Egypt’s current account deficit narrows to $9.5bn in H1 2025/26

Egypt’s current account deficit narrowed by 13.6% to $9.5bn in the first half of fiscal year 2025/26, driven by a 29.6% surge in remittances to $22.1bn, Central Bank of Egypt data shows. Tourism and Suez Canal revenues also boosted the services surplus.

Central Bank of Egypt data shows the current account deficit fell to $9.5bn in July-December 2025, down 13.6% from $10.9bn a year earlier. Net unrequited transfers rose 28.4% to $22bn, led by remittances jumping to $22.1bn.

The services balance posted a $8.9bn surplus, up 20.6%. Tourism revenues grew 17.3% to $10.2bn, while Suez Canal receipts increased 19% to $2.2bn, supported by net tonnage up 16.1% to 284m tons and vessels rising 5.8% to 6.7 thousand.

Trade deficits widened, however, with the oil gap reaching $8.9bn and non-oil at $22.8bn. The capital and financial account saw net inflows of $6.5bn, including $9.3bn in FDI—non-oil sectors at $9.4bn—with $6.1bn in greenfield investments driven by the $3.5bn Alam El-Roum deal.

Overall, the balance of payments recorded a $2.1bn deficit, wider than the $502.6m gap last year.

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South Korea recorded its largest-ever monthly current account surplus of $23.19 billion in February, according to Bank of Korea data. The figure was driven by a semiconductor upcycle and robust exports. It sharply exceeded January's $13.26 billion and surpassed the previous record of $18.7 billion set in December 2025.

Egypt’s Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS) reported that the trade deficit widened to $4.8bn in January 2026, a 15% increase from $4.2bn in January 2025. The rise was driven by a 20.3% drop in exports to $3.6bn, while imports fell 3.2% to $8.4bn.

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The Central Bank of Egypt announced that the government repaid $6.442bn in external debt service during the first quarter of the 2025/2026 fiscal year. The total includes $2.078bn in interest payments and $4.363bn in principal repayments. This compares to $7.952bn in the same period of 2024/2025.

Commercial International Bank posted consolidated net profit of EGP 17.8 billion for the first quarter of 2026, up 7 percent from a year earlier. Revenue reached EGP 31.2 billion, a 15 percent increase, even as regional tensions and currency moves created challenges.

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Minister of Planning and Economic Development Ahmed Rostom told parliament that Egypt’s economy is projected to grow by 5.4% by the end of fiscal year 2026/2027, rising to 6.8% by the end of the medium-term plan in 2029/2030. The government adopted a cautious growth scenario amid regional and global uncertainty.

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