AEDPKR denotes the exchange rate between the United Arab Emirates Dirham and the Pakistan Rupee, indicating how many Pakistani rupees are required to purchase one UAE dirham. It tracks cross-border value between the two currencies and is used in pricing, settlement and currency conversion.
The United Arab Emirates Dirham (AED) is the official currency of the UAE and several of its constituent emirates, commonly used across the Gulf Cooperation Council region for trade and finance. The dirham is issued and regulated by the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates, which manages monetary policy, foreign reserves and banking supervision.
The Pakistan Rupee (PKR) serves as the legal tender of Pakistan and is the currency for domestic transactions and cross-border flows involving Pakistan. Monetary authority responsibilities for the rupee fall to the State Bank of Pakistan, which oversees currency issuance, interest-rate policy and financial stability measures.
Movements in AEDPKR are driven by supply and demand across foreign-exchange markets, differences in interest rates, relative inflation, and the respective central banks’ policy actions. Geopolitical developments, remittance flows and commodity-price shifts can also exert significant influence on short- and long-term exchange-rate trends.
For businesses, traders and investors, AEDPKR is relevant for trade settlement, remittance valuation, hedging currency risk and speculative strategies tied to Gulf–Pakistan economic links.