President Muhammadu Buhari says he is opposed to a
further weakening of the naira, and has endorsed the Central Bank’s
policy of restricting foreign-exchange trading.
“I don’t think it is healthy for us to get the naira devalued,” Buhari said in an interview in Paris with France 24, broadcast yesterday.
The Central Bank is providing ample foreign exchange to “essential services, industries,” he said.
The unqualified presidential backing of the policy of
Central Bank Governor Godwin Emefiele, is bound to dampen the clamour by
analysts and portfolio managers for a further weakening of the currency
of Africa’s largest oil producer.
After a halving of oil prices in the past year, the
Central Bank of Nigeria reacted to the naira’s drop to a record low in
February by extending trading curbs and introducing bans on purchases of
dollars by certain importers.
And this was after the naira had been devalued by close to 23 per cent, sparking panic, but much of that has now receded.
While the currency has since stabilised, foreign
investors, local businesses and even some of Monetary Policy Committee
members have complained that it is overvalued.
Emefiele has consistently said the foreign exchange controls were helping to stabilise the naira and replenish reserves.
“These policies have led to a significant stabilisation in
the exchange rate and an improvement in market sentiments,” Emefiele
said last month, in a speech to Nigeria’s Senate in Abuja. The measures,
coupled with efforts by the administration of President Buhari to cut
wasted spending “have seen our foreign exchange reserves begin a gradual
recovery,” he said.
The central bank started restricting currency trading in
December in a bid to stem the fall of the naira, as the price of oil,
Nigeria’s main export and source of two-thirds of government revenue,
plunged. Last month, the central bank banned importers of about 40
items, including toothpicks, private jets and wheelbarrows from using official foreign-exchange markets.
Emefiele said Nigeria’s foreign-exchange
reserves have risen to $31.9 billion on Tuesday, more than the figure of
$29.6 billion from the central bank’s data for the same day.
The central bank has “zero tolerance for
speculators,” Emefiele said in the speech. “Nigeria’s foreign reserves
remain our common wealth and we must all strive to work together to
protect it and prevent speculators and rent seekers from plundering it.”
While the measures have stabilised the
naira at an average of 199.02 per dollar since the start of March, some
critics including Atedo Peterside, chairman of Stanbic IBTC Holdings
Plc, the local unit of Africa’s largest lender, Standard Bank Group Ltd
say controls have left Nigerian companies unable to source the dollars
they need to pay foreign suppliers.
“People underestimate the problems that
exchange rate systems can pose to businesses,” Peterside said in an
interview on Wednesday in Lagos, the commercial capital. “Instead of
doing business, they’re devoting 40 percent of their time to scouting
around for dollars, pulling crumbs together.”
No comments:
Post a Comment