S&P: Drop in Lebanons Foreign Currency Reserve to Test Peg

  • 9/4/2019
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An international ratings agency warned Wednesday there is a risk that customer deposit flows, particularly by nonresidents, could continue to decline in Lebanon, resulting in an accelerated drawdown of foreign currency reserves that would test the highly indebted countrys ability to maintain the local currency peg to the US dollar. The countrys prime minister, however, pledged to keep the national currency pegged to the dollar, as it has been since 1997. In an interview with CNBC, Saad Hariri said the government will not consider an International Monetary Fund program that would leave it to the markets to decide the price of the Lebanese pound. "This is something that we have extreme sensitivity on," Hariri said. "We believe that keeping the Lebanese pound at 1,500 (to the dollar) is the only stable way to move forward with these reforms." Standard & Poors said it estimates that Lebanons usable reserves will decline to $19.2 billion by the end of 2019, from $25.5 billion at the end of last year. Lebanon has one of the worlds highest public debts, standing at 150% of gross domestic product. Growth has plummeted and the budget deficit has reached 11% of GDP and remittances from Lebanese living abroad shrank. Last month, international ratings agency Fitch downgraded Lebanons long-term foreign currency issuer default rating to CCC from B-, while Standard & Poors Global Ratings affirmed its long- and short-term foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings for Beirut at B-/B, saying the countrys outlook remains negative. In February, Moodys downgraded Lebanons issuer ratings to Caa1 from B3 while changing the outlook to stable from negative. On Monday, the countrys political leaders declared what they called an "economic state of emergency" following a meeting aimed at finding a solution to the countrys economic crisis. Hariri warned after that meeting that Lebanon could face the fate of Greece, which is still suffering from an economic crisis that began a decade ago. The downgrades and tensions over the border with Israel and inside Lebanon led for the first time in years to the US dollar reaching 1,560 Lebanese pounds on the black market in recent weeks for the first time in more than two decades. Standard & Poors warned it could downgrade Lebanon in six months if the conditions dont improve. "In our view, the central banks foreign currency (FX) reserves remain sufficient to fund the governments borrowing requirements and the countrys external deficit over the next 12 months," Standard & Poors said, according to The Associated Press. It warned that there is a risk that customer deposit flows could continue to decline, "resulting in an accelerated drawdown of FX reserves that would test the countrys ability to maintain the currency peg to the US dollar." "A continuation of these trends during the next six months could trigger a downgrade to CCC rating category," Standard & Poors warned. Hariri vowed in the interview with CNBC to fight corruption, adding that the Cabinet will work on bringing down the budget deficit to GDP to 7% in 2020.

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