistan has become a slavish sidekick of neo-imperial China. The image of a Chinese worker standing atop the bonnet of a police car captures the swagger of a dominant power, and the servility of its vassal.

..................

Given the economic and military shortcomings of Pakistan, it cannot take on India by itself. This is where China, with its own implacable hostility to India, comes on Pakistan’s stage. Pakistan has, for decades, been China’s complaisant little crony as a way to stiffen its defences against India. As the United States draws closer to India—while growing ever more distant from terrorist-infested Pakistan—the panicked Pakistanis have come to regard China as a life-support machine. Their fatal error is not just to rely so extensively on China for almost every single one of their needs, but also to fail to anticipate the python-like grip China would have over Pakistan in their bilateral relations. The very army (and ISI) that boasts most loudly of keeping Pakistani sovereignty safe from all aggressors has consigned Pakistan to the most profound vassaldom.

China’s helping hand has not come to Pakistan for free. Pakistan is now tethered to the Chinese, bound to Beijing as a hostage of its own history. Pakistan’s knack for self-delusion has largely prevented it from seeing how thoroughly it is being exploited by China. It has signed away significant amounts of northern land to China (including land that is lawfully Indian), and has practically gifted China a deep-water port in Gwadar that the Chinese are unlikely ever to vacate. And with the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), Pakistan is now in a painful debt trap, Made in China.

The Chinese workers and engineers who rioted in Khanewal are in Pakistan to build a highway from Bahawalpur to Faisalabad. What would Jinnah think, one wonders, of the fact that the country for which he sundered a millennial civilisation cannot even put together its own highways?

There is a long history of Chinese workers going abroad to build infrastructure. Think of the railroad in the American West, and the role of the Chinese “coolie.” He went, then, as a semi-indentured serf, abused and vilified by the natives around him. Today he builds highways, but no one abuses him. In Pakistan, in fact, he is the abuser. He knows that he is among supplicants—and he knows that he owns them. One Belt, One Road…One Thrashing.

https://theprint.in/opinion/one-belt-one-road-one-thrashing-how-china-took-pakistan-hostage/47879/
 
.
5ac4cc0bbd07d.jpg


Are we really, Zia? Are we?
Is that the Pakistani Flag he is Stomping on?
Also pray tell us what punishment was been handed out to them? Oh yes. NONE.

One Belt, One Road, One Thrashing: How China took Pakistan hostage

Unlike many in India, I derive no pleasure from the squalid little news clip that shows workers from China beating Pakistani cops and civilians at a Chinese work-camp outside the Punjabi town of Khanewal. Pakistan’s news media described the policemen as having been “thrashed”, a word reflecting the humiliation and feelings of emasculation that have swept through that country in the aftermath of the event.

This violent act of criminal assertiveness on foreign soil lays bare the contempt that the Chinese have for the Pakistanis. The Chinese workers wanted to leave their camp to let off steam at a local brothel. The police who were there to ensure the workers’ security tried to stop them from leaving unescorted, hence the brawl.

The cops’ submissiveness in the face of this assault shows the extent to which Pakistan has become a slavish sidekick of neo-imperial China. The image of a Chinese worker standing atop the bonnet of a police car captures the swagger of a dominant power, and the servility of its vassal.

..................

Given the economic and military shortcomings of Pakistan, it cannot take on India by itself. This is where China, with its own implacable hostility to India, comes on Pakistan’s stage. Pakistan has, for decades, been China’s complaisant little crony as a way to stiffen its defences against India. As the United States draws closer to India—while growing ever more distant from terrorist-infested Pakistan—the panicked Pakistanis have come to regard China as a life-support machine. Their fatal error is not just to rely so extensively on China for almost every single one of their needs, but also to fail to anticipate the python-like grip China would have over Pakistan in their bilateral relations. The very army (and ISI) that boasts most loudly of keeping Pakistani sovereignty safe from all aggressors has consigned Pakistan to the most profound vassaldom.

China’s helping hand has not come to Pakistan for free. Pakistan is now tethered to the Chinese, bound to Beijing as a hostage of its own history. Pakistan’s knack for self-delusion has largely prevented it from seeing how thoroughly it is being exploited by China. It has signed away significant amounts of northern land to China (including land that is lawfully Indian), and has practically gifted China a deep-water port in Gwadar that the Chinese are unlikely ever to vacate. And with the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), Pakistan is now in a painful debt trap, Made in China.

The Chinese workers and engineers who rioted in Khanewal are in Pakistan to build a highway from Bahawalpur to Faisalabad. What would Jinnah think, one wonders, of the fact that the country for which he sundered a millennial civilisation cannot even put together its own highways?

There is a long history of Chinese workers going abroad to build infrastructure. Think of the railroad in the American West, and the role of the Chinese “coolie.” He went, then, as a semi-indentured serf, abused and vilified by the natives around him. Today he builds highways, but no one abuses him. In Pakistan, in fact, he is the abuser. He knows that he is among supplicants—and he knows that he owns them. One Belt, One Road…One Thrashing.

https://theprint.in/opinion/one-belt-one-road-one-thrashing-how-china-took-pakistan-hostage/47879/


chilla
or zor se chilla
 
.
Congratulations. May next tranche be double of this.
 
.
Congratulations. May next tranche be double of this.

Forex market in an uneasy wait-and-see mode

THE country’s foreign exchange reserves fell rapidly until the end of March, but they may start rising from this month, providing a breather to the beleaguered forex market.

The central bank’s forex reserves saw a decline of five per cent only in March. However, a rise is expected in the coming weeks.

