For the second week running, the Zimbabwe dollar yesterday
firmed marginally against the US dollar in the weekly auction, this time by
just under three quarters of a percent, to $82,6993 from last week’s $83,32
despite a record allotment of US$19,2 million on both the main and SMEs
auctions.
The new stable rates generated by the auction system in the
past month are emphasised by the movements of well under one percent over the
past four auctions following movements in the first eight auctions.
With the Zimbabwe dollar now only a few cents below the
mid-August rate as a result of these tiny four changes, the process of price
discovery in an open market system has produced general agreement within very
narrow limits of just what the local currency is worth for normal international
trade.
In the last four auctions, the Zimbabwe dollar moved down
0,43 percent, then down another 0,58 percent, then up 0,094 percent last week
and now up by another 0,746 percent to produce a cumulative move down over the
four weeks of 0,016 percent, roughly a sixth of one percent, or a total of just
under 14 cents.
These tiny changes have resulted in minimal price
movements, a few prices falling slightly as a result of lower inflation
expectations, and the less common small rises driven by a rise in real costs.
Zupco fares are the only common item that has seen a major
jump, probably in a catch-up process.
Yesterday’s main auction saw 185 successful bidders
allocated US$18 334 530,08 with another 31 bids disqualified because bidders
were trying to pay for goods or services not on the import priority list,
according to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, or had not cleared paperwork by the
deadlines for previous exports and imports.
In the SMEs auction, 59 valid bidders shared US$876 674,44,
with another 15 disqualified for the same reasons. This is the first time the
Reserve Bank has listed non-adherence to the priority list as the main reason
for disqualifications. Some bids were allotted pro-rata to ensure that
allotments conformed to the import priority list. No valid bid was rejected in
full.
Category 1 imports on the list absorb 70 percent of main
auction allotments and 80 percent of SME auction allotments, with category 2
imports taking the remainder. A valid bid has to be for something in one of
these two pre-set categories.
In yesterday’s auction, as in the previous 12, raw
materials took almost half the allotments with US$8,7 million on the main
auction and US$255 700 on the SME auction.
Machinery and equipment, as always, came in second with
US$3,3 million on the main and US$226 347 on the SMEs, and consumables, listed
as things like spares, tyres and electricals, in third place on US$2,289
million and US$218 332 on the two auctions.
These three categories tend to account for between three
quarters and 80 percent of all allotments in all auctions.
The final quarter or so is shared by services (loans,
school fees, dividends and disinvestments), retail and distribution, fuel
electricity and gas, pharmaceuticals and chemicals and paper and packaging.
The bids for the main auction were between $88 and $75 and
for the SMEs auction between $86 and $73, with the bottom bids around $1 lower
than last week.
Observers say the modest strengthening of the Zimbabwe
dollar is a culmination of efforts by both the monetary and fiscal authorities
to curb money supply growth.
“This is indicative of current efforts to control money
supply,” said economist Persistence Gwanyanya.
“The ratio of Zimbabwe dollars to US dollars is actually
contracting over time, which is creating demand for the local unit.”
Although a good number of the big corporations and even
smaller businesses that access foreign currency on the formal market have
complied with the statutory dual pricing requirements, some unscrupulous
businesses are still pegging prices on parallel market rates.
Others still have moved to increase prices of their goods
and services in US dollar terms in particular “response” to the 20 percent
surrender policy introduced last month.
But Mr Gwanyanya says the move to increase prices in US
dollar terms is ill-advised and very transitory.
“The 20 percent surrender policy was essentially to support
demand for the Zimbabwe dollar. It alternatively increased US dollar supply
into the formal system,” he said.
“Because convergence between the official and the parallel
market rate has not been achieved, there are still arbitrage opportunities
rising from that gap.
“But businesses increasing prices in US dollars are doing
that to the detriment of their sales volumes. Those prices increases are only a
short term disturbance. In the long run the 20 percent surrender policy will
result in increased flow of foreign currency on the official market.” Herald
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