LAGOS—
The naira, yesterday, depreciated further to N385 per dollar in the parallel
market as demand for foreign exchange intensified.
This
implies the naira has depreciated by N60 against the dollar this week in the
parallel market, when compared with the closing exchange rate of N325 per
dollar last Friday. The currency, however, remained stable at the official
interbank foreign exchange market as the interbank rate closed N199.34,
yesterday. Thus, the gap between the interbank and parallel market rates
widened to N185.66 per dollar from N127.53 last Friday.
Vanguard investigation also reveals that the
naira depreciated against the British pounds to N505 per pounds in the parallel
market, yesterday, implying N65 depreciation when compared with the closing
rate of N440 last Friday. Investigations revealed that the sharp depreciation
of the naira in the parallel market this week is driven by increasing demand by
importers sourcing dollars to pay for imports from China.
According
to a BDC operator, who spoke on condition of anonymity, “you know China had been
on its one month annual holidays. But they resumed work on Monday, and people
have to complete payment for goods ordered before the holidays. “They had made
30 per cent down payment to order the goods and they now have to pay the 70 per
cent balance otherwise they will lose the 30 per cent. That is why they are
desperate and ready to buy dollars at any rate. Meanwhile, supply is scarce and
those who have dollars are not willing to sell because they might also need the
currency soon.
”
The naira has been on steady decline since Tuesday, January 12, 2016, when the
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) stopped weekly dollar sale to BDCs. Prior to this
action, the naira traded at N265 per dollar in the parallel market.
Consequently, the naira has depreciated by N80 in the parallel market since the
CBN took the action. The steady depreciation was also aggravated by inability
of the CBN to meet foreign exchange demand. Vanguard investigations reveal that
the parallel market is being bedevilled with demand for foreign exchange from
importers of the 41 items excluded from the official market by CBN last year as
well as importers of items not excluded from the official market.
No comments:
Post a Comment