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Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 10:31am On Apr 23, 2016
Egypt's war on black market currency traders is not going to plan. One month after a devaluation that was supposed to ease an acute dollar shortage in the banking system, clandestine business is booming in cafes, shops and flats.

The central bank, which hoped the 13 percent devaluation would relieve downward pressure on the Egyptian pound, has cracked down on exchange bureaux trading far outside its set range.

And yet the gap between the official and black market rates, which briefly narrowed with the devaluation, is now wider than ever, with dealers buying and selling dollars for 20 percent or more above the official rate of 8.78 pounds.

Traders say the crackdown has only exacerbated the crisis. People with dollars are shunning the official financial system, starving it of foreign currency. This is putting yet more pressure on the pound, with potentially dire consequences for inflation, investors' confidence and economic growth.

"No one sells dollars to the banks any more. They all prefer to go to the black market which will pay them more," said one banker who asked to remain anonymous. "The dollars don't come into the banking system any more and the central bank's dollar reserves are not enough to support the country's import needs."

Egypt has struggled to restore growth since the 2011 uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak scared away tourists and foreign investors - vital sources of the foreign currency it needs to import everything from fuel to food.

Eradicating the black market is essential to restoring investors' confidence, easing the risk that the pound's volatility will erase their profits.

Already, foreign investors are struggling to repatriate earnings because the central bank's reserves have more than halved since 2011 to about $16.5 billion in March. This has made it hard for them to convert pound earnings into foreign currency through the banking system.

Even before last month's devaluation, which was accompanied by the launch of financial instruments aimed at attracting hard currency to the banks, the central bank had resorted to legal force. In February, it revoked the licenses of four exchange companies with 27 offices.

Since then, the expected influx of dollars has failed to materialize and this month it referred 15 more exchange firms to public prosecutors. Then on Wednesday the central bank said it had revoked the licenses of nine more companies for manipulating prices of dollars in the parallel market.

REPEATED OFFENCES

"The decision ... comes after repeated offences by these companies which distorted the exchange market and has harmed the national economy," said Gamal Negm, deputy central bank governor, in remarks published by the state news agency MENA.

Negm added that the bank is working on a new law that could raise the punishment for violators to a prison sentence.

Bankers say the clampdown has backfired because as it became riskier to deal on the black market, the dollar strengthened against the pound and people began hoarding foreign currency to speculate on the rate. This pushed the U.S. currency yet higher, and the pound hit a record low of 11.50 to the dollar this week.

"Traders are speculating on the dollar and those who need dollars for imports can't find the dollars and must buy them from traders and speculators, so the black market rate is putting the Egyptian economy in a tight spot," said Ziad Waleed, an economist at Beltone Financial.

Any further official devaluation would threaten to fuel inflation, a politically explosive development in a country where millions live in poverty. That leaves the central bank with few weapons in its arsenal.

One trader described the situation as a standoff, saying that while the central bank is trying to punish black market dealers, it does not have the resources to fight them.

"We will secure ourselves and we will continue to work and we will do it carefully, as if we were dealing in drugs. We will hoard the dollars and we won't sell. Where will the central bank get dollars from?" he said.

EASY EVASION

Just a few blocks away from one Cairo exchange bureau, a trader sipped coffee at a downtown cafe as he closed deals over the telephone away from the prying eyes of the authorities.

"Do you have riyals?" he asked another trader, quoting the black market rate for the Saudi currency. "I will take all of it."

This is one example of how easily traders are adapting to tighter oversight.

They quote official rates at the exchange bureaux, which are closely monitored, without making any deals. Business is then done at cafes or elsewhere at black market rates, dealers said.

Outside the bureaux, young men puff on cigarettes and whisper to customers: "Dollars? Euros?"

"No one buys or sells at the official rate, so as soon as the customer leaves there are guys standing outside to catch them and deal with the unofficial rates," said another exchange bureau manager in downtown Cairo.

It should be easy to clamp down on these men, but traders say agents of the Interior Ministry's General Department of Public Funds Crime Investigation Unit, which is responsible for tackling illegal trading outside the bureaux, are easily bribed.

