Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Fuel pumps run dry in Mozambique capital as dollar deficit bites

MAPUTO, Mozambique

From empty fuel pumps to dollars selling for a steep premium on the street, Mozambique’s foreign-currency crunch is becoming increasingly obvious in the natural gas-rich southeast African nation.

Motorists in Maputo, the capital, hunt for filling stations that have stock and join increasingly long queues when they find them. Red and white tape cordoning off pumps that have run dry has become a common sight.

Informal currency traders are seeing rising demand for dollars, and expect the gap between the official and parallel-market rates to continue widening.

Mozambique’s foreign-currency shortage follows months of post-election unrest. Pressures have built under what the International Monetary Fund has dubbed a “de-facto stabilized” exchange rate.

Allowing depreciation could fuel inflation in a tense political environment, while the central bank is reluctant to tap reserves.

Already, a dollar costs 78 meticais on the informal market in downtown Maputo, a premium of more than 20% to the Banco de Moçambique’s official rate that’s barely changed since July 2021.

And as it becomes more difficult to source foreign exchange from commercial banks, the informal market is booming.

“People have no choice,” said Santos, a street currency trader near Maputo’s bustling central market who only wanted to provide his first name. “More and more are buying from us because they can’t get dollars elsewhere.”

At least one flour mill can’t access foreign currency for wheat imports, and bakers face a 17% price surge since January, Victor Miguel, head of the local bread-makers association, said by phone.

The Banco de Moçambique, the headquarters of which are located a block away from where Santos trades, has played down the foreign currency shortage, saying its January move to cut mandatory reserves for commercial lenders freed up dollar liquidity.

This month, it increased the value of export revenues that companies must convert to local currency to 50% from the prior 30%.

The central bank didn’t immediately respond to a request seeking comment. Neither did Mozambique’s main business-lobby group, which has previously complained of hundreds of millions of dollars in unmet demand for foreign exchange among its members. The local banking association declined to comment.

Banco de Moçambique Governor Rogério Zandamela last month dismissed concern over foreign-exchange shortages and highlighted the importance of building strategic international reserves.

The country’s reserves slipped in January to $3.68 billion, data from the central bank show.

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