The
foreign reserves of Nigeria has started falling again after months of
meteoric rise as Nigeria struggling to overcome economic recession.
The country’s external reserves fell to a two-week low and the
naira eased on the black market on Friday after the Central Bank of
Nigeria pledged to step up dollar sales.
This came just as the CBN said it would announce a new exchange rate for Bureau De Change Operators next week, Reuters reported.
The central bank had on Tuesday set a rate of N362/dollar for the
BDC operators to sell the greenback to customers, an 11 per cent rise
over the 399 it set in January.
The CBN has been selling the dollars on the official market in
order to narrow the spread with the black market rate, which was quoted
at a record low of N520 per dollar a month ago.
On Friday, the black market naira rate, which has firmed 17 per
cent since last month due to central bank dollar sales on the official
market aimed at narrowing the spread, eased by 1.8 per cent to
390/dollar, Thomson Reuters data showed.
The naira held its level at 306.35 to the dollar after the central bank sold $1.5m on the spot market.
The CBN had on Thursday said it would increase the amount it was
offering to the BDCs to $10,000 per member from $8,000, but would
announce a new rate on April 3.
Traders said the new rate announcement had created uncertainty and caused the naira to trade weaker on the black market.
But dollar buffers have started to decline. Traders estimate that
the bank has sold more than $1bn in currency forwards since last month
to boost liquidity.
The external reserves, which have risen by 16.1 per cent since the
start of the year, stood at $30.29bn by March 29, but are still far off
their peak of $64bn, hit in August 2008, the CBN data showed.
The International Monetary Fund on Thursday urged the Federal
Government to lift the remaining foreign exchange restrictions and scrap
the system of multiple exchange rates in order to revive the economy.
Economic and financial experts said they were not sure if the CBN
would continue to intervene in the market, especially as the price of
oil continued to decline slightly in recent times.
Some analysts believe the central bank may not cut further the
N360/dollar rate set for the sale of the greenback for invisibles by
commercial banks.
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