Tag: lowest

  • Pakistan’s weekly inflation reaches lowest point at 28.6% since October 2022

    Pakistan’s weekly inflation reaches lowest point at 28.6% since October 2022

    The Sensitive Price Indicator (SPI) recorded a weekly inflation increase of 0.70 per cent, reaching 28.55 per cent on a year-on-year basis for the week ending June 6.

    This represents the lowest rate since October 20, 2022, when SPI inflation stood at 27.1 per cent. Furthermore, short-term inflation surged to an all-time high of 48.35 per cent for the period ending on May 4.

    During the week, a total of 51 items were monitored, and their price movements were analysed. Out of these items, 24 (47.06 per cent) experienced price increases, 10 (19.61 per cent) witnessed price decreases, and 17 (33.33 per cent) remained stable.

    This table showcases the items that recorded either an increase or decrease in their average prices during the specified week:

    Item Increase/Decrease
    Tomatoes Increase (42.25%)
    Onions Increase (8.70%)
    Potatoes Increase (4.79%)
    Wheat flour bag 20 kg Increase (4.05%)
    Gur Increase (4.01%)
    Sugar Increase (3.48%)
    Shirting Increase (3.02%)
    Hi-speed diesel Increase (2.95%)
    Garlic Increase (1.90%)
    Matchbox each Increase (1.66%)
    Curd Increase (1.43%)
    Pulse mash Increase (1.29%)
    Fresh milk Increase (1.20%)
    Rice irri-6/9 Increase (0.74%)
    Rice basmati broken Increase (0.67%)
    Mustard oil Increase (0.59%)
    Prepared tea Increase (0.56%)
    Long cloth 57″ Gul Ahmed/Al Karam Increase (0.51%)
    Mutton Increase (0.40%)
    Beef with bone Increase (0.39%)
    Toilet soap Increase (0.24%)
    Powdered milk Nido 390 gm polybag each Increase (0.13%)
    Georgette Increase (0.08%)
    Cooked daal Increase (0.04%)
    Bananas Decrease (7.51%)
    Chicken Decrease (2.80%)
    Eggs Decrease (1.17%)
    LPG Decrease (0.96%)
    Vegetable ghee Dalda/Habib 2.5 kg tin each Decrease (0.74%)
    Cooking oil Dalda or other similar brands, 5L Decrease (0.72%)
    Vegetable ghee Dalda/Habib or other superior quality, 1 kg pouch each Decrease (0.81%)
    Pulse masoor Decrease (0.47%)
    Pulse moong Decrease (0.31%)
    Pulse gram Decrease (0.24%)
  • Pakistani rupee falls to Rs233 per US dollar in the interbank market

    Pakistani rupee falls to Rs233 per US dollar in the interbank market

    The Pakistani rupee (PKR) continued to fall on Tuesday as the country’s political turmoil worsened, trading at Rs233 to the dollar in the interbank market.

    Today, the US dollar gained Rs3.12 versus the local currency, compared to the previous day’s finish of Rs229.88, which was an all-time high at the time.

    The local currency has been under pressure for the past week due to increased political tensions in the country following the July 17 by-elections in Punjab, which the PTI easily won. Also, the rupee has been one of the world’s worst performers, falling 30.2 per cent since the beginning of 2022.

    PKR had its worst week in more than two decades, ending on July 22, highlighting investor fear that a $1.2 billion loan tranche from the IMF approved last week could not be enough to alleviate the balance of payment crisis.

    Fears of Pakistan defaulting on its foreign repayments remain in the market, despite the central bank’s guarantee that the country would comfortably cover its funding obligations as long as an International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan programme remained in place.

    The rupee fell by nearly 8 per cent last week, the most in a single week since October 1998.

  • Pakistani rupee falls to a new all-time low of Rs205 against the US dollar

    Pakistani rupee falls to a new all-time low of Rs205 against the US dollar

    In the interbank market today, the Pakistani Rupee (PKR) plummeted below its previous record low versus the US Dollar (USD).

    The local currency lost Rs1.30 in the interbank market today, depreciating by 0.63 per cent against the US dollar and closing at Rs205.16. During today’s open market session, the local currency reached an intraday high of Rs203.75 versus the US dollar.

    The PKR was trading between Rs206 to Rs208 against the US dollar in the evening. The rupee’s devaluation was in line with market expectations, with traders expecting the local currency to fall even lower if Pakistan fails to persuade the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on its fiscal year 2022-23 budget.

    The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) meeting in Berlin, which starts today, is another reason that is likely to have influenced the FX market. On the 15th and 16th of June, issues concerning Pakistan will be discussed.

    In today’s interbank market, the PKR reversed gains versus the majority of major currencies. It fell 22 paisas against the Canadian dollar (CAD), 34 paisas against the Saudi riyal (SAR), 35 paisas against the UAE dirham (AED), 62 paisas against the British pound sterling (GBP), and Rs1.25 versus the Euro (EUR).

  • Bitcoin falls to lowest since January after stock market

    Bitcoin falls to lowest since January after stock market

    Bitcoin on Monday, May 9 fell to its lowest level since January 2022, as falling equity markets weighed on cryptocurrencies, which are now trading in line with riskier assets like tech stocks.

    In early trade, bitcoin fell as low as $33,266 to test the January low of $32,951. If it drops below that level, it will be at its lowest since July of 2021. The price then settled at roughly $33,500, down 1.4 per cent.

    A Singapore-based crypto platform, Stack Funds said that everything in crypto is still classified as a risk asset, and most cryptocurrencies are pummelling in the same way that the Nasdaq has been.

    The Nasdaq, which is heavily weighted in technology, plummeted 1.5 per cent last week and is down 22 per cent year to date, as persistent inflation forces the US Federal Reserve to raise rates despite slowing GDP.

    On Monday morning Nasdaq futures were down another 0.8 per cent.

    Other factors in bitcoin’s weekend slide were the crypto market’s notoriously low liquidity on weekends, as well as short-lived fears that an algorithmic stablecoin dubbed Terra (UST) could lose its stability against the US dollar.

    Read more: Pakistan’s foreign currency reserves down by $328 million

    The crypto world is keeping a close eye on UST because of its unique method of maintaining a 1:1 dollar peg, as well as its founders’ aspirations to construct a $10 billion bitcoin reserve to support the stablecoin, implying that UST volatility might potentially leak over into the bitcoin markets.

    On Monday, Ethereum, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency, plummeted to $2,421, its lowest level since late February.