Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 29 Jun 2025, 11:31 am Print
Pakistan Shehbaz Sharif meeting Xi Jinping. Photo: Shehbaz Sharif/X
China has signed a $3.7 billion equivalent commercial loan deal with Pakistan, which has pulled the South Asian country's foreign exchange reserves back to the double-digits from the critically low level of $8.9 billion last week, media reports said.
According to reports, the deal is expected to help meet a commitment with the International Monetary Fund to close the fiscal year 2024-25 with $14 billion gross foreign exchange reserves.
Official sources told The Express Tribune that the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and the Bank of China have signed a total $1.6 billion deals on Friday.
The money will reportedly be disbursed on Monday.
Sources told the newspaper that Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar played a critical role in finalising the deals after he was approached by the finance ministry.
Dar first started pursuing the Chinese authorities on May 19, and that eventually led to the signing and even the disbursement of the $2.1 billion commercial loan by a syndicate of three Chinese commercial banks this week.
- Big tech shock: Anthropic suspends latest AI tools amid US security concerns
- Trump declares Iran war over — but Tehran refuses to confirm any deal
- Anti-immigrant riots shock Northern Ireland; Indian community says ‘people are scared’
- Anti-immigration protest hit Belfast after knife attack
- Fresh West Asia flashpoint: Iran claims successful attack on US military targets

