Page 19 - IRANRptJul19
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Tankertrackers puts Iran’s March oil and condensates exports at 1.9 b/d
Iran records positive 11-month trade balance despite US sanctions assault
India's government was studying the implications of the US announcement, the PTI news agency cited sources as saying. New Delhi had reportedly hoped to be allowed to continue to reduce its Iranian oil imports gradually.  In the first quarter of 2019, India shipped in about 40% less oil from Iran at about 313,400 bpd, the data also showed.
Iran is estimated to have exported 1.9mn b/d of oil and condensates in March, Tankertrackers.com said on April 17.
The data from the company put Iranian crude exports at 1.4mn b/d in March while condensates stood at 500,000 b/d. Condensate is a type of ultralight oil favoured by some East Asian refiners in countries including Japan.
Iran’s non-oil trade balance remained positive in the first 11 months of the Persian year (ending February 22) despite efforts by the US to choke off the country’s international trade flows with sanctions, Mehr News Agency cited the Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration (IRICA) as saying on March 14.
The trade surplus was officially recorded at $1.577bn.
Iran exported 105.9mn tonnes of non-oil goods worth approximately $40bn in the stated period. The value of the goods fell 0.74% y/y while the tonnage decreased 6.36% y/y.
Also in the 11-month period, 28.92mn tonnes of items worth $38.5bn were imported into Iran.
Gas condensates were registered as the main export. Some $3.93bn of gas condensates were exported.
The figures were calculated using the government’s official and preferential exchange rate of IRR42,000 to the USD, which is available only to selected businesses. The unofficial rate stood at IRR133,000 by the market close on March 14.
5.1.3  Gross international reserves
Iran’s gold Imami sovereign breaks IRR25mn barrier amid dwindling hard currency supplies
Iran’s gold sovereign of choice, the Imami, has again broken the IRR25mn barrier as buyers continue to purchase remaining stocks of the officially minted 18-carat coin, IBENA reported on June 18.
Iranians’ attraction to gold as a safe haven has intensified with hard currency supplies dwindling in Iran following legal changes suddenly brought in in early April to arrest the stark descent of the Iranian rial (IRR), hit by souring sentiment over Iran’s economic prospects in the face of hostility from the US Trump administration. The move banned open market trading of foreign exchange and made unofficial rates illegal.
In early May, a World Gold Council report said that   gold coin and bar demand in Iran shot up to a three-year high of 9.3 tonnes   in the first quarter as Iranians —correctly—anticipated that the consequences of deteriorating relations with the US would cause Tehran to introduce currency controls.
The Azadi gold coin, the former number one sovereign sold by the Central Bank of Iran (CBI), also reached a historic high on June 18, topping IRR24mn a coin, while smaller half-sovereigns increased in price accordingly.
According to the IMF in its Regional Economic Outlook on May 4, the value of Iran’s gross official reserves will reach $108.4bn in 2018.  The country’s gross official reserves will experience a $13.3bn jump in the current year rising from last year’s $95.1bn.
19  IRAN Country Report  July 2019 www.intellinews.com


































































































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