Reuters spoke to 10 traders who either work, own, or collaborate with exchange bureaux and all said that their operations run smoothly thanks to bribes and favors that are given to Public Funds forces and central bank employees.

"It does not put a dent in profits," said one exchange bureau worker, adding that a single branch of the company he works for makes around 6 million Egyptian pounds ($675,680 at the official rate or about $522,000 on the black market) in profit each month on black market trades alone.

The Interior Ministry spokesman did not respond to requests for comment and officials at the central bank, which does not have a spokesman, were not available for comment.

Exchange bureaus are licensed to operate with a certain amount of funds but most have offices or apartments where business is carried out off the books.

"If they close the exchange bureaux we will continue to work from the streets and this way the dollar price will reach 13 or 15 pounds per dollar," one trader said.

LUGGAGE SHOPS AND CARS

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has made economic revival a priority but is also mindful of protecting the poor, with his government slowing cuts to subsidies which keep down some food and fuel prices but burden the budget.

If the central bank is forced into repeated devaluations to keep up with the black market, this would be a nightmare for authorities trying to stabilize the economy.

But so is the current situation, where the public sector functions at an official exchange rate wholly disconnected from the rest of the economy which has to deal on the black market.

Black market activity is fast and efficient.

In Cairo, a luggage store manager took 20,000 pounds from his wooden desk in return for $2,000, a deal made with a customer who had been turned down at the exchange bureau next door. The operation took under a minute.

One trader showed Reuters a car he uses to transfer funds to clients in rubbish bags hidden in the boot. "The largest amount this car carried is the equivalent of 11 million Egyptian pounds," he said proudly.

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-egypt-dollars-blackmarket-idUSKCN0XI1W9

@Modath: Pls. summarize for them you know who. cheesy

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Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by chriskosherbal(m): 10:34am On Apr 23, 2016
Although we can take lessons from that, that does not in anyway stop us from taking proactive in the financial industry.

20 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 10:36am On Apr 23, 2016
chriskosherbal:
Although we can take lessons from that, that does not in anyway stop us from taking proactive in the financial industry.

No doubt.
What we need is an holistic approach to the ills that affect us; not some symptomatic treatment/non-treatment.

37 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by aeronot(m): 10:49am On Apr 23, 2016
Lets stop deceiving ourselves, if you want to do an online transaction the banks are charging black market rates 319, it is only when u are receiving money or changing dollar to naira the banks gladly charge 199! We should stop all this deceit!

141 Likes 7 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by modath(f): 10:53am On Apr 23, 2016
989900:


@Mo: Pls. summarize for them you know who. cheesy

Difaluashon nor epp Egypt... cheesy

A yaff tirai..

70 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 10:55am On Apr 23, 2016
modath:


Difaluashon nor epp Egypt... cheesy

A yaff tirai..

cheesy grin cheesy

I guess this will keep them naysayers quiet for some while about their 'devaluation El-dorado'.

12 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 10:59am On Apr 23, 2016
aeronot:
Lets stop deceiving ourselves, if you want to do an online transaction the banks are charging black market rates 319, it is only when u are receiving money or changing dollar to naira the banks gladly charge 199! We should stop all this deceit!

Those are the ills the FG and CBN need to fine tune. Obviously the banks don't get enough, and the little they do get, they share it among their cronies.

The government and CBN can do better than this.

15 Likes

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by GworoChewinMaga: 11:02am On Apr 23, 2016
The naira is already devalued since the CBN can not meet up with local forex demands and has asked manufacturers, banks, businesses and the general public to source for forex else where.

As things stand now our foreign reserves does not mean sh1t as nobody but buhari and his cronies have access to it.

This is why NNPC is the only sole importer of PMS with Buhari's cronies as agents and why fuel scarcity will forever persists.

The economics of the Naira has taken a back seat to the politicking of the Naira and it has no benefit to any one.

23 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by GworoChewinMaga: 11:05am On Apr 23, 2016
But OP what you are pointing out in Egypt is exactly what is going on in Nigeria with the huge gap between the parallel market and the official rates.


Did you even read the rubbish you posted?

46 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by omobaekiti: 11:09am On Apr 23, 2016
Abeg help shift this to the rightful place you know nah...@lalasticlala.
Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by Oxenomy: 11:10am On Apr 23, 2016
Just point out any sector where Nigeria is better than Egypt.. Bunch of clowns!

