Day: January 22, 2021

  • FPCCI resents electricity tariff hike, gas supply shortage

    FPCCI resents electricity tariff hike, gas supply shortage

    KARACHI: Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FPCCI) has resented increase in electricity tariff and supply shortage of gas to industry.

    Mian Nasser Hyatt Maggo, President FPCCI in a statement on Friday expressed concerns over electricity tariff hike and disconnection of gas for the industry.

    He said that instead of reforming the energy sector, the adhoc and painful decisions are being made detriment to domestic industry.

    He said that the much awaited outcome of negotiations between IPPs and government which was considered to be directed towards reduction in base tariff do not assures any decrease in the base tariff, which again is shocking outcome questionable as the private sector was of the view that the report published on IPPs which was required to be further expanded towards the eventual objectives of resulting in the reduced cost of energy for increasing the competitiveness of economy and mitigating the inflationary trapped and consumption requirement of the poor segment of the economy.

    He said that the spokesman on the energy has attributed the need of tariff hike due to bad and corrupt agreements made with IPPs in the past. He said that if so, such situation requires to be corrected through invoking all the civil and criminal remedies to correct the agreements by excluding the pay or take, reducing O&M cost, converting the repatriation cost from dollar indexation to rupee and relevant recommended measures in the report.

    He said that while appreciating the present government in ordering the inquiry in respect of agreement with IPPs, the outcome does not appear to be reciprocating for base tariff reduction and availability of electricity sale at reduced cost.

    He further said that the announcement of Rs40 billion per year off-take of financial burden on Government is marginal even against the present announced tariff base hike wherein one rupee hike is over charging consumers of Rs 100 billion on consumption of electricity.

    President FPCCI also said that such on & off increase in tariff is coming in the way of economic development, in specific loaded by the carried forward adverse effect of COVID-19.

    The hike if is linked to any part of the memorandum of understanding with IMF can be fairly convinced for freezing such tariff hike when IMF itself projected low economic growth. Such duplicity cannot be justified.

    On the other side the predictable outward and inward oriented trade has become hostage of keep on increasing gas prices and intending to disconnect the gas supply of captive power plants.

    He said that mismanaged RLNG cargoes by the Petroleum Division are also answerable to such abrupt and non-justified late decisions. He said that during last November the spokesman on energy and petroleum had promised that increasing demand of gas in the winter season will be met through increase in RLNG imports.

    It appears that this non-living promise has forced Government to take decision of disconnecting the gas for captive power of industry. The setting of the deadline for disconnection of gas from February 1, 2021and 1st March 2021 is too short time to adjust.

    He said that some industry is running on captive powers with some emergency required grid loads need more time to arrange all the equipment’s and settle all the requirements of Discos which would take considerable time.

    He said that even CPP’s of industry with equivalent power arrangement from Grid also requires back-up adjustments of power by the Discos which is again time consuming.

    Mian Nasser Hyatt Maggo, President FPCCI proposed that the time period provided be extended reasonably in order to shift to Grid power. He said that the penalty of bad agreements with IPPs on capacity and take or pay clauses is being shifted to industry with their self-generation through captive power plants which basically is assurance for reliability and un-interrupted supply.

    Discos have yet to claim such performance to supply un-interrupted electricity without load shedding. He said that government spokesman has claimed saving of 150 MMCFD gas by disconnecting CPPs of industry, while the gas leakages in the systems are four times of this saving of 150 MMCD.

    He wondered that if there is any efficiency in the management over sighting the political economy of the gas affairs.

    He further suggested that even if the government reduces gas loss by one-fourth, the abrupt imposition of such decision may not have been required to adversely affect the industrial economy.

  • Share market ends down by 116 points in range bound trading

    Share market ends down by 116 points in range bound trading

    KARACHI: The share market ended down by 116 points on Friday in a range bound trading activity.

    The benchmark KSE-100 index of Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) closed at 45,868 points as against previous day’s closing of 45,984 points showing a decline of 116 points.

    Analysts at Arif Habib Limited said that the market oscillated between +132 points and -294 points, ending the session down 116 points.

    Global stock markets took breather since last evening, which trickled in regional markets as well.

    KSE-100 saw across the board selling on the concern of monetary policy decision, which was announced in the last half hour of the session, besides the redemptions from mutual funds.

    Increase in electricity tariff also affected investor sentiment towards manufacturing concerns. Among scrips, KEL realized the most volumes with 54 million shares, followed by FFL (24.6 million) and ICIBL (23.7 million).

