Lebanese pound: exchange rate lowered more than 50%

The new rate, which applies to money sent through wire transfer offices, amounts to a devaluation

epaselect epa08380641 Lebanese protesters shout slogans against the governor Ryad Salameh of the Lebanese central bank are they block the Hamra main street in Front the Central bank building in Beirut, Lebanon 23 April 2020, amid an economic crisis exacerbated by the coronavirus Covid-19 pandemic.  EPA/Nabil Mounzer
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The Lebanese central bank set an exchange rate of 3,625 Lebanese pounds to the US dollar to be applied by money-transfer firms on Friday, 58 per cent weaker than the official peg as the country grapples with its financial crisis, a central bank source said.

The new rate is seen as part of wider moves by the central bank away from a peg in place since 1997, bankers said. Though the official pegged rate of 1,507.5 pounds is still in place, it amounts to an effective devaluation of the pound, they said.

The new rate applies to money sent through wire transfer offices, which are used by many Lebanese abroad to send money to family at home.

The Lebanese pound has slumped on a parallel market since October, when the country's long-brewing economic troubles came to a head, prompting a financial and banking crisis considered the biggest risk to stability since the 1975-90 civil war.

The authorities are still applying the official pegged rate for essential imports - fuel, wheat and medicine - in an effort to slow spiralling inflation in the import-dependent economy.

"Prices may change every day and will be set the day before," the central bank source said, adding that the rate reflected the price dollars were fetching at foreign exchange offices.

"In the event that there are major fluctuations during the day, the price may be set again during the same day."

A senior banker said central bank governor Riad Salameh was effectively devaluing the currency without announcing it.

With dollars in short supply, the central bank earlier this month said the money-transfer services must issue cash in the local currency at a "market rate".

Earlier this week, the central bank also said depositors with dollar accounts in Lebanon would be paid cash in pounds, also at a "market rate", within each bank's withdrawal limits.

Banking sources said they expected the rate applied to such withdrawals to be close to the rate set by the central bank for wire transfer firms. Banks, exchange dealers and the central bank will meet on Monday to make a decision.

Parliament speaker Nabih Berri urged the government on Thursday to use its legal powers to halt the pound's "dramatic collapse" before it is "too late".

Foreign currency dealers are on strike until Monday "to warn about the continued deterioration of the exchange rate", their syndicate announced late on Thursday.