Pakistan’s financial landscape in November 2025 is a study in contradictions. The headlines splitting the nation’s economic narrative have rarely been this dramatic: on one end, the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) continues to roar, brushing against historic highs and hovering around 160,000. On the other end, multinational corporations-some operating in Pakistan for decades-are downsizing, delisting, or exiting entirely. Together, these two realities expose both the potential and fragility of Pakistan’s economic direction as the year draws to a close.
The upward momentum on the PSX reflects improved macroeconomic sentiment. After prolonged negotiations, Pakistan secured a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in mid-October for a significant combined tranche of around $1.2 billion. This includes nearly $1 billion under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and an additional $200 million through the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF). The IMF Executive Board has listed Pakistan for a decision on December 8, and the market has interpreted this scheduling as a strong indicator of approval. The anticipated inflow has helped stabilise investor expectations and is seen as a key driver behind the PSX’s resilience.
Stability at the top-IMF programmes, currency buffers, and government-to-government deals-is no substitute for predictable rules, consistent taxation, manageable regulatory processes, and affordable energy for businesses on the ground.
The external account has shown modest improvement compared to crisis periods in previous years. Pakistan’s foreign exchange reserves, which had faced dangerous erosion in 2023, have now climbed significantly. Central bank data discussed in the financial press indicates that the State Bank’s reserves stand near the $14-15 billion range in mid-October 2025, with total reserves around $16 billion when commercial bank holdings are included. This is still a thin cushion for an import-dependent economy, but it represents a meaningful improvement over past lows and has helped anchor the currency somewhat. The rupee remains under pressure, but compared to the volatility of prior years, it is trading within a tighter, more predictable band.
Foreign interest in Pakistan’s high-yield sovereign papers is another reason for market optimism. In October 2025 alone, foreign investment into Pakistani treasury bills reached $118.6 million, the highest monthly inflow recorded in the fiscal year thus far. Total inflows for July to October FY26 were reported around $333 million, versus outflows of $213 million, indicating a net positive shift. Most of this interest is reportedly coming from Gulf-based investors who see an opportunity in Pakistan’s high-yield environment backed by the IMF umbrella. For policymakers, this is a short-term win-but it also reinforces Pakistan’s dependence on hot money.
Inflation, however, remains the persistent shadow over this apparent recovery. After several months of moderate readings, headline inflation jumped to 6.2 per cent year-on-year in October 2025. Food prices rose sharply due to disruptions from regional flooding and border instability affecting supply routes. Month-on-month inflation climbed 1.8 per cent, and the State Bank has acknowledged that inflation may remain above the target range due to supply-side pressures. Businesses report that rising input costs continue to squeeze margins, even in sectors that appear outwardly strong.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) paints an even more complicated picture. In September 2025, FDI amounted to approximately $185 million-a sharp 55 per cent drop compared to the same month in 2024. Over the first quarter of FY26, total FDI came in at $569 million, a decline of over one-third compared to the previous year. At the same time, portfolio investors pulled more than $120 million from Pakistan’s equity markets. The broad decline in long-term investment underscores a structural challenge that the booming stock index cannot mask.
The corporate developments of 2025 illustrate this challenge in stark detail. In one of the year’s biggest headlines, Procter & Gamble (P&G), a global consumer goods giant with decades of presence in Pakistan, announced that it would wind down its direct operations and transition to a distributor-based model. The company will no longer operate local manufacturing or maintain the extensive commercial footprint it once held. This is part of a global restructuring, but Pakistan is among the markets where P&G has elected to significantly reduce on-ground exposure. Gillette Pakistan, a company associated with the P&G brand portfolio, moved toward voluntary delisting from the Pakistan Stock Exchange as part of these structural shifts.
Another major exit came from Philip Morris (Pakistan), which received formal approval for voluntary delisting in October 2025. The sponsor shareholders offered to buy back minority shares at Rs 1,300 each through 2026. While the company continues operations, the delisting reflects a strategic decision to reduce public market exposure in a challenging regulatory environment.
In the industrial sector, one of the most consequential corporate events of 2025 was the sale of Lotte Chemical Corporation’s stake in Lotte Chemical Pakistan. On November 13, 2025, Lotte announced that it had sold approximately 75 per cent of its stake to Dubai-based PTA Global Holding for around $68.94 million. Lotte Chemical Pakistan operates one of the country’s most important PTA (purified terephthalic acid) plants, producing about 500,000 tons annually-a core input for Pakistan’s polyester, textile, and packaging sectors. The sale was part of a larger restructuring effort of the parent company’s petrochemical portfolio, but its implications for Pakistan are significant: another long-term multinational sponsor withdrawing equity from domestic industrial operations.
The technology and mobility sector witnessed a symbolic setback as well. Careem, a major ride-hailing operator in the Middle East and South Asia, announced in June 2025 that it would suspend its core ride-hailing operations in Pakistan effective July 18, 2025. The company cited a difficult investment climate, intense competition, and unsustainable operational costs. This decision came after Uber’s earlier departure from Pakistan, signalling broader challenges in sustaining app-based mobility services in the country’s price-sensitive market.
While these exits underscore concerns about Pakistan’s business environment, the overall investment story of 2025 is not unidirectional. Several major new investments and commitments emerged during the year. In February, Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison announced an investment plan worth nearly $1 billion to upgrade port operations, including automation and expansion of container terminals. The government anticipates significant long-term revenues from associated taxes, royalties, and rent.
Pakistan also completed its first offshore oil and gas bidding round in nearly two decades in late October 2025. Out of 40 available blocks, 23 were awarded to consortia comprising both local and international partners, including Turkey’s TPAO and Hong Kong’s United Energy Group. Initial work commitments total around $80 million, with potential total investments exceeding $700 million if exploration transitions to drilling and development.
The country’s strategic relationship with China also resulted in major commitments in 2025. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Beijing yielded investment agreements worth around $8.5 billion, including multiple joint ventures in agriculture, renewable energy, electric vehicles, healthcare, and steel. Meanwhile, the World Bank approved a 10-year, $20 billion lending programme to support Pakistan’s economic reform efforts, climate resilience, and energy sector restructuring.
Taken collectively, Pakistan’s 2025 corporate and economic landscape presents a clear pattern: the country excels at attracting large, government-led investments in infrastructure, mining, and energy. It is less successful at retaining long-term multinational operators in everyday consumer, industrial, and technology sectors. The corporate exits of P&G, Philip Morris, Lotte Chemical’s parent company, and Careem reflect the pain points experienced by companies that must navigate daily regulatory hurdles, unpredictable taxation, energy shortages, import restrictions, and currency instability.
Pakistan is standing at a corporate crossroads. The stock market’s performance suggests confidence and momentum, driven by liquidity and the IMF anchor. Large-scale foreign investments indicate that global players still see strategic value in Pakistan. But the steady retreat of multinationals from consumer-facing and mid-margin businesses reveals systemic problems that capital alone cannot fix.
The challenge for policymakers is to use this window of improved macroeconomic stability to address the micro-level issues that drive operators away. Stability at the top-IMF programmes, currency buffers, and government-to-government deals-is no substitute for predictable rules, consistent taxation, manageable regulatory processes, and affordable energy for businesses on the ground.
If Pakistan can reconcile these contradictions, 2025 may be remembered as a turning point. If not, the country risks entrenching a two-tier economy-one where big projects thrive but everyday businesses struggle, and where the stock market rises even as the corporate landscape thins. The choice, and the moment, are both unmistakably here.
The writer is a financial expert and can be reached at jawadsaleem.1982@ gmail.com. He tweets @JawadSaleem1982