“Arrangements are place to boost the reserves starting from this month,” a senior central banker says. “The end-June debt servicing should be quite smooth. We’ll be very much comfortable by that time. So, forex markets must feel confident (about the supply of foreign exchange), shun nervousness and keep functioning in a smooth and disciplined way.”

Senior bankers and forex dealers say they have received informal messages from the SBP about the prospects of huge foreign funding coming in

The question is: what has created this optimism among central bankers? The International Islamic Finance Corporation (IIFC) has agreed to offer Pakistan $3 billion to finance external trade and another $285bn for fuel purchases from the international market, according to a Reuters report.

Moreover, the government is also expecting to seek some immediate forex injection into Pakistan by the Chinese. By the time this write-up is published, Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi would have undertaken a one-day visit to Beijing. “We are sure to hear something good following that visit,” says a senior official of the Ministry of Finance, but refuses to discuss the specifics.

Sources close to the ministry and the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) say that as a result of top-level contacts between Islamabad and Beijing, a couple of financing arrangements are under discussion. China is expected to offer a substantial sum of foreign exchange right during this quarter.

Senior bankers and forex dealers say they have got informal messages from the SBP about the prospects of huge foreign funding coming in. “That’s why panic-driven dollar buying in the open market last week subsided after a (closed-door) meeting between forex dealers and senior central bankers,” says a treasurer of a large local bank

However, it has yet to be seen in what form China will help us rein in the external-sector issues. From offering a loan to placing funds with the SBP to reactivating financing line for Pakistan-China bilateral trade settlement in the yuan to engineering yuan-rupee swaps between Pakistani and Chinese banks, there are several options. Officials say exercising any one or a combination of these options can help Pakistan in keeping its forex reserves stable amid external-debt servicing during the April-June quarter.

“On top of the Chinese assistance in whatever form it might come, trade financing of the IIFC can really provide a breather to a beleaguered forex market, but much depends on when funds actually start flowing in,” says the chief forex dealer at another large local bank.

SBP’s forex reserves slumped to $11.602bn on March 30, from $12.227bn at the end of February, showing a big decline of $625m, or 5pc, within a month. At $11.602bn, the central bank’s reserves are not enough even to cover two and a half months of imports.

A forex cover of less than three months of imports is generally considered too low, and indicates that the economy’s external sector is in real trouble. And that exactly is the case: not only our current account deficit shot up to $10.286bn in July-February from $7.126bn in the year-ago period, the overall balance-of-payments deficit also swelled to $3.775bn from just $1.008bn.

“So, it was but natural for forex markets to show unease,” says a senior central banker, commenting on the last week’s run on dollars in the open market. In the inter-bank market, too, there was some uneasiness towards the end of March and in the first few days of April.

However, compared to the open market, the inter-bank market is more mature, more disciplined and under stricter control of the SBP. Besides, sitting on their own forex reserves of $6bn plus, banks feel more confident than forex companies.

Executives of forex companies claim these companies are showing a greater amount of understanding these days in relation to our external-account situation. They say it’s not just speculative, panic-driven dollar buying that you see in the open market on occasions. A few big exchange companies actually run short of dollars after selling in inter-bank market more than they should, they insist.

“They start turning down even genuine buyers of foreign exchange at their own counters, creating a panic-like situation in the open market. This, coupled with renewed fears of a further fall in the rupee’s value, was at the heart of a sudden spike in the dollar demand last week,” says an official of the Exchange Companies Association of Pakistan.

In the open market, the rupee lost 1pc value against the US dollar in the first week of April, though exchange rates in the interbank market remained stable. Most forex companies’ selling rate stood around Rs117.40 a dollar on April 6, up from Rs116.25 at end-March. In the interbank market, the local currency lost just 0.1pc worth during this period, falling close to 115.80 in midday trade on April 6 from 115.65 on the last working day of March.

Whereas optimism runs high in officialdom about our external-sector worries coming to an end soon, the forex market will be in an uneasy wait-and-see mode unless the facts about the current account and balance-of-payments deficits change. And they cannot change without some fatty, fresh forex inflows pretty soon.

Meanwhile, the SBP may keep firefighting on the forex front, sometimes using moral suasion, and at other times resorting to other more direct techniques like dollar buying from banks or from forex companies via banks.

However, it’s not just fundamental weaknesses of the external sector alone that are adding fuel to the fire. Political manoeuvring ahead of promised elections, uncertainty about whether elections could be held on time and nervousness of the current government that is about to finish its term are all contributing to it, senior bankers and executives of exchange companies say.

Published in Dawn, The Business and Finance Weekly, April 9th, 2018

https://www.dawn.com/news/1400471

Ummah and Chinins to the rescue, but they are still loans. WHo can guess the amount Pakistan will receive from china?
 
.
With the Cpec development; what are the prospects for an increase in foreign exchange earning exports in the next three years? The Cpec loan payments will start in a few years and then the economy will really be screwed unless the government can get on the ball.
game changing everything..
 
.
So many Indian economists on this thread and their wet dreams of seeing Pakistan fall.
Isn't it cute that Indian writers are missing their sleep to warn Pakistan about the trap of "evil" Chinese plans !
 
.
So many Indian economists on this thread and their wet dreams of seeing Pakistan fall.
Isn't it cute that Indian writers are missing their sleep to warn Pakistan about the trap of "evil" Chinese plans !
Believe it or not, other than the sanghis who may find pleasure in it, what the logical Indians find concerning is a Chinese province on our West.
 
.
More loan on its way, which is only being taken for corruption & corruption only.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom