November 7, 2013 - 16:04 AMT
Egypt says foreign currency reserves dropped to $18.59bn

Egypt's central bank says the country's foreign currency reserves dropped slightly, to $18.59 billion at the end of October. The announcement was reported on the central bank's official website on Thursday, Nov 7, according to the Associated Press.

The level represents a slight drop from July, when foreign reserves reached $18.8 billion — their highest level in almost two years.

That increase came after Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait pledged a total of $12 billion dollars in aid to Egypt following the popularly-backed July 3 coup that ousted the country's Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.

The three Gulf countries had been at odds with Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood group.

Still, Egypt's military-backed interim government faces increasing unemployment, widespread poverty and a burdensome and ill-distributed subsidy system.