The naira was sold at the parallel
market for 440 per dollar on Sunday, as the lingering foreign exchange
scarcity increased to a new level.
The local currency, which closed at 436/dollar on Thursday, eased to 435 in the early hours of Friday. It closed at 439/dollar.
The naira had closed at 428 to the
greenback on Wednesday, down from 424 on Tuesday, as lingering foreign
exchange shortage weighed on the economy.
The MPC had after its two-day bi-monthly
meeting left the Monetary Policy Rate unchanged, rebuffing calls for
rates cut by analysts, stakeholders and some government officials,
including the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun.
However, economic and currency analysts
have said the decline in the value of the local currency against the
dollar has nothing to do with the MPC decision.
At the interbank market, the naira
closed at 307.79 on Friday. It closed at 307.25, 311 and 312 on Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday respectively, according to data posted on the
FMDQ OTC platform.
“There is shortage of dollar supply.
Diaspora remittances have dropped. This is why you can see the rate
dropping at the parallel market,” an economic analyst and Chief
Executive Officer, Cowry Asset Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Chukwu,
said.
The development came amid depleting external reserves, which stood at $24.8bn last Monday.
The latest data posted on the CBN
website showed that the foreign exchange reserves were down by 3.4 per
cent from a month ago to its lowest level in more than 11 years, as the
apex bank sells the greenback at the interbank market to support the
naira.
Economic and currency analysts had said
there had been no significant policy response to the fall in the
reserves, further fuelling the concerns.
The Association of Bureau De Change
Operators of Nigeria had said the naira would recover by Monday due to
the introduction of Travelex, a licensed forex dealer.
Travelex, an international money transfer organisation, would begin to distribute forex to the BDC operators on Monday (today).
The President, ABCON, Alhaji Aminu
Gwadabe, said the forex distribution would be efficient and uniform
across ABCON members, unlike what was obtainable in the past.
According to him, Travelex has the
technology to sell forex to about 1,000 BDCs in a couple of hours, which
is a major advantage.
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