
KUWAIT CITY — In a significant forex development, the Kuwaiti Dinar (KWD) has depreciated against the Pakistani Rupee (PKR), trading at Rs.917.13 in the open market this week — its lowest level since June.
This marks a steady decline from Rs.919.70 on October 4, Rs.920.75 on September 27, and a broader downtrend from the summer peak of Rs.926.79. Analysts say the fall mirrors global oil softening, evolving monetary policies, and contrasting economic directions in both Kuwait and Pakistan.
Kuwait’s Dinar — traditionally the world’s strongest currency — derives strength from its oil-dominated economy. However, with Kuwaiti crude closing at $67.63 per barrel on October 10, downward pressure has emerged. The IMF projects 2.6% GDP growth for Kuwait in 2025, supported by recovering OPEC+ quotas and diversification efforts, but mild fiscal strain persists.
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The Central Bank of Kuwait, which pegs the Dinar to a basket of major currencies led by the US Dollar, continues to maintain large reserves exceeding $43 billion. Still, market sentiment has softened amid a modest decline in oil revenues and budget deficit concerns.
On the Pakistani side, the Rupee has strengthened modestly due to improving foreign reserves — up to $16.6 billion by mid-2025 — and sustained IMF inflows.
A managed float policy by the State Bank of Pakistan has allowed for controlled appreciation, though inflation has recently risen to 5.6% in September from 3% in August, mainly driven by food and energy prices. The resulting 0.22% KWD-PKR shift reflects not weakness in the Dinar alone but Pakistan’s tentative stabilization under ongoing fiscal reforms.
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For Pakistan’s more than 250,000 workers in Kuwait, the depreciation means slightly fewer Rupees per Dinar when sending money home. A 1,000 KWD remittance, worth Rs.919,700 on October 4, now yields Rs.917,130 — a loss of Rs.2,570. Across $1.9 billion in annual remittances, the impact could reduce household income in key cities such as Lahore and Faisalabad.
However, importers and businesses may see benefits. Petroleum imports from Kuwait — worth hundreds of millions of dollars annually — become marginally cheaper, easing local fuel inflation and trade costs. Exporters dealing in PKR to KWD conversions could also gain competitiveness in Gulf markets.
Pakistan’s GDP growth of 2.7% and rising per capita income to $1,824 strengthen investor confidence. Yet, if Kuwait’s fiscal deficit widens to an expected 7.8% of GDP, regional investments could slow. For remitters, experts recommend timing transfers after IMF disbursements or during PKR peaks for better conversion value. Businesses, meanwhile, should diversify trade ties beyond oil-dependent economies to hedge against currency volatility.
Kuwaiti Dinar (KWD): Introduced in 1961; 1 KWD = $3.26; backed by oil revenues and sovereign wealth exceeding $700 billion. Pakistani Rupee (PKR): Established in 1947; 1 PKR ≈ 0.00108 KWD; managed float regime under SBP reflects ongoing reform success.
The KWD’s fall to Rs.917.13 underscores shifting oil and fiscal dynamics across the Gulf, while highlighting Pakistan’s fragile but improving macroeconomic footing. For workers, traders, and investors, timing and strategy remain key in navigating this evolving forex terrain.