Dollar and Other Currency Rates in Pakistan Today, 06 Jan. 2026
- By Web Desk -
- Jan 06, 2026

Karachi, 06 January 2026 – The Pakistani rupee started the first full trading week of 2026 on a steadier note, with the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) fixing the USD/PKR mark-to-market currency rate at Rs 280.0731, 7 paisa below last close and the slimmest print since the year-end holiday lull.
Priority Currencies – Quick Take
1. US Dollar (USD) – 280.07 (spot)
The 7-paisa dip keeps the greenback locked inside the 279–282 range that has governed trade since October. One-week forwards sit at 280.38, implying a wafer-thin 0.11 % carry. Exporters continue to sell above 280.50, while oil importers nibble below 280.00.
“Liquidity is ample; the currency rate is drifting on positional tidy-ups rather than fresh macro cues,” said a senior treasury dealer.
2. British Pound (GBP) – 379.86 (spot)
Sterling grabs headline space at 379.86 after UK wage data cooled BoE rate-cut bets; one-year forward is 395.81, implying 4.2 % annualised rupee softness. Textile exporters to Manchester are locking in six-month receivables above 382, keeping forward points well bid.
3. Saudi Riyal (SAR) – 74.68
SAR edges 1 paisa lower to 74.68; 12-month forward is 77.23, an annualised 3.4 %—still the narrowest band among major remittance corridors. Exchange booths see steady demand from Umrah travellers locking in ahead of the January rush.
4. UAE Dirham (AED) – 76.25
AED softens 1 paisa to 76.25; six-month forward is 77.48, implying 3.3 % annualised rupee softness. UAE salary inflows remain anchored to formal banking, keeping the pair quietly stable.
5. Qatari Riyal (QAR) – 76.63
QAR slips 1 paisa to 76.63; 12-month forward is 79.90, a 4.3 % annualised gap—virtually identical to SAR and AED, underscoring uniform Gulf-peg calm.
6. Kuwaiti Dinar (KWD) – 911.65
KWD is flat at 911.65; twelve-month forwards at 958.06 equate to 5.1 % annualised PKR weakness—marginally wider than GCC peers owing to thinner dinar liquidity.
7. Australian Dollar (AUD) – 188.60
The “Aussie” rebounds to 188.60 as iron-ore steadies above $102/t. One-year forward is 195.82, implying 3.8 % annualised rupee deprecation—almost flat against the SAR curve, confirming commodity-driven moves.
8. Canadian Dollar (CAD) – 203.61
The “Loonie” holds above 203.61 as WTI crude hovers near $77/bbl. Twelve-month forwards at 215.06 still pencil out to 5.6 % annualised rupee softness, but importers of prairie pulses are said to have covered February shipments early, capping further CAD gains.
Other Majors – Single-Paragraph Round-Up
Euro opens at 328.62, down 0.2 % on the week after softer German CPI data; one-year forward is 347.97, translating into 5.9 % annualised rupee weakness. Japanese yen remains the cheapest major at 1.79 per unit, but forwards price 7.1 % annualised PKR decline—the steepest among G-10 pairs. Swiss franc is 354.05; Singapore dollar 218.94; Swedish krona 30.58; Norwegian krone 28.00; Danish krone 43.98; New Zealand dollar 162.68; Chinese yuan 40.12; Turkish lira 6.51; Russian ruble 3.47; Indian rupee 3.11; Bangladeshi taka 2.29—all inside well-worn ranges and implying no event-risk premium ahead of the IMF’s first-quarter 2026 review.
Market Context & Outlook
The uniformly slender forward premiums—barely 5–6 % annualised even for the least-liquid pairs—tell currency desks that both importers and exporters believe the State Bank has enough cover to defend the rupee through the winter remittance season. Reserves have risen $1.5 billion in six weeks to $20.8 billion, while the real effective exchange rate (REER) slipped to 98.2 in November, a level the IMF considers “competitive but not undervalued.” Unless oil spikes above $90 or political noise disrupts the Fund programme, traders expect the USD currency rate to remain hand-cuffed to the 278–282 corridor for the opening quarter of 2026, dragging the rest of the currency mosaic along in its slipstream.