    Sectors contributing to the performance include E&P (-51 points), Fertilizer (-21 points), Technology (-19 points), O&GMCs (-16 points) and Power (-13 points).

    Volumes declined from 606.3 million shares to 430.6 million shares (-29 percent DoD). Average traded value also declined by 12 percent to reach US$ 98.5 million as against US$ 111.5 million.

    Stocks that contributed significantly to the volumes include KEL, FFL, ICIBL, PIBTL and FFBL, which formed 34 percent of total volumes.

    Stocks that contributed positively to the index include SYS (+21 points), KTML (+15 points), FABL (+13 points), FFBL (+12 points) and INIL (+11 points).

    Stocks that contributed negatively include TRG (-40 points), ENGRO (-16 points), MARI (-16 points), PPL (-14 points) and OGDC (-14 points).

  • SBP keeps policy rate unchanged at 7 percent

    SBP keeps policy rate unchanged at 7 percent

    KARACHI: The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) has decided to keep key policy rate unchanged at 7 percent for next two months, Dr. Reza Baqir, Governor, State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said on Friday.

    The MPC noted that since the last meeting in November, the domestic recovery has gained some further traction.

    Most economic activity data and indicators of consumer and business sentiment have shown continued improvement.

    As a result, there are upside risks to the current growth projection of slightly above 2 percent in FY21.

    On the inflation front, recent out-turns are also encouraging, suggesting a waning of supply-side price pressures from food and still-benign core inflation.

    While utility tariff increases may cause an uptick in inflation, this is likely to be transient given excess capacity in the economy and well-anchored inflation expectations.

    As a result, inflation is still expected to fall within the previously announced range of 7-9 percent for FY21 and trend toward the 5-7 percent target range over the medium-term.

    With the inflation outlook relatively benign aside from the possibility of temporary supply-side shocks, the MPC felt that the existing accommodative stance of monetary policy remained appropriate to support the nascent recovery while keeping inflation expectations well-anchored and maintaining financial stability.

    While noting these favorable growth and inflation developments, the MPC also stressed that considerable uncertainty remains around the outlook.

    The trajectory of the Covid pandemic is difficult to predict, given still-elevated global cases, the emergence of new strains, and lingering uncertainties about the roll-out of vaccines worldwide.

    Such external shocks could slow the recovery. In light of such Covid-related uncertainties, the MPC considered it appropriate to provide some forward guidance on monetary policy to facilitate policy predictability and decision-making by economic agents.

    In the absence of unforeseen developments, the MPC expects monetary policy settings to remain unchanged in the near term.

    As the recovery becomes more durable and the economy returns to full capacity, the MPC expects any adjustments in the policy rate to be measured and gradual to achieve mildly positive real interest rates.

    In reaching its decision, the MPC considered key trends and prospects in the real, external and fiscal sectors, and the resulting outlook for monetary conditions and inflation.

    The economic recovery underway since July has strengthened in recent months. Large-scale manufacturing (LSM) grew by 7.4 percent (y/y) in October and 14.5 percent (y/y) in November.

    The manufacturing recovery is also becoming more broad-based, with 12 out of 15 subsectors registering positive growth in November and employment beginning to recover.

    So far this fiscal year, LSM has grown by 7.4 percent (y/y), against a contraction of 5.3 percent during the same period last year. Nevertheless, the level of manufacturing activity generally remained below average levels in FY19, pointing to continued spare capacity in the economy.

    On the demand side, cement sales remain strong on the back of rising construction activity, POL sales are at two-year highs, and automobile sales are also rising in both urban (motorcars) and rural (tractors) markets.

    In agriculture, cotton output is likely to decline more than expected based on latest production estimates. However, this is likely to be offset by improved growth in other major crops and higher wheat production due to the rise in support prices along with announced subsidies on fertilizers and pesticides for Rabi crops.

    While social distancing is still affecting some service sectors, wholesale, retail trade and transportation are expected to benefit from improvements in construction and manufacturing activity.

    Following five consecutive months of surpluses, the current account registered a deficit of $662 million in December. While remittances and exports continued to grow steadily, the trade deficit rose due to a rise in imports of machinery and industrial raw material, in line with the pick-up in economic activity. At the same time, wheat and sugar imports also rose to close demand and supply gaps in the domestic market.

    Nevertheless, the current account remained in surplus during the first half of FY21, at $1.1 billion compared to a deficit of over $2 billion during the same period last year.

