The naira will weaken further at the
parallel market this week after shedding nine per cent of its value last
week, foreign exchange dealers and economic experts have said.
Last week, the local currency fell from 310 to 338 as acute shortage of the greenback lingered.
The CBN has left the official exchange rate unchanged at N197 to the dollar on its official interbank window.
Forex dealers and experts expect the
naira to fall further at the parallel market this week as demand for the
greenback continues to soar.
“The situation has got to the point of
hysteria now; everybody wants to hold dollars. So the demand is rising
and piling up,” the Chief Executive Officer, Cowry Asset Management
Limited, Mr. Johnson Chukwu, said.
The local currency hit a record low of
338 to the dollar on Thursday as desperate importers scrambled for
dollars to meet their obligations overseas.
The local currency had closed at 325, 318, 313.5 and 310 on Thursday, Wednesday, Tuesday and Monday, respectively.
“We see the naira falling further in
coming days if the central bank fails to lift the dollar restriction,”
the Acting President, Association of Bureau De Change Operators, Aminu
Gwadabe, said.
Tumbling global oil prices have battered
Nigeria’s oil-dependent economy, with external reserves down to an
11-year low at $27.89bn on February 9, Reuters reported.
President Muhammadu Buhari is concerned
that further depr
eciation will hurt poor Nigerians, but the CBN’s
refusal to revise the pegged exchange rate has widened a chasm between
official rate and the parallel market.
In January, the central bank halted
dollar sales to the BDC operators and allowed commercial banks to accept
dollar deposits, in a failed effort to shore up dwindling foreign
reserves.
Around 90 per cent of the nation’s
foreign exchange earnings come from crude oil exports, but mismanagement
of the refineries means the country must also import expensive refined
fuel.
The Managing Director, Financial
Derivatives Company Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane, said it was high time
the CBN came up with a forex policy to address the forex crisis
confronting the nation.
In an economic note released on
Thursday, Rewane said, “Nigerians are perplexed at the endless slide of
their currency, which is now trading at
the lowest points ever.
“This is happening even when the oil
price is up at $31pb. The debate as whether to devalue the naira is not
the real issue. The discourse should be whether we need an exchange rate
policy or not. The absence of a policy is a recipe for economic anarchy
and a race to the bottom.”
According to Chukwu of Cowry Asset, the CBN needs to address the forex crisis before it gets too late.
The Head, Investment Advisory, Afrinvest
West Africa Limited, Mr. Ayodeji Ebo, believes the CBN needs to review
the list of the 41 items it banned from the official forex market,
saying “some of the items need to return to the official forex market to
reduce the pressure at the parallel market.”
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