13 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by feldido(m): 11:10am On Apr 23, 2016
The Naira has already been devalued by our banks, why will they charge their customers the black market rate and nothing is done about it?



By the way, I'm stuck right now cos of the limits placed on cards in a day. How do I go about it without wiring?

6 Likes

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by ichidodo: 11:11am On Apr 23, 2016
What is there to be thankful,you f**king propagandist? Egypt has refused to devalue their currency,at least the most they have done is partial devaluation just like Nigeria, that is why the blackmarkets are thriving thus you have customers patronizing them instead of the Banks and enabling extreme pressure on their currency just as you have the naira.....Now,F**k off.

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Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 4Play(m): 11:12am On Apr 23, 2016
What has been called for is a free float of the Naira and not mere devaluation. If the CBN comes out today and announces that the Naira will now exchange at N280 to the dollar, that does not eliminate the problem as fixing exchange rates by fiat with insufficient reserves is a recipe for disaster. This is what the Egyptians have done and it goes against sound macro-economic advice.

A free float eliminates the black market as you have one exchange rate market and the market determines the exchange rate. People don't realise that having a fixed exchange rate regime in Nigeria was the norm from the 70s to the 80s and it helped hollow out our economic capacity and created all sorts of economic distortions.

Prices dictated by supply and demand play a crucial signalling role in the allocation of economic resources. By maintaining an inflated exchange rate, resources are misallocated and necessary economic adjustments are not made until it is too late.

You have to ask yourself - what does having the Naira at N200 to the dollar do for the economy other than to make imports cheaper? Why do these our so called nationalists want to make the importation of goods cheaper when they claim that Nigeria needs to weans itself off the dependence on imports?

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Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by GworoChewinMaga: 11:13am On Apr 23, 2016
ichidodo:
What is there to be thankful,you f**king propagandist? Egypt has refused to devalue their currency that is why the blackmarkets are thriving thus you have customers patronizing them enabling extreme pressure on their currency just as you have the naira.....F**k off.

You dey mind the illiterate.

The very same scenario playing out in Nigeria due to Buhari refusal to devalue the naira is what is happening in Egypt but the clown like his fellow zombies are incapable of comprehending written text.

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 11:13am On Apr 23, 2016
ichidodo:
[s]What is there to be thankful,you f**king propagandist? Egypt has refused to devalue their currency that is why the blackmarkets are thriving thus you have customers patronizing them enabling extreme pressure on their currency just as you have the naira.....F**k off.[/s][s][/s]

My God, who did this to you?

If you can type the above, definitely you should be able to read, and should you have problems with comprehension, ask for help.

53 Likes 4 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 11:15am On Apr 23, 2016
GworoChewinMaga:


[s]You dey mind the illiterate.

The very same scenario playing out in Nigeria due to Buhari refusal to devalue the naira is what is happening in Egypt but the clown like his fellow zombies are incapable of comprehending written text.[/s]


LOL. English don put this one too for wahala. #shame embarassed

Read again and edit your comment.

29 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 11:18am On Apr 23, 2016
If we have all of you with comprehension issues, it's a big shame.

What part of this is so hard to understand?

Y'all should read again, and feel sorry for yourselves, then edit your comments -- adrenaline rush for nothing.

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by GworoChewinMaga: 11:18am On Apr 23, 2016
989900:


LOL. English don put this one too for wahala. #shame embarassed

Read again and edit your comment.

**** your heading is the only rubbish you contributed to this copy and paste thread.

You better read your own thread and see the parallels of not devaluing the local Egyptian currency and that of Buhari's economic policies on the naira.


****

9 Likes

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 11:19am On Apr 23, 2016
GworoChewinMaga:


Olodo your heading is the only rubbish you contributed to this copy and paste thread.

You better read your own thread and see the parallels of not devaluing the local Egyptian currency and that of Buhari's economic policies on the naira.


Dunce

Oh, you expected me to edit an article from another journal -- are you really that slow?

