Home Money CURRENCY; Naira takes fresh beating as reserve declines to $27.8bn

CURRENCY; Naira takes fresh beating as reserve declines to $27.8bn

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The naira yesterday, depreciated in value against the dollar across foreign exchange (FX) markets due to shortage of the greenback.

Specifically, the naira weakened by N20 or 6.45 percent to close at N360/$, compared with N310/$ on Friday last week at the parallel market.

It also lost N15 or 4.92 percent against the greenback at the autonomous market, closing at N320/$ as against N305/$ on Friday last week.

At the interbank market, the naira depreciated slightly in value against the dollar by N0.03k or 0.02 percent, as it close at N199.37/$ on Monday from N199.34 on last week Friday, data from FMDQ reveal.

However, the CBN’s clearing rate at the interbank market yesterday remained unchanged at N197/$, data from FMDQ indicate.

Nigeria’s dollar reserves fell to $27.8 billion by February 25, a 1.6 percent decline from a month earlier, central bank data showed on Monday, Reuters report. That marked an 11.91 percent decline from the $31.57 billion recorded a year earlier, the data showed.

According to analysts at Afrinvest Securities Limited, dynamics of the Nigerian FX was different last week, as the naira strengthened against the dollar at the parallel market to a high of N320/$ during the week. This naira rally was however not unexpected given that the weakness in exchange rate in the previous week was driven majorly by speculations regarding inclusion of items such as international school fees and health care bills in the list of items banned for FX access at official and interbank markets.

In a bid to stem this speculative pressure, the CBN last weekend released a circular to douse these fears and affirmed the legality of FX demand for both services at the regulated markets.

While the unpredictability of BDC and parallel market rates continues, the CBN and interbank rates remain unchanged at N197/$ and N199.10/$, respectively.

“We expect pressure to continue to mount on parallel segment rate as a fundamental demand/supply mismatch for foreign currencies subsists, while liquidity remains weak in the interbank market,” the analysts said.

 

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