Israel’s foreign exchange reserves at the end of July 2025 fell to $226.728 billion – a decrease of $1.481 billion from their level at the end of June, the Bank of Israel reports.
Israel’s foreign exchange reserves at the end of July 2025 fell to $226.728 billion – a decrease of $1.481 billion from their level at the end of June, the Bank of Israel reports. The level of the reserves relative to GDP at the end of June was 41.4%.
The decline was the result of a revaluation that decreased the reserves by about $1.170 billion, and foreign exchange activities totaling about $208 million and foreign exchange sales of $273 million by the Bank of Israel.
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Israel’s foreign exchange reserves have risen from $210.281 billion at the end of June 2024 to a record $228.250 billion at the end of June.
In June, the Bank of Israel sold nearly $300 million in foreign currency – its first such sales since the early months of the war. Despite announcing in October 2023 at the start of the war, a plan to sell up to $30 billion in foreign currency to support the shekel, the Bank of Israel only sold $8.5 billion in foreign currency, most of it in October and November 2023.
Published by Globes, Israel business news – en.globes.co.il – on August 7, 2025.
© Copyright of Globes Publisher Itonut (1983) Ltd., 2025.

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