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Egypt's central bank holds rates, doubles its inflation outlook

Egypt's central bank holds rates, doubles its inflation outlook

The CBE keeps rates on hold a second straight meeting and lifts its 2026 inflation forecast to 16-17% from 11%, blaming the regional conflict and an energy shock

Leaders·Money· worsening El dinero de quién·Cómo cambia la vida ·9 takes ·actualizado 24 jun 2026

Summary

The Central Bank of Egypt held its policy rates — overnight deposit 19%, lending 20% — for a second straight meeting, and lifted its 2026 inflation outlook to 16-17% from a prior 11%, a near-doubling it blamed on supply-side pressure from "ongoing regional conflict," exchange-rate moves and fiscal adjustment. The CBE expects inflation to accelerate through Q3 2026. Annual urban inflation was 14.6% in May, with food and beverages up 7.6% — the biggest monthly rise in a year — and housing and utilities up 40.4% as electricity costs climb, tying directly to the energy import scramble. The pound weakened toward 53 to the dollar. The revision reverses earlier expectations of 4-6% in rate cuts this year — pressure on Abdel Fattah El Sisi's economy that the IMF program and Gulf backing are meant to contain.

By the numbers

  • 19% / 20% — held overnight deposit / lending rates (second straight hold).
  • 16-17% — revised 2026 inflation outlook, from 11%.
  • 14.6% — annual urban inflation in May; food and beverages +7.6%.
  • 40.4% — housing and utilities inflation, on rising electricity costs.
  • ~53/$ — pound weakening against the dollar.

Why it matters

The doubled forecast is the war and energy shock landing in the cost of living. With rate cuts now delayed, Egyptians face a longer squeeze, the IMF program's inflation assumptions slip, and Sisi's economic story — that diplomacy buys stability — gets harder to tell at the checkout.

What to watch

  • Whether inflation peaks in Q3 as the CBE projects, or overshoots.
  • The pound's trajectory and any new currency pressure.
  • The next IMF review and its read on the inflation path.