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Zambia's currency stuck at record low as drought continues

Zambia's kwacha has struck a series of record lows given that the start of the year as a severe drought keeps the pressure strongly on the copperproducing Southern African nation's economy.

Experts had actually hoped Zambia's emergence from default early in 2015 would have assisted belief, however the currency is now roughly 3% listed below where it was before its financial obligation restructuring offer and has fallen nearly 15% over the last six months.

It was trading at 27.95 per dollar on Wednesday, simply above the most recent record low of 28.05 on Tuesday.

Zambia remains in a state of serious dry spell, and this appears to manifest in currency weak point as the hydroelectrically dependent nation deals with a commercial slowdown, Gain access to Bank Zambia stated in a research note.

Mining companies are being forced to reduce copper production, a crucial foreign profits earner, it added.

The serious impacts of El Niño triggered the worst drought in southern Africa in a century in 2015, devastating crop production and requiring Zambia's authorities to cut electrical energy generation on the Kariba dam, the biggest source of electrical energy.

The kwacha plunged when Zambia defaulted on $11 billion worth of external financial obligation in November 2020, however saw a short 20%. jump last February when it ended up being clear its restructuring. efforts were going to achieve success.

One monetary analyst in Lusaka stated some companies had sold. dollars during Wednesday's session in preparation for local tax. payments next week, using some support to the kwacha.

(source: Reuters)