CEO of Pakistan's biggest bank says country needs IMF bailout

Habib Bank chief also urging Pakistan to tap China's nascent "panda bond" market after what would be Islamabad's 13th IMF rescue since late 1980s

A Pakistani man walks past the Habib Bank Limited (HBL) building in Pakistan's port city of Karachi on August 29, 2017.
A Pakistani private bank is facing some 629 million dollars penalty in the United States over accusations of non compliance of financial standards and practices. Habib Bank Limited (HBL), one of the largest listed bank in Pakistan on August 28 told the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) through a letter that it had decided to wind up its United State business. / AFP PHOTO / ASIF HASSAN
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Pakistan needs to seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund and make "hard decisions" to avoid going back again, said Muhammad Aurangzeb, chief executive of Habib Bank (HBL), the country's biggest lender.

The bank is also urging Pakistan to tap China's nascent "panda bond" market, which enables oversees issuers to raise yuan-denominated bonds there, as soon as possible after IMF funding is secured.

"They are clearly very interested, because the overall stance the current government has is to move and diversify away from USD into RMB [yuan]," Mr Aurangzeb said in Beijing on Tuesday.

The potential size of panda bond issuance would be equivalent to $1.5 billion to $2bn, he said. China Development Bank and China International Capital would be HBL's domestic partners on such a project.

HBL received an RMB licence from Beijing two weeks ago and is seeking approval to upgrade its representative office in the Chinese capital to a branch as soon as next year, he added.

An IMF rescue package would be Pakistan's 13th from the multilateral lender since the late 1980s.

"The advantage of a programme which IMF brings to the table is that it pushes the government to bring in their fiscal discipline and move with the reform agenda," Mr Aurangzeb said.

Last month, Pakistan received a $6bn rescue package from Saudi Arabia, but officials say it still plans to seek a bailout from the IMF to avert a balance of payments crisis.

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Pakistan's foreign reserves have plunged 42 per cent since the start of the year to about $8bn, or less than two months of import cover.

"Both on the fiscal side and on the current account side, some very tough political choices need to be made," said Mr Aurangzeb.

These include moves to increase the tax base, boost exports - particularly to neighbouring China, let the currency find its fair market value, actively work to narrow deficits, and get the structural reforms agenda going, he said.

"If they can do that, they can get on a more sustainable path without relying on the IMF," Mr Aurangzeb said.

"But if they don't follow through, the likelihood is that there will be another (IMF) programme."

The focus of new Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan's talks with Beijing is less about debt or loans, and more about increasing investment, industrial activity, exports to China, and the creation of local jobs, Aurangzeb said.

Khan began a visit to China late last week.

Though China is Pakistan's closest ally, Khan has sought to rethink a signature project, the $60-billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a flagship of Beijing's vast Belt and Road Initiative.