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Central bank official: Foreign reserves may hit US$21.2 bn

An official at the Central Bank of Egypt told a state-run paper that he predicted the country's foreign reserve would jump by US$6.8 billion to $21.2 billion in the coming period, after Qatar delivers on a $1.5 billion deposit.

The anonymous official told the state-run newspaper Al-Gomhurriya on Tuesday that reserves are expected to soar after Qatar delivers $1.5 billion, the second batch of its previously announced deposit to the CBE.

Qatar said on Saturday it would deposit $2 billion. Egypt has only received $500 million.

Egypt's foreign reserves began a steep decline last year when a popular uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak led the central bank buy Egyptian pounds to support the currency.

Saudi Arabia stepped in with financial support in June, approving $430 million in project aid for Cairo and a $750 million credit line for oil imports.

The official added that the increase could also go higher if the IMF agrees to Egypt's request to increase the loan to $4.8 billion.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Hesham Qandil will begin talks with head of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde aiming at reaising a proposed loan from $3.2 billion to $4.8 billion, or 300 percent of Egypt's capital in the IMF.

The government decided to lower subsidies on oil products from LE95.5 billion in the 2011-2012 budget to LE25.5 billion in the 2012-2013 budget by applying a coupon system on butane, gas and diesel in addition to other procedures for rationalizing energy consumption.

The source told the paper that interest rates for the Egyptian pound will either be cut or fixed following a meeting by the central bank’s committee for monetary policies in mid-September.

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