Pakistani rupee dives 8 percent in de facto central bank devaluation as IMF bailout talks loom

Reuters  |  ISLAMABAD 

(Reuters) - The plunged about 8 percent in early trading on Tuesday in an apparent by the central bank, market participants said, a day after the new government said it would seek an (IMF) bailout.

"The has given an indication to let the go with market forces," said one market participant at a brokerage. A second market participant confirmed that the is keeping out of the market, effectively letting the currency drop in a de facto

The of Pakistan (SBP) runs what is widely seen as a managed float, though its official stance is that the currency is freely traded.

"The market is aware about the overall macro economic conditions and based on those conditions, they are having their own expectations about the exchange rate, so that is driving (the rupee valuations) currently," Abid Qamar, the SBP spokesman, told

The latest step by the marked the fifth de facto since December, which has seen the rupee lose over 26 percent of its value, and is in line with the decision to seek IMF support to avoid a balance of payments crisis.

(Reporting by Drazen Jorgic; Editing by & Shri Navaratnam)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, October 09 2018. 11:46 IST