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Thursday, August 28, 2014

BNR to franc’s rescue with $300m currency sales kitty

Business

A forex bureau. The National Bank of Rwanda has set aside over $300 million for forex exchange market in bid to shore up the franc. PHOTO | FILE
A forex bureau. The National Bank of Rwanda has set aside over $300 million for forex exchange market in bid to shore up the franc. PHOTO | FILE 
By Moses K Gahigi Special Correspondent

The National Bank of Rwanda has set aside over $300 million (Rwf210 billion) for the local forex exchange market in bid to shore up the franc.
Central bank vice-governor Monique Nsanzabaganwa said the intervention is intended to smoothen the volatility of the currency market to protect the franc against foreign currencies.
“When there is volatility in the currency market, it is not good for the private sector, we come in to mitigate the unpredictability.”
“The currency trade is market driven, we monitor the currency market variations, and when we see a gap, we sell to the banks, but it also comes with necessity and now its necessary,” she noted.
Should not cause panic
However, Mrs Nsanzabaganwa said the depreciation of the franc against the dollar should not cause panic in the market.
The forex line will be sold to the commercial banks in the current financial year.
The economy registered a decline in export receipts by 1.9 per cent in the second quarter of this year, widening the country’s trade deficit by 12.14 per cent.
The franc depreciated 6.1 per cent against the dollar in 2013. This together with the aftershocks of the aid cuts affected business with some currency dealers folding up.
The central bank predicts the depreciation rate to rise to four per cent by the end of the year, but with the current acute shortage of dollars in the currency market, the rate is likely to increase.
At the end of last year, the dollar was trading at Rwf680 and on January 1 it rose to Rwf682. Today, the greenback trades at a staggering Rwf700.
From 2011, there has been an almost 20 per cent increase in the cost of the dollar against franc.
A forex bureau dealer said the dollar scarcity is affecting their business.
He noted that foreign currency sales to commercial banks by the central bank, does not normally affect any change.
“The forex sold to commercial banks does not trickle down to us, it doesn’t change anything, they use it for their client withdrawals, even when they sell, they sell to a few forex bureaus,” he said.
He added that the high volumes of imports and the high charges on dollar withdrawals by commercial banks are partly responsible for this scarcity.
 The banks charge over 1.5 per cent on dollar withdrawals of the transferred money, because of this people have resorted to withdrawing money in francs because it is cheaper, this has left the market with a dollar shortage,” he added.
High demand
Chief financial officer of Bank of Kigali, John Bugunya, said his bank has enough forex to serve their clients but noted that there is a general high demand for the dollar in the market.
“We have enough forex to meet the demand of our clients. The demand is there in the general market but for us here, we don’t have any acute shortage,” he said.
Among East African Community member countries, the franc depreciated by 5.3 per cent against the Kenyan shilling, 6.2 per cent against the Tanzania shilling, 11.7 per cent against Ugandan shilling and 4.9 per cent against the Burundian franc.
The francs real effective exchange rate depreciated 2.7 per cent in December 2013, which was mainly attributed to the depreciation of the nominal value of the franc against currencies of the major trading partners.
In 2013, the banking sector recorded an increase of 12.4 per cent in forex resources compared with 2012, but expenditures increased 22.9 per cent, leading to a cash deficit of $64.3 million by end 2013 by commercial banks.

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