Reuters: ** Sri Lanka’s rupee closed slightly weaker on Wednesday in thin trade due to light dollar demand from banks and importers, while worries over political uncertainty and fiscal slippage weighed on investor sentiment.
** The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will resume discussions with Sri Lanka in February for further disbursal of part of a $1.5 billion loan, the lender said, after a political crisis led to talks being delayed by three months.
** The rupee ended at 182.30/40 per dollar on Wednesday, compared with 182.15/30 in the previous session, market sources said. Markets were closed on Tuesday for a holiday. On Jan.3, the rupee had fallen to an all-time low of 183.00 against the dollar.
** The rupee fell 19 percent in 2018, making it one of the worst-performing currencies in Asia, according to Refinitiv data, due to heavy foreign outflows.
** The rupee has declined about 5 percent since the political crisis started.
** A series of credit rating downgrades have made it harder for Sri Lanka to borrow as it faces record high repayments of $5.9 billion this year, with $2.6 billion of it due in the first three months.
** On Tuesday, the island nation’s junior Finance Minister, Eran Wickramaratne, told Reuters that Sri Lanka was considering an offer from Bank of China for a loan of $300 million, which could be raised to $1 billion, to help it meet repayments in the coming months.
** The central bank on Jan.9 said that the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had agreed to provide $400 million to it under a regional swap facility and it had also requested a further bilateral swap arrangements of $1 billion.
** Sri Lankan shares closed slightly weaker, near their more than six-week closing low hit on Friday.
** The Colombo Stock Index ended 0.13 percent weaker at 5,973.34, hovering near its lowest close since Nov. 26 hit on Friday. The benchmark stock index lost 5 percent in 2018.
** Turnover was 950.2 million rupees ($5.22 million), more than last year’s daily average of 834 million rupees.
** Foreign investors sold a net 620.6 million rupees worth of shares on Wednesday. They have been net sellers of 15.3 billion rupees worth of stocks since a political crisis began on Oct. 26. The bond market saw outflows of 77.9 billion rupees between Oct. 25 and Jan. 9, the latest central bank data showed.
** Foreign investors pulled a net 22.8 billion rupees out of stocks last year, while they net sold 159.8 billion rupees from government securities from January through Dec. 26, bourse and central bank showed data.
** Sri Lanka President Maithripala Sirisena appointed a cabinet of ministers from his rival party on Dec. 21 after he was forced to reinstate Ranil Wickremesinghe as prime minister, 51 days after he was sacked.
** The crisis is expected to ease, though tense relations between the two men could cause fiscal problems, analysts say.
** Sri Lanka plans to increase government spending by 13.2 percent from last year to 4.47 trillion rupees in 2019, the finance ministry said last week.
($1 = 182.2000 Sri Lankan rupees)
(Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)