Economy April 5, 2026

Cairo Steps Up Mediation as Domestic Private Sector Weakens

Diplomatic outreach on de-escalation coincides with sharp deterioration in Egypt's non-oil private sector and rising input costs

By Maya Rios
Cairo Steps Up Mediation as Domestic Private Sector Weakens

Egypt has intensified diplomatic efforts to de-escalate the Middle East conflict, holding high-level calls with U.S. and Iranian officials while data show the country’s non-oil private sector contracting at its steepest pace in nearly two years. Rising fuel costs and a stronger U.S. dollar have driven a sharp increase in input prices, and business sentiment has turned negative for the first time in the PMI survey’s history.

Key Points

  • Egypt has intensified diplomatic engagement, with Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty holding calls with U.S. Envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi to pursue de-escalation proposals.
  • S&P Global’s Egypt PMI fell to 48.0, marking the fourth consecutive monthly decline and signaling contraction in the non-oil private sector.
  • Input prices rose at a joint-fastest pace in 18 months, driven by higher fuel prices and a stronger U.S. dollar, and business expectations slipped into negative territory for the first time in the survey’s history.

Egypt has taken a more active diplomatic posture in the regional crisis even as its domestic economy shows signs of strain. Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty conducted a series of high-level calls on Sunday with U.S. Envoy Steve Witkoff and Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi to press urgent proposals aimed at de-escalation.

The diplomatic push has occurred alongside fresh evidence that the country’s non-oil private sector is weakening. S&P Global’s Egypt Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell for the fourth month in a row to 48.0, indicating contraction in activity. The survey also recorded a joint-sharpest surge in input costs in 18 months, a development that participants attributed to soaring fuel prices and a strengthening U.S. dollar.

Government diplomacy has focused in part on logistics and trade-security measures. Egypt, together with Turkey and Pakistan, has emerged as an intermediary in discussions that have included proposals to reopen the Strait of Hormuz after a recent summit in Islamabad. The involvement of U.S. Envoy Witkoff signals the global importance of any steps to secure that key energy corridor. Cairo is attempting to thread a difficult needle - serving as a regional interlocutor on de-escalation while shielding a fragile domestic recovery from adverse spillovers caused by the conflict.

Beyond the headline PMI reading, the survey highlighted a notable shift in sentiment. For the first time in the history of the Egypt PMI, firms reported negative business expectations for the coming 12 months. The report described a sense of "mild gloom" among respondents, as concerns about how long the war will last began to outweigh expectations for domestic growth.

The combination of elevated input-cost inflation and falling activity presents policy and market challenges. Higher fuel costs directly affect manufacturers, transport and logistics providers, and businesses with heavy energy intensity, while a stronger U.S. dollar raises import costs for companies reliant on foreign-sourced inputs. The deterioration in non-oil private sector activity underscores risks to the broader services and manufacturing segments of the economy.

As Cairo pursues mediation efforts, the economic readings suggest policymakers and market participants will be closely monitoring both diplomatic progress and near-term cost pressures. How quickly input-price inflation eases, and whether business confidence can recover, will be key variables for the private sector’s trajectory amid ongoing regional tensions.

Risks

  • Prolonged conflict - Continued uncertainty over the war’s duration could sustain negative business sentiment and suppress investment and hiring in services and manufacturing.
  • Rising input costs - Soaring fuel prices and a stronger U.S. dollar may increase expenses for energy-intensive sectors, transport, and firms dependent on imported inputs, squeezing margins.
  • Trade disruption - Any instability affecting the Strait of Hormuz could disrupt energy flows and global trade, with knock-on effects for domestic energy costs and export-import activity.

More from Economy

AI-Driven Memory Demand Forces Strategic Shift at Samsung and SK Hynix Apr 5, 2026 Markets Pin Eyes on Inflation as Middle East Conflict Keeps Investors on Edge Apr 5, 2026 Delay of Trump’s China State Visit Alters Timing but Not Strategic Course, Says BofA Apr 5, 2026 Turkish Officials Reassure Investors in London as Rate Hike Remains an Option Apr 5, 2026 Goldman Sachs: Strait of Hormuz Disruption Strains Supplies but Stops Short of Global Shortage Apr 5, 2026