I'll help y'all:

1. Egypt devalued their currency some few weeks ago by 13% (I guess you didn't read that part 'cause I didn't embolden it . . . *facepalm*), hoping that would bring the rates from both markets closer and sorta normalize things . . . and we had some folks like you here cheering them on that Nigeria should do the same.

2. Egypt is back in the same poo some weeks after devaluation -- which is exactly what would have happened to Nigeria, if the call to devalue the Naira as an attempt to reduce importation and bring the BM rates closer to the CBN rates.

3. Hope you and slow folks like you learnt a thing or two, even though y'all will never be humble enough to admit your fallacy.

47 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 4Play(m): 11:19am On Apr 23, 2016
GworoChewinMaga:
But OP what you are pointing out in Egypt is exactly what is going on in Nigeria with the huge gap between the parallel market and the official rates.


Did you even read the rubbish you posted?

The sad thing is their obliviousness to their profound economic illiteracy. He puts up an article about the ill-fated move by the Egyptian government to fix exchange rates, instead of leaving it to market supply and demand to determine as economists recommend, and proclaims that this illustrates that the Nigerian government is vindicated!

To the contrary, the Egyptians are doing what the Nigerians are doing and are predictably failing. The fact that they have chosen to devalue a bit doesn't refute the fundamental diagnosis - governments cannot simply fix echange rates unless they have sufficient forex reserves to back it up. Nigeria does not have the reserves to fix the Naira at a particular price level so insisting on doing so will cause unnecessary hardship and creates opportunities for corruption via round-tripping. Why is this so difficult for Nigerians to understand?

20 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by olafum1(m): 11:20am On Apr 23, 2016
All I know is that Buhari is no economist. And so far he had only been exercising trial by error economic policies, which explains lots of economic somersaults we are currently experiencing in crucial areas of our economy today.

5 Likes

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by hahn(m): 11:21am On Apr 23, 2016
aeronot:
Lets stop deceiving ourselves, if you want to do an online transaction the banks are charging black market rates 319, it is only when u are receiving money or changing dollar to naira the banks gladly charge 199! We should stop all this deceit!

I swear it is annoyingly annoying. Unfortunately, logic is dead in these climes

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by omonnakoda: 11:23am On Apr 23, 2016
GworoChewinMaga:
But OP what you are pointing out in Egypt is exactly what is going on in Nigeria with the huge gap between the parallel market and the official rates.


Did you even read the rubbish you posted?
How is it rubbish to reproduce a "factual" report verbatim. did he add any opinion. You are just too rude. The fact that you are online is not a licence for gratuitous unruliness.

23 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by ichidodo: 11:27am On Apr 23, 2016
GworoChewinMaga:


You dey mind the illiterate.

The very same scenario playing out in Nigeria due to Buhari refusal to devalue the naira is what is happening in Egypt but the clown like his fellow zombies are incapable of comprehending written text.

Yep..And the troglodytes expect us to hold hands and sing kumbaya for this shyte piece of propaganda?? Maybe they forget we aren't zombies like them....the f**kin lot.

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by chinchum(m): 11:28am On Apr 23, 2016
Same thing i have argued, devaluation of naira will not shrink the parallel rate, it would get worse.

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by GworoChewinMaga: 11:29am On Apr 23, 2016
4Play:


The sad thing is their obliviousness to their profound economic illiteracy. He puts up an article about the ill-fated move by the Egyptian government to fix exchange rates, instead of leaving it to market supply and demand to determine as economists recommend, and proclaims that this illustrates that the Nigerian government is vindicated!

To the contrary, the Egyptians are doing what the Nigerians are doing and are predictably failing. The fact that they have chosen to devalue a bit doesn't refute the fundamental diagnosis - governments cannot simply fix echange rates unless they have sufficient forex reserves to back it up. Nigeria does not have the reserves to fix the Naira at a particular price level so insisting on doing so will cause unnecessary hardship and creates opportunities for corruption via round-tripping. Why is this so difficult for Nigerians to understand?

The naira has been subjected to partial devaluation just like in Egypt.

Buhari met the naira at 178 as at may 29. Today the CBN is selling at 215 to a dollar but restricting access to it exactly what the Egyptians are doing and the outcome is strikingly similar to what is going on in Nigeria and the senseless op has the audacity to claim Egypt failed in the same currency policy but Nigeria is winning even where the outcomes are the same for the two nations.

