Kenyan tea still held in Karachi port in Pakistan despite the letter of credit order

Published 2023년 3월 21일

Tridge summary

Kenya's tea exports to Pakistan are being held up at the Karachi port due to a dollar shortage in Pakistan, leading to a restriction on imports. To allow for the release of the tea, the State Bank of Pakistan has designated it as an essential food commodity, but traders are still not issuing Letters of Credit (LCs) due to reluctance. This situation is causing a potential price hike in Pakistan and affecting Kenyan sales. The situation is further complicated by the possibility of tea being removed from the essential goods list after the Ramadhan period.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Kenyan tea is still held at the Karachi port even after Islamabad gave a directive to allow banks to give traders a letter of credit (LC) to free the commodity five days ago. The State Bank of Pakistan on Thursday listed tea as an essential food commodity, a move that would allow banks to issue LCs to tea traders. Nearly 200 containers of Kenyan tea have since last month been held at the port in Karachi as traders lack LCS, which is mandatory before the ships are allowed to offload the beverage. Pakistan is suffering from a serious dollar shortage, forcing it to restrict imports in order to preserve the little that is remaining in foreign reserves. “The tea is still being held up at the port in Pakistan,” said Peter Kimanga, a tea trader at the Mombasa Auction. The Pakistan government listed tea as an essential commodity last week on the advice of the Pakistan Tea Association in order to tame the expected high prices as the country joins the rest of the world in observing the ...

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