Egypt’s inflation eases to 10.3% in September as price pressures cool 

Egypt’s inflation eases to 10.3% in September as price pressures cool 
Egypt’s inflation peaked at around 33.2 percent in September 2023 but has steadily eased. Shutterstock
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Updated 08 October 2025
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Egypt’s inflation eases to 10.3% in September as price pressures cool 

Egypt’s inflation eases to 10.3% in September as price pressures cool 

RIYADH: Egypt’s inflation slowed for a fourth consecutive month in September, easing to 10.3 percent year on year as consumer price pressures continued to moderate, official data showed. 

The Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics said the Consumer Price Index rose 1.5 percent month on month to 260.9 points, driven mainly by higher housing and utility costs. 

Egypt’s inflation peaked at around 33.2 percent in September 2023 but has steadily eased since the government secured an $8 billion loan program from the International Monetary Fund in March 2024, which helped stabilize the currency and support policy reforms. 

In its latest release, CAPMAS stated: “Housing, water, electricity, gas and fuel section recorded an increase of 3.4 percent due to an increase in prices of the actual rental group of houses by 1.3 percent, calculated rent group of houses by 7.1 percent, and group of maintenance and repair of houses by 1.4 percent.”  

The report added that expenses for water and miscellaneous services related to housing increased by 0.2 percent, while electricity, gas, and fuel prices rose by 0.3 percent. 

Another key driver in September was the food and beverages sector, which increased by 1.9 percent. This section saw a 12.2 percent rise in vegetable prices, a 3.5 percent increase in fruits, and a 0.3 percent rise in meat and poultry expenses. 

The alcoholic beverages and tobacco segment witnessed a monthly rise of 0.8 percent, while the health care sector saw an increase of 0.4 percent. 

Within healthcare, outpatient service costs climbed 0.8 percent in September compared to the previous month, while hospital expenses rose 1 percent over the same period. 

On an annual basis, alcoholic beverages and tobacco prices surged 25.3 percent, followed by housing, water, electricity, and fuel, which went up 18.2 percent. 

The food and beverages category recorded a 0.3 percent increase year on year, while clothing and footwear costs advanced 14.4 percent during the same period. 

In February, global credit rating agency Moody’s affirmed Egypt’s Caa1 long-term foreign and local currency rating with a positive outlook. 

It stated that the positive outlook reflected the government’s measures to control inflation and interest rates. 

Earlier this month, Egypt’s Central Bank slashed interest rates by 100 basis points, marking the fourth reduction this year, citing subdued inflationary pressures amid economic growth of about 5 percent in the second quarter. 


Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue

Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue
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Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue

Qatar sells $4bn in two-part debt issue

ABU DHABI: Qatar, among the world’s top exporters of liquefied natural gas, tapped global debt markets for $4 billion in a two-tranche issue which attracted hefty order books and allowed the Gulf state to achieve more favorable pricing than initially indicated.

Qatar sold a $1 billion, three-year bond at 15 basis points over US Treasuries and a $3 billion Islamic bond, or sukuk, with a 10-year tenor at 20 basis points over the same benchmark, according to a document from a lead manager.

Orders for the issuance hit $13.5 billion ahead of launch, fixed income news service IFR reported, allowing the sovereign — rated AA by Fitch and S&P and Aa2 by Moody’s — to tighten pricing substantially from earlier guidance.

In the second quarter of 2025, Qatar posted a budget deficit of 757 million riyals ($208 million) as public spending rose 5.7 percent from a year earlier and lower oil prices weighed on revenue.

It raised $3 billion from debt markets in February.

Several Gulf sovereigns have issued debt in recent weeks as strong global appetite and attractive borrowing costs have allowed governments to increase funding sources to help refinance debt, plug budget deficits, and invest in ambitious economic diversification plans.

Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs International, QNB Capital and Standard Chartered Bank were mandated global coordinators on Qatar’s bond issue. They were joined by Santander, Citi, Emirates NBD Capital, ICBC, IMI-Intesa Sanpaolo and SMBC as joint lead managers.

Citi, Deutsche Bank, QNB Capital and Standard Chartered Bank were global coordinators for the sukuk as well as joint lead managers along with Al Rayan Investment, Dubai Islamic Bank, Emirates NBD Capital, Goldman Sachs, Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector, IMI-Intesa Sanpaolo and KFH Capital.