How daft can zombies be?

11 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by 989900: 11:29am On Apr 23, 2016
ichidodo:
[s]Why don't you f**k off our mention,you goat brained prick? [/s]

I can relate to your frustration: I would say the same if I did make a big f00l of myself the way you just did.

6 Likes

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by GworoChewinMaga: 11:30am On Apr 23, 2016
chinchum:
Same thing i have argued, devaluation of naira will not shrink the parallel rate, it would get worse.

Devaluation means subjecting the naira to full market forces and not by the CBN.

Or was the naira officially trading at 220 as at may 29 2015?

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by ichidodo: 11:31am On Apr 23, 2016
4Play:


The sad thing is their obliviousness to their profound economic illiteracy. He puts up an article about the ill-fated move by the Egyptian government to fix exchange rates, instead of leaving it to market supply and demand to determine as economists recommend, and proclaims that this illustrates that the Nigerian government is vindicated!

To the contrary, the Egyptians are doing what the Nigerians are doing and are predictably failing. The fact that they have chosen to devalue a bit doesn't refute the fundamental diagnosis - governments cannot simply fix echange rates unless they have sufficient forex reserves to back it up. Nigeria does not have the reserves to fix the Naira at a particular price level so insisting on doing so will cause unnecessary hardship and creates opportunities for corruption via round-tripping. Why is this so difficult for Nigerians to understand?
Gbam...For the zombies who don't understand simple inglis and economics
1 Egypt and Nigeria don't have the reserves to support fixed exchange rates
2 They both restrict FX thus causing hoarding and inflation
3 Their activities have caused the thriving of blackmarkets at the expense of their respective economies
4 Egypt has devalued but partially...Nigeria decieves itself but there has been partial devaluation, jes take a look at the wide gap btw the parralel markets and Cbn market....
You are welcome,dear zombies.
...

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: Egyptian Devaluation Backfires -- Nigeria, Be Thankful!!! by tsdarkside(m): 11:32am On Apr 23, 2016
989900:
Egypt's war on black market currency traders is not going to plan. One month after a devaluation that was supposed to ease an acute dollar shortage in the banking system, clandestine business is booming in cafes, shops and flats.

The central bank, which hoped the 13 percent devaluation would relieve downward pressure on the Egyptian pound, has cracked down on exchange bureaux trading far outside its set range.

And yet the gap between the official and black market rates, which briefly narrowed with the devaluation, is now wider than ever, with dealers buying and selling dollars for 20 percent or more above the official rate of 8.78 pounds.

Traders say the crackdown has only exacerbated the crisis. People with dollars are shunning the official financial system, starving it of foreign currency. This is putting yet more pressure on the pound, with potentially dire consequences for inflation, investors' confidence and economic growth.

"No one sells dollars to the banks any more. They all prefer to go to the black market which will pay them more," said one banker who asked to remain anonymous. "The dollars don't come into the banking system any more and the central bank's dollar reserves are not enough to support the country's import needs."

Egypt has struggled to restore growth since the 2011 uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak scared away tourists and foreign investors - vital sources of the foreign currency it needs to import everything from fuel to food.

Eradicating the black market is essential to restoring investors' confidence, easing the risk that the pound's volatility will erase their profits.

Already, foreign investors are struggling to repatriate earnings because the central bank's reserves have more than halved since 2011 to about $16.5 billion in March. This has made it hard for them to convert pound earnings into foreign currency through the banking system.

Even before last month's devaluation, which was accompanied by the launch of financial instruments aimed at attracting hard currency to the banks, the central bank had resorted to legal force. In February, it revoked the licenses of four exchange companies with 27 offices.

Since then, the expected influx of dollars has failed to materialize and this month it referred 15 more exchange firms to public prosecutors. Then on Wednesday the central bank said it had revoked the licenses of nine more companies for manipulating prices of dollars in the parallel market.

REPEATED OFFENCES

"The decision ... comes after repeated offences by these companies which distorted the exchange market and has harmed the national economy," said Gamal Negm, deputy central bank governor, in remarks published by the state news agency MENA.

