Page 28 - IRANRptMar19
P. 28
Accordingly, other currencies including the euro and the British pound followed suit, reaching IRR148,700 and IRR169,950 respectively on February 18 (up 4.5% d/d), in the third trading day of the Iranian week which starts on Saturday.
Gold sovereign coins are also following the bullish trend down on Ferdowsi Street in Tehran, where one Emami gold coin now retails for IRR44,500,000, up 3% d/d, and the Azadi currently trades at IRR42,500,000.
The local TEDPIX, the all-star index on the Tehran Stock Exchange (TSE), was up 550.33 points (0.35%) to reach 156,705.3 by close of trade in the Iranian capital.
The CBI and police are running ongoing campaigns to force speculators out of the forex market.
It appeared in December that the CBI had got a grasp of the often wild forex market, however, this latest slip is likely to make citizens uneasy as it appears their grip may beginning to loosen.
The IRR had strengthened against hard currencies in recent months partly due to the central bank flooding the market with foreign currency while also limiting transactions per person.
An Iranian economist who prefers to remain anonymous but goes by the name Hooroozan said on February 17 that the CBI’s inadequate supply including shrinking oil income, exporters’ refusal to deliver their profits back to the so-called NIMA local forex platform, in addition to speculating and rent seeking were the likely reasons for the continued decline.
7.1 Forex rate platform
Iran to launch new OTC forex trading platform to quell black market turbulence
Iranian officials have announced that a new over-the-counter (OTC) trading platform will commence in the next few weeks in a bid to quell the black market trading of currencies, the Financial Tribune has reported.
Developed by the Money and Credit Council and Central Bank of Iran (CBI), the OTC platform will accept cash deposits and then be converted into an electronic platform. The move amounts to the latest attempt by authorities to pull in foreign currency reserves floating around the informal market.
Details of currencies to be on offer remain limited, however; so far it has been reported that the trading of five to six popular currencies will be hosted on the OTC platform.
Location-wise, the new trading floor will be based in the heart of Tehran’s forex market on Ferdowsi Street in the main lobby of the former CBI building.
CBI governor Abdolnasser Hemmati was quoted as saying that the market would be launched with the participation of banks and certified exchange shops under central bank supervision.
He added that exporters could also enter the regulated forex market, returning part of their profits to the OTC centre.
28 IRAN Country Report March 2019 www.intellinews.com