    This improvement has been mainly driven by workers’ remittances, which have remained above $2 billion every month during the current fiscal year due in part to travel restrictions and supportive policy measures taken by the government and SBP that have increased the use of formal channels.

    Further, the pick-up in workers proceeding abroad in December bodes well for future prospects. Encouragingly, exports have also recovered to their pre-COVID monthly level of around $2 billion since September, with a broad-based recovery in export volumes recorded in almost all categories in December.

    Persistent improvement in the current account position and improving sentiment led to a mild appreciation in the PKR since the last MPC meeting and further strengthened external buffers. SBP’s foreign exchange reserves have risen to $13 billion, their highest level since December 2017. Based upon the data available so far, the outlook for the external sector has improved further and the current account deficit for FY21 is now projected to remain below 1 percent of GDP.

    Fiscal developments have been largely in line with this year’s budget and the government has continued to adhere to its commitment of no fresh borrowing from the SBP. Despite higher interest payments and Covid-related spending, healthy growth in revenues has contained the fiscal deficit during the fiscal year so far. Provisional estimates suggest that net FBR revenue grew by 3.0 and 8.3 percent (y/y) in November and December, respectively. Driven by a rebound in direct taxes and the sales tax, FBR revenue during H1-FY21 has grown by 5 percent (y/y) to come in close to the targeted level. Despite higher non-interest current expenditures, the primary balance posted a surplus of 0.5 percent of GDP during July-November, 0.2 percentage points better than the same period last year.

    The MPC noted that financial conditions remain appropriately accommodative at this early stage of the recovery, with the real policy rate in slightly negative territory on a forward-looking basis. Private sector credit has seen an encouraging uptick since the last MPC meeting, driven by a continued rise in consumer and fixed investment loans on the back of SBP’s refinance facilities. As demand recovers and inventories fall in some sectors, working capital loans have also picked up for the first time since the onset of the Covid pandemic, although their level remains lower than last year.

    Inflation pressures have eased since the last MPC, despite an upward adjustment in fuel prices. After remaining close to 9 percent in the preceding two months, headline inflation fell to 8.3 percent in November and further to 8 percent in December, the lowest rate since June 2019. This decline is mainly attributable to easing food inflation. Owing to conducive weather and various measures taken by the government to address supply-side issues, the price of perishables, wheat, pulses and rice has declined. Moreover, core inflation has continued to remain relatively soft since the beginning of FY21, in line with the presence of spare capacity in the economy.

    Inflation expectations of both businesses and consumers remain well-anchored and have declined in recent months. As a result, at this stage of the recovery, any further supply-side shocks from food or utility tariffs are unlikely to have a lasting inflationary impact through second-round effects.

  • Rupee depreciates by 13 paisas ahead weekly holidays

    Rupee depreciates by 13 paisas ahead weekly holidays

    KARACHI: The Pak Rupee depreciated by 13 paisas against the dollar on Friday owing to higher demand ahead of weekly holidays and deficit in current account on increased import bill.

    The rupee ended Rs160.75 to the dollar from previous day’s closing of Rs160.62 in the interbank foreign exchange market.

    Currency dealers said that the demand for the dollar was remained higher ahead of two weekly holidays. Further, the current account posted a deficit in December 2020 after staying in positive for five consecutive months.

    Pakistan’s Current Account (C/A) clocked in a deficit of $662 million in Dec-2020 (vs. a surplus of 513 million in November 2020), worst since October 2019 and breaking a streak of five consecutive monthly C/A surplus.

    Vis-à-vis last month, C/A recorded a variance of US$1,175 million, which was largely fueled by an increase of US$940 million in imports of goods. The exports of goods increased by $13 million and home remittances grew by $98 million.

  • Ordinance notified to extend tax amnesty for construction sector

    Ordinance notified to extend tax amnesty for construction sector

    ISLAMABAD: Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on Friday notified changes made through presidential ordinance to tax amnesty scheme available to developers and builders.

    The Presidential Ordinance has been promulgated on January 19, 2021, which is called as the Income Tax (Amendment) Ordinance, 2021 and it has been enforced from January 01, 2021.

    Through the ordinance amendments have been made to Income Tax Ordinance, 2001.

    According to this, amendment has been made to Section 100D of Income Tax Ordinance, 2001, the completion of project for availing amnesty on invested amount has been extended to September 30, 2023 from September 30, 2022.

    The date has also been extended for the amnesty on investment made in a housing project up to June 30, 2021 from the date of December 31, 2020.