KARACHI: The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has completed its investigation over alleged exchange-rate manipulation by commercial banks in the country, and will put forth the decision in a matter of “days” after consultations on whether the apparent penalty is to be pursued from a regulatory or fiscal standpoint.
“The SBP has inspected 13 banks, and identified the issues,” said SBP Governor Jameel Ahmad during the question-and-answer session held on Monday after the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting of the SBP. Ahmad had earlier announced that the MPC had decided to increase the key interest rate by 100 basis points, taking the level to 17%.
“The only issue (left) is what (type of) action would be taken against this (foreign exchange) income earned by banks,” said Ahmad, implying that the SBP had indeed found the banks guilty of exchange-rate manipulation.
“One is the regulatory side action — the other is fiscal action, which includes taxation-related measures.
“This is the issue, which has led to the delay. However, action would be taken either by the SBP or the government. However, both actions cannot be taken at the same time. This leads to legal complications
“We just do not want to pursue the route of double action,” he said.
The SBP chief added that the period the central bank focused on for the investigation was between January to September 2022, “especially June and July”.
“The issue of currency volatility was resolved in the fourth quarter,” he said.
Ahmad said gross income to the tune of Rs100 billion was generated by banks in the first three quarters of 2022.
The SBP’s investigation comes after Pakistan’s rupee fluctuated wildly in 2022, hitting record lows against the US dollar in September before suddenly rising towards the end of that month, leading authorities to suspect manipulation by banks and exchange companies.
In October, SBP chief spokesperson Abid Qamar had said results might come soon, but refrained from giving an exact date for the completion. However, he said that the probe had started some time back during the tenure of the previous finance minister, Dr Miftah Ismail.
In November, Ahmad had said the central bank expanded its scope of investigation beyond eight banks with the inspection team working towards the end of the month as its deadline. Ahmad refrained from taking names of the banks, but clarified the scope of the investigation had expanded after initial scrutiny.
MPC’s decision
On the hike in interest rate on Monday, Ahmad said the MPC found that the increase was inevitable.
“The rationale behind the rate hike is that inflationary pressure persists.
“Secondly, challenges pertaining to the current account deficit remain as there is a delay over expected inflows. This has added pressure on our foreign exchange reserves,” he said.
The central bank chief shared that he expects a current account deficit (CAD) to the tune of $9 billion for FY23.
Ahmad also expressed optimism over Pakistan’s upcoming payment obligations, saying that inflows are lined up.
“There are difficulties but we have arrangements. Repayments, after rollovers, will not be more than $3 billion by the end of FY23.
“Amount of $15 billion has already been settled through repayments ($9 billion) and rollovers ($6 billion).”