Negm added that the bank is working on a new law that could raise the punishment for violators to a prison sentence.

Bankers say the clampdown has backfired because as it became riskier to deal on the black market, the dollar strengthened against the pound and people began hoarding foreign currency to speculate on the rate. This pushed the U.S. currency yet higher, and the pound hit a record low of 11.50 to the dollar this week.

"Traders are speculating on the dollar and those who need dollars for imports can't find the dollars and must buy them from traders and speculators, so the black market rate is putting the Egyptian economy in a tight spot," said Ziad Waleed, an economist at Beltone Financial.

Any further official devaluation would threaten to fuel inflation, a politically explosive development in a country where millions live in poverty. That leaves the central bank with few weapons in its arsenal.

One trader described the situation as a standoff, saying that while the central bank is trying to punish black market dealers, it does not have the resources to fight them.

"We will secure ourselves and we will continue to work and we will do it carefully, as if we were dealing in drugs. We will hoard the dollars and we won't sell. Where will the central bank get dollars from?" he said.

EASY EVASION

Just a few blocks away from one Cairo exchange bureau, a trader sipped coffee at a downtown cafe as he closed deals over the telephone away from the prying eyes of the authorities.

"Do you have riyals?" he asked another trader, quoting the black market rate for the Saudi currency. "I will take all of it."

This is one example of how easily traders are adapting to tighter oversight.

They quote official rates at the exchange bureaux, which are closely monitored, without making any deals. Business is then done at cafes or elsewhere at black market rates, dealers said.

Outside the bureaux, young men puff on cigarettes and whisper to customers: "Dollars? Euros?"

"No one buys or sells at the official rate, so as soon as the customer leaves there are guys standing outside to catch them and deal with the unofficial rates," said another exchange bureau manager in downtown Cairo.

It should be easy to clamp down on these men, but traders say agents of the Interior Ministry's General Department of Public Funds Crime Investigation Unit, which is responsible for tackling illegal trading outside the bureaux, are easily bribed.

Reuters spoke to 10 traders who either work, own, or collaborate with exchange bureaux and all said that their operations run smoothly thanks to bribes and favors that are given to Public Funds forces and central bank employees.

"It does not put a dent in profits," said one exchange bureau worker, adding that a single branch of the company he works for makes around 6 million Egyptian pounds ($675,680 at the official rate or about $522,000 on the black market) in profit each month on black market trades alone.

The Interior Ministry spokesman did not respond to requests for comment and officials at the central bank, which does not have a spokesman, were not available for comment.

Exchange bureaus are licensed to operate with a certain amount of funds but most have offices or apartments where business is carried out off the books.

"If they close the exchange bureaux we will continue to work from the streets and this way the dollar price will reach 13 or 15 pounds per dollar," one trader said.

LUGGAGE SHOPS AND CARS

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has made economic revival a priority but is also mindful of protecting the poor, with his government slowing cuts to subsidies which keep down some food and fuel prices but burden the budget.

If the central bank is forced into repeated devaluations to keep up with the black market, this would be a nightmare for authorities trying to stabilize the economy.

But so is the current situation, where the public sector functions at an official exchange rate wholly disconnected from the rest of the economy which has to deal on the black market.

Black market activity is fast and efficient.

In Cairo, a luggage store manager took 20,000 pounds from his wooden desk in return for $2,000, a deal made with a customer who had been turned down at the exchange bureau next door. The operation took under a minute.

One trader showed Reuters a car he uses to transfer funds to clients in rubbish bags hidden in the boot. "The largest amount this car carried is the equivalent of 11 million Egyptian pounds," he said proudly.

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-egypt-dollars-blackmarket-idUSKCN0XI1W9

@Modath: Pls. summarize for them you know who. cheesy

thunda fire any black-person in the world that still thinks its a good idea to listen to any white-person.....

devalueing will bring you absolutly nothing.....for that way to work,you musssst start producing and selling abroad like japan....

and who will garantie you that your cheaper products will be bought abroad from those white-devils?!.....


have you forgoting that the western-world never ever liked you in your black-skin?!....
do you really think they will buy your product even if its cheaper than china??.....

you people need to start thinking and stop messing around...........

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