Egypt’s Trade Deficit Up 23.8% YoY in April

 A container ship passes through the Egyptian Suez Canal (AFP)
A container ship passes through the Egyptian Suez Canal (AFP)
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Egypt’s Trade Deficit Up 23.8% YoY in April

 A container ship passes through the Egyptian Suez Canal (AFP)
A container ship passes through the Egyptian Suez Canal (AFP)

Data released by Egypt’s Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics on Tuesday revealed that the North African nation’s trade deficit increased by 23.8% year on year (YoY) in April 2023.

According to a report from the Central Bank of Egypt, the trade balance deficit increased by 23.8% year on year (YoY) to $2.33 billion in April 2023 from $1.89 billion in the same month of 2022.

Data indicated that the value of exports decreased by 44.9%, amounting to $3.03 billion, due to a decline in exports of certain goods, including liquefied natural gas, crude oil, fresh fruits, and ready-made garments.

Furthermore, the value of imports decreased by 27.4% to $5.36 billion, with a decline in imports of certain goods, primarily wheat.

Meanwhile, Egypt's sovereign dollar bonds gained more than 1 cent on Tuesday amid a wider rally that has lifted international debt issued by frontier markets such as Pakistan and Ghana.

Longer-dated issues maturing 2033 and beyond rallied the most with the February 2048 bond up more than 1.2 cents, according to Tradeweb data.

Egypt has been facing a liquidity crisis in dollars since late last quarter, prompting initiatives and proposals to overcome the biggest financial challenge faced by the largest Arab country in terms of population in the region.

Egypt has begun a $1.8 billion program to drill natural gas exploration wells in the Mediterranean Sea and Nile Delta, petroleum minister Tarek El Molla told UAE state news agency WAM on Tuesday.

The program is in cooperation with Eni, Chevron , ExxonMobil, Shell and BP. The aim is to drill 35 exploration wells within two years, 21 in the current 2023/2024 financial year and 14 in the next year, El Molla told WAM on the sidelines of an OPEC seminar in Vienna.



Gold Bolts Past Key $3,200 Mark on Dollar Slide, Safe-haven Flows

A gold bullion is displayed in The Reserve vault, operated by Silver Bullion Pte Ltd, in Singapore April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Edgar Su
A gold bullion is displayed in The Reserve vault, operated by Silver Bullion Pte Ltd, in Singapore April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Edgar Su
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Gold Bolts Past Key $3,200 Mark on Dollar Slide, Safe-haven Flows

A gold bullion is displayed in The Reserve vault, operated by Silver Bullion Pte Ltd, in Singapore April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Edgar Su
A gold bullion is displayed in The Reserve vault, operated by Silver Bullion Pte Ltd, in Singapore April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Edgar Su

Gold prices breached the crucial $3,200/oz level for the first time on Friday, fueled by a weaker dollar and an escalating trade war that sent investors rushing toward safe-haven assets.
Spot gold was up 0.6% at $3,192.79 an ounce, as of 0555 GMT. Bullion scaled an all-time peak of $3,219.84 earlier in the session, and has gained around 5% this week.
US gold futures climbed nearly 2% to $3,237.50, Reuters reported.
"The rapid weakening of the US dollar seems to be the main driver of gold's rebound at the moment. That seems to reflect an ongoing exodus from USD-based assets, with stocks and bonds' selloff amid tariff policy uncertainty," said Ilya Spivak, head of global macro at Tastylive.
The dollar was down nearly 1% against its major peers, making greenback-priced bullion cheaper for overseas buyers. Major stock indexes also fell after US President Donald Trump ratcheted up tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%, but hit a 90-day pause on previously announced tariffs for dozens of countries.
China has been matching Trump's tariff hikes, sparking fears that Beijing could push duties on the US beyond the current 84%.
"$3,500 is the next round number people will be looking at. I suspect we won't get there immediately or without bumps along the way," Capital.com's financial market analyst Kyle Rodda said.
Apart from tariffs, central bank demand, expectations of interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, geopolitical instability in the Middle East and Europe, and increased flows into gold-backed exchange-traded funds also fueled the metal's rally this year.
US consumer prices fell unexpectedly in March but inflation risks are tilted to the upside, data showed.
Traders now bet that the Fed will resume cutting rates in June and probably reduce by a full percentage point by the end of 2025.
Spot silver was steady at $31.2 an ounce, while platinum eased 0.2% to $936.55. Palladium gained 0.7% to $914.55.