State Bank of Pakistan’s foreign reserves surge by $14 million

Foreign reserves held by the central bank stood at $14,574.8 million.

Pakistan’s liquid foreign reserves stood at $19,588.5 million as of November 28, 2025.

Foreign reserves held by the central bank stood at $14,574.8 million. Net foreign reserves held by the commercial banks stood at $5,013.7 million as of November 28, 2025, according to the data shared by the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) on Thursday.

During the week ending November 28, 2025, the State Bank of Pakistan’s (SBP) foreign reserves rose by $14 million, reaching $14,574.8 million. The previous week, reserves had increased by $9 million to $14,560.7 million. Two weeks earlier, reserves grew by $27 million to $14,551.5 million, and three weeks back, they increased by $22 million to $14,524.6 million.

Four weeks ago, reserves rose by $31 million to $14,502.8 million. Five weeks back, they increased by $16 million to $14,471.6 million, and six weeks back, by $14 million to $14,455.2 million. Seven weeks ago, reserves grew by $21 million to $14,440.8 million, and eight weeks back, they rose by $20 million to $14,420.1 million.

Read more: Saudi Arabia extends Pakistan’s $3bn deposit for one year

Nine weeks ago, SBP’s liquid foreign reserves increased by $21 million to $14,400.4 million, and ten weeks back, by $22 million to $14,379.5 million. During the week ending September 12, 2025, reserves rose by $21 million to $14,357.2 million. Prior to that, reserves had increased by $34 million to $14,336.3 million, $28 million to $14,302.5 million, and $18 million to $14,274.3 million.

Overall, SBP’s foreign reserves have shown a steady increase over the past ten weeks, reflecting gradual improvement in the central bank’s external liquidity position.

Read more: Currency Exchange Rates in Pakistan Today