In 25th of January article, I argued
that the Central Bank decision to increase its prime rate from 7 to 14%
wouldn’t help curb the Congolese Franc (CDF) depreciation.
Unfortunately (for the country), I
was right and 5 months later, the local currency further depreciated by almost
18%.
Earlier this week, the BCC has
increased its prime rate from 14 to 20% to stabilize the CDF. Once again, I doubt this decision will have
any positive impact for the same reasons explained in my previous article.
With an inflation of 36%, the real
interest remains largely negative (-16%) and therefore, there is no incentive
to keep CDF. Why would someone buy treasury bills in CDF if the return worth less
than the principal invested equivalent in United States Dollars (USD) (remember
that the USD is the primary currency in the DRC)?
The reality on the ground is that
people lost trust in the CDF; therefore, they try to get rid of it as fast as
possible. People are expecting the local currency to depreciate everyday and are
ready to buy USD at any rate fueling the CDF depreciation further… It is a
vicious circle, a self-fulfilling prophecy.
In my opinion, the only short-term remedy
would be for the BCC to intervene on the Foreign Exchange market by selling USD
to reduce a little bit the pressure on the CDF. However, the international reserves
are limited to CDF 717m. Therefore, the intervention can only be limited.
Last week the Chamber of Mines,
announced that they are expecting a record production of copper for the year
2017 to 1,05 m tons. Copper is DRC primary source of foreign currencies. Hopefully,
this expected increase of production (+2,4%) would allow the BCC to rebuild its
international reserves in order to intervene on the market and limit this
hemorrhage.