The
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Tuesday boosted the interbank foreign
exchange (FX) market with another sum of $210 million.
A statement disclosed that the CBN
offered the sum of $100 million to authorised dealers in the wholesale
segment of the market. The Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs)
segment received the sum of $55 million while the sum of $55 million was
apportioned to invisibles such as
tuition fees, medical payments and
Basic Travel Allowance (BTA).
The Bank’s Acting Director, Corporate
Communications Department, Mr. Isaac Okorafor, who confirmed the
figures, reiterated CBN’s capacity to continue to sustain the foreign
exchange intervention.
Okorafor urged authorised dealers to
help sustain the confidence in the foreign exchange market by continuing
to honour requests from customers with genuine needs.
The CBN had last Friday intervened in the Secondary Market Intervention Sales (SMIS) to the tune of $349.34 million.
Meanwhile, the naira exchanged at an average of N362/$1 in the BDC and parallel market segments of the market.
Reuters attributed the N362 to the
dollar the greenback went for to the repatriation of dividends abroad
following the end of the earnings season and as forward currency
contracts mature amid tight dollar liquidity, traders said.
The naira has been trading at N360 to
the dollar on the Investors’ and Exporters’ window for over six months
after the central bank in April 2017 liberalised the currency for
investors in the wake of a currency crisis brought on by low oil prices
that also slashed government revenues.
Traders, however said the currency
started to weaken last week as demand piled up especially from companies
seeking to repatriate dividends and investors booking profits from
local assets. Importers buying goods from abroad were also exerting
pressure on the naira.
MTN’s Nigeria operation recently declared a dividend of N50 billion by its local unit in 2017.
The central bank is gradually loosening
policy to adopt a more dovish stance on interest rates especially as its
foreign reserves are rising, giving the West African country a buffer
with which to defend the naira.

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