Iran Currency Tumbles 17% in One Day to New Low
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةIran's currency plummeted at least 17 percent in trading on Monday, according to media and an online exchange website, severely adding to strains on the Islamic republic's sanctions-hit economy.
The currency, the rial, weakened to 34,700 to the dollar by the end of the day's trading, according to the Mesghal.com website, a drop of 17 percent compared to the previous day's rate of 29,600.
The Mehr news agency said the rial fell 18 percent to 35,000.
The rial has lost more than 80 percent of its value compared with the end of last year, when it was worth 13,000 to the dollar.
Visitors to the money-changing area in central Tehran said registered dealers were no longer selling dollars in their shops, leaving the market to informal traders in the street -- a situation resulting in dollars becoming scarce and thus much more expensive.
Iran is suffering heightened geopolitical tensions over its nuclear program and the effects of draconian Western economic sanctions curbing access to its reduced oil exports.
It also is burdened with high inflation and rising unemployment.
The rial's plunge on Monday was largely censored online.
Websites that usually give real-time currency data, such as Mazanex.com, had the dollar rate for the rial blanked out. The Iranian-hosted version of Mesghal (mesghal.ir) disappeared half-way through the day to be replaced with the message "Account Suspended".
The fall sent a shock through Iranian companies.
"It's a disaster," a manager of a business in Iran's import sector told Agence France Presse on condition of anonymity. "One business lady was really crying, she was losing millions of dollars."
The Fars news agency said money changers in Tehran were hoarding dollars.
"We do not know what will happen in the coming days, we do not know what the government will do," it quoted one money changer saying.
The official news agency IRNA quoted a spokesman for Iran's money changers' association, Nosrat Ezzati, as saying the latest rates for the rial "are artificial as no real exchange is happening in the market."
While Western sanctions curbing Iran's ability to export oil or to make financial transactions abroad were certainly having an impact, blame for the situation was also being put on economic mismanagement.
The government has in recent weeks excluded almost all importers from buying dollars at its official rate of 12,260 rials per dollar, encouraging them instead to use a new "exchange center" where the rate was fixed daily at a small discount to the open-market rate. That has sharply increased consumer prices and spurred the rial's fall.
"This center has helped accelerate the soaring dollar rate," one economics columnist, Hirad Hatami, told AFP.
But he stressed "there is also the issue of speculation... this is a bubble which is rooted in the operation of the exchange center."
Mahmoud Bahmani, the head of Iran's central bank, was quoted by the ISNA news agency as predicting: "The effects of the foreign exchange trading centre will gradually emerge in the free exchange prices."
Ordinary Iranians are increasingly struggling with the resulting inflation, which was officially put at 23 percent even before the latest plunge of the rial.
"Prices are rising every day and it just doesn't stop," said Khosro, a retiree who gave only his first name. He was forced to work as a taxi driver to boost his diminishing pension, he said.
Even locally made products were becoming more costly in Iran's supermarkets.
"The price of my toothpaste, a foreign brand, has tripled in just a few months. Now, I'm buying an Iranian one, but it has also nearly doubled in price," said Maryam, a young shopper.
assad's war is costing 1bio dollars a month paid 90 pct by iran,that is not a political thinking it's accountings.
I bet Noussralla is now worried about the value of the clean money that Iran sends him...
Matter of time before anger flares up again over there. Iranian Spring redux (and just as bloody as Iranian Spring I).
I would not even use as toilet paper (well maybe if Sayyed's picture is on it....lol)!
Nassy will need to sell more drugs now.....money from Iran is going to stop flowing.
For all their anti-western stances, they still have to hoard dollars and euros to survive. Once the people of Iran start feeling the effects of their lower currency, that country will have its own revolt to deal with.
Just wait until the mass marches of the hungry and unemployed start in Tehran and the other cities of Iran.
The murder of the civilians in Syria will look like childrens games.
Yeah... the best news I have heard in a while... they are going down and so are all their puppets in Lebanon and Syria...
This is what will destroy Iran. Not Israel... not the US.... But public anger because people are becoming poorer.
Once iran is gone, syria will go... then north korea and cuba... and what will remain is a monochromatic globalized world society headed by the US and China.
10,000 Ayatollah rials is worth $.30. All because they won't let inspectors in to see whay they are up too.
Doesn't take much imagination to realize that Iran without the massive profit from oil & gas export would be another Somalia or North Korea. It is a definition of a failed state using its natural resources to create a police and oppressive state, and invest in arms and rockets instead of Silicon Valleys. As to its copy-cat Hezbollah's cost to Lebanese economy, it can be reasonably estimated using risk and financial analysis. It certainly lowered our GNP and standard of living by at least half by scaring foreign investments and the exodus of foreign corporations with their good paying jobs that used to make Lebanon with its democracy, weather and sophistication their undisputed best place for regional headquarters. Hizbollah and Aoun are poison to Lebanon's and economy and civility as the Iranian Basij are poison to Iran's freedom and prosperity