Egyptian market awaits impact of 1% rate cut on savings, loans, and government debt

The Egyptian market is awaiting banks' return to work on Sunday to assess how lenders will adjust interest rates on savings products and loan facilities following the Central Bank of Egypt's decision to cut key rates by 1%. Last Thursday, the CBE’s Monetary Policy Committee reduced its benchmark rates to 19% for overnight deposits and 20% for overnight lending, with the credit and discount rate, as well as the main operation rate, lowered to 19.5%. In a parallel move, the CBE cut the mandatory reserve requirement ratio for banks to 16% from 18% to support liquidity.

The Central Bank of Egypt's (CBE) decision to cut key rates by 1% has led to an automatic decline in returns on variable-rate savings certificates and loan products linked to the key policy rates, commonly referred to as corridor-linked products. Egypt’s banking sector offers several variable-rate certificates, most notably the “Platinum” certificate issued by the National Bank of Egypt and the “Al Qimma” certificate offered by Banque Misr. Similarly, a wide range of corporate and retail loan products priced against the corridor have seen borrowing costs fall by the same percentage as the central bank’s cut.

However, attention is now turning to fixed-rate savings products, where banks retain discretion over whether to amend pricing in response to the policy shift. Market participants are closely watching to see whether lenders will revise yields on newly issued certificates or maintain current levels to preserve deposit inflows.

Investors are also assessing how the rate cut could affect yields on domestic government debt instruments scheduled for auction this week, particularly in light of foreign investors’ appetite for Egyptian pound-denominated assets. Acting on behalf of the Ministry of Finance, the CBE is set to offer two Treasury bill (T-bill) auctions on Sunday totalling EGP 70bn: EGP 25bn in 91-day bills and EGP 45bn in 273-day bills. On Monday, the central bank will offer four Treasury bond (T-bond) auctions worth a combined EGP 40bn. These include three fixed-coupon bond offerings totalling EGP 33bn – EGP 8bn for two-year bonds, EGP 20bn for three-year bonds, and EGP 5bn for an additional three-year tranche, alongside a zero-coupon bond auction valued at EGP 7bn with a 716-day maturity.

The key question for the market is whether the 100-basis-point rate cut will translate into lower accepted yields at these auctions, and whether foreign portfolio investors will maintain strong participation amid evolving interest-rate differentials. The coming days are therefore expected to provide clearer signals on how quickly the monetary easing cycle will filter through to savings returns, borrowing costs, and the pricing of sovereign debt instruments.

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Brazil Central Bank president announces Selic rate held at 15% with March cut signal amid cooling inflation.
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Central bank keeps selic at 15% and signals march cut

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The Monetary Policy Committee (Copom) of Brazil's Central Bank kept the Selic rate at 15% per year for the fifth consecutive time on January 28, 2026, but signaled it will start cuts at the March meeting if the economic scenario holds. The decision reflects cooling inflation, which ended 2025 at 4.26%, below the target ceiling. Analysts and groups like the CNI see room for easing, but the BC stresses caution amid unanchored expectations and global uncertainties.

The Egyptian market awaits banks' return to business on Sunday following the weekend break to assess the impact of the Central Bank of Egypt's decision last Thursday to cut interest rates by 1% on returns from savings products and borrowing costs. The Monetary Policy Committee reduced the bank's key policy rates to 20% for overnight deposits, 21% for overnight lending, and 20.5% for both the main operation rate and the credit and discount rate.

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Egypt's Central Bank Monetary Policy Committee is expected to cut interest rates by 1-2% at its first 2026 meeting on Thursday. This comes amid core inflation easing to 11.2% in January. Experts support the move to boost economic growth while maintaining stability.

Egypt's Finance Ministry launched the new 'Citizen Bond' today, an investment tool available exclusively through Egypt Post branches for individuals, offering a fixed annual return of 17.75% over 18 months with monthly payouts.

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Egypt's Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk announced that risks related to the country's public debt have declined, driven by growing investor confidence in its economic trajectory and improving macroeconomic indicators. He noted that Egypt's strong performance in international markets has led to a drop in yields on its international bonds to 4%. Kouchouk spoke at the 15th Annual Conference of the Egyptian Investment Management Association.

Finance Minister Fernando Haddad stated that, if he were a Central Bank director, he would vote for lowering interest rates, deeming the 10% annual real rate unsustainable. The comment came on Tuesday, November 4, 2025, a day before the Copom meeting. Analysts view the criticism as counterproductive for the government and economy.

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Hassan Abdalla, governor of Egypt's Central Bank, joined the second AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies, stressing that the bank's role is not to push the currency up or down but to build a resilient policy framework. He outlined Egypt's economic reform program launched in March 2024, noting inflation's drop from around 40% to nearly 12%. He also highlighted improvements in key economic indicators amid global challenges.

 

 

 

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