The naira appreciated,
yesterday, against the US dollar in the parallel market, closing at N215 to a
dollar. This represents an appreciation of N16 from Tuesday when a dollar
exchanged for N231 in Lagos and Kano, and N230 to a dollar in Abuja.
It was gathered that the CBN issued
a circular to sell additional $30,000 to all licensed bureaux de change (BDCs)
in the country on Friday, apart from the weekly sale of $30,000 that the apex
bank normally makes to each BDC.
Earlier in the day, naira exchanged
for as high as N235 to a dollar, but a parallel market source noted that the
news of the CBN circular prompted various firms to hurriedly sell off the
dollars in their possession leading to increase in supply of dollars to the
market and thus crashing the exchange rate.
The hurried sale is in anticipation
that the market would be flooded by dollars when the additional sale is made by
the apex bank on Friday. The official exchange rate remains pegged by CBN at
N197 to a dollar.
Vanguard investigations on Tuesday had revealed that the naira
depreciation was as a result of panic buying of the dollar in the hope that it
would further depreciate. Sources said that there was hoarding of foreign
currency going on at the unofficial market.
They said the appreciation of the
naira last week was temporary and that the exchange rate was most likely to
return to its previous level.
The naira had last week appreciated
by N35 fromN245 per dollar to N210, due to excess dollars in the market,
occasioned by refusal of banks to allow foreign currency deposits into domiciliary
accounts.
Banks reject foreign currencies
deposit
Meanwhile, Vanguard gathered
that commercial banks have started rejecting deposit of all other foreign
currencies in addition to dollars.
It would be recalled that last week,
banks stopped accepting dollars because they had too much cash in their vaults
– reported to be in excess of $1 billion —in a desperate measure taken to
mitigate currency risk.
Contrary to the reports that the
excess was caused by CBN’s refusal to accept dollar deposit from banks in
return for credit into their foreign accounts, Head of Foreign Exchange unit of
a Tier 2 bank told Vanguard that the decision of the CBN was in response
to the increasing volume of dollar deposit from banks for credit into their
foreign accounts.
He said hitherto banks don’t take
the dollars to the CBN but swap it among themselves. “Banks with surplus
dollars exchange it for naira with banks with deficit. CBN was not involved.
But when the volume of dollars in the system became more than what the banks
entirely needed, they started taking it to the CBN to swap it for credit into
their foreign accounts. But when the CBN observed an increasing trend in the
volume of dollars banks were bringing for transfer, it decided to discontinue
to the service. So what the CBN did only aggravate it, but it was not the
source of the problem.”
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