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Karachi:
Pakistan's main Karachi bourse reluctantly decided to unfreeze itself by Oct
27 only if the government fixes a cap on interest rates on loans taken by
top brokers, sources said. 'The decision to unfreeze is only tentative. We
are watching the government to see if it will inject money into the market
and put a cap on interest rates,' Akeel Karim Dhedhi, chairman of local
giant AKD Securities told DPA.
The Pakistani stock market, roiled by domestic political instability and
economic turmoil, has been virtually closed for the last two months after
losing almost 50 percent in value since May. Among the major reasons for the
decline is a bleak investment scenario due to growing Islamic insurgency in
North West Frontier Province -, a spate of suicide bombings across the
country, and mounting tensions between NATO forces and the Afghan
government.
Meanwhile, the recent credit crunch has caused the interest rates on
short-term loans to shoot up to an all time high of 60 percent. Dhedhi said
the directors of Karachi Stock Exchange in a meeting with the state
watchdog, the Securities Exchange Commission of Pakistan -, had demanded a
cap on interest rates at 24 percent.
Dhedhi said the meeting was still going on and no decision was taken so far
whether the SECP would convince the financial institutions to lower the
interest rates for brokers. Some brokers have borrowed billions of Pakistani
rupees - from banks to buy shares. 'Many top guns of the market are at the
verge of bankruptcy,' said Mudassar Malik director at the BMA Capital
Management.
Though the central State Bank of Pakistan has pumped more than 20 billion
rupees - in the money market this week the interest rates kept climbing.
Pakistan is currently facing inflation of more than 25 percent and a
widening current-account deficit of over $14 billion. The country's currency
has depreciated by 22 percent since January. |