The News Egyptian authorities continue their crackdown on informal currency traders, with the Interior Ministry announcing the seizure of foreign currency exchange cases worth over 20 million Egyptian pounds (approximately $377,000) in just three days. Questions are mounting over whether these operations signal a genuine resurgence of the black market, or merely reflect isolated speculation amid ongoing exchange rate volatility. The dollar is currently trading between 52 and 53 pounds on the informal market, having peaked at around 52.9 pounds in March 2026. The Central Bank is holding interest rates at 19% on deposits and 20% on lending, while urban inflation reached 14.9% in April.
Why This Matters to America Egypt is the largest economy in Africa and the Arab world and one of the largest recipients of U.S. foreign assistance. Its economic stability is directly tied to the security of the Suez Canal — a vital artery for American and Western trade interests. A broad return of the black market would mean pressure on the pound, rising inflation, and social instability in a country of over 110 million people. Washington is closely watching Cairo’s ability to withstand the economic fallout of the ongoing war, especially after an estimated $5–8 billion in foreign portfolio investment fled Egyptian debt instruments since February 2026.
Implications The war is squeezing every major source of dollar inflows simultaneously: energy import costs have surged from roughly $560 million per month to $1.65 billion, foreign investors are exiting treasury instruments, shipping and insurance costs are rising, and Suez Canal revenues and tourism face growing pressure. On the other hand, the Central Bank holds approximately $53 billion in reserves, and Egyptian remittances rose 30% to reach $22 billion in the first half of the current fiscal year — providing a meaningful buffer. The real danger lies not in today’s numbers but in the logic of expectations: if citizens and importers come to believe the pound will fall, that belief becomes self-fulfilling.
