The Egyptian pound held steady at an official foreign currency auction on Sunday and strengthened slightly on the black market. Egypt, which depends on imported food and energy, is facing a dollar shortage and mounting pressure to devalue the pound. The central bank surprised markets when it strengthened the pound on November 11 by 20 piasters against the dollar.
On Sunday it sold $39.3 million at a cut-off price of 7.7301 pounds to the dollar, unchanged from Thursday, providing 38.83 percent of the amount requested by banks.
The official rate is still far from that on the black market, which was quoted at 8.55 pounds to the dollar on Sunday by a trader, making the pound marginally stronger than Thursday's black market rate of 8.56/57 pounds.
Egypt's reserves have tumbled from $36 billion in 2011 to $16.4 billion in October, and the country has been rationing dollars through weekly auctions to banks, keeping the pound artificially strong.
On December 3 the central bank said it had changed the way it allocated dollars at its foreign exchange auctions. It provided fewer banks with dollars but at higher allocations.
Previously, banks in Egypt had been accustomed to receiving a regular quota of dollars at each foreign currency sale. Since the changes, some banks have said they were declined dollars at the regular auctions. The country has been starved of foreign currency since a popular uprising in 2011 ousted autocrat Hosni Mubarak and drove away tourists and foreign investors.
In February, the central bank imposed capital controls, limiting dollar-denominated deposits to $50,000 a month in an attempt to fight the black market. The move caused problems for importers, which could no longer source their foreign currency needs.