News

Pakistan qualifies for UK’s new scheme

Pakistan has qualified for the United Kingdom’s new preferential trade scheme, which allows Islamabad to avail duty-free exports to the UK markets. On June 19, the preferential trade programme called the Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS) replaced the UK’s Generalised Scheme of Preference (GSP). Pakistan will be one of the 65 countries to avail lower tariffs on exports to the UK market.

Cold winter on the cards as govt fails to secure gas

ISLAMABAD: The country has failed to secure liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the spot market in its first attempt after a year-long break, as it received no bid for six shipments for the coming winter months. State-run Pakistan LNG Ltd (PLL), which last week floated short-term tenders for three cargoes each in October and December, announced on Tuesday that it received no bid for any of the del

PM Shehbaz vows to present Pakistan’s position on global financial firms’ restructuring at Paris summit

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday said he planned to present Pakistan’s stance on the urgent need to restructure international financial institutions to address the challenges facing humanity. He made the remarks as he was departing for France to attend the New Global Financing Pact Summit in Paris. In a tweet, the premier emphasised that the summit provided a “unique opportunity” f

Foreign direct investment dips 21pc

After a drop in both remittances and exports, foreign direct investment (FDI) fell 21 per cent in the 11 months through May, though inflows in May rose on both month-on-month and year-on-year bases. The State Bank’s data issued on Tuesday noted an FDI inflow of $149.6 million in May compared to $121.6m in April 2023 and $141.2m in May 2022. Due to prolonged political and economic uncertainti

680 points lost on IMF-driven panic selling

Stock prices tumbled on Monday on negative macroeconomic triggers as the representative index of the Pakistan Stock Exchange dropped below the psychological level of 41,000 points. Topline Securities said the “bloodbath” was caused by selling headwinds after a gap of almost eight weeks. It attributed the selling spree to the calendar of the International Monetary Fund’s Executive Board, which