The Naira and dollar
The Central Bank of Nigeria on Thursday
made a slight adjustment to its naira-dollar exchange rate peg, data on
its website showed.
The bank adjusted the rate at which it sold the United States dollar from N197 to N196.95, Reuters reports.
Prior to Thursday’s action, the rate had been oscillating between N197 and N199 for a few months.
Economic
and financial analysts said the action might indicate that the CBN was
beginning to think about how to loosen its currency regime.
They noted that the change was too small to be called a revaluation, particularly in the face of dwindling foreign reserves.
The
naira had traded on thin volumes at 198.95 to the dollar on the
interbank market on Thursday, before two large sales totalling $36.4m
were done at N196.95 towards the close of the forex market, foreign
exchange dealers said.
The
dealers attributed the sale to the central bank. The naira is trading
between 215 and 218 against the dollar at the parallel market.
An
economist said the move might suggest that the bank was testing out the
market to see whether it was ready for a looser currency regime.
“Small changes in the rate could
possibly allow the central bank to gauge the changes in demand and
supply dynamics, which will inform decisions on when and how best to
start lifting forex restrictions,” an analyst at South Africa’s NKC
Independent Economists, Cobus de Hart, said.
The CBN, however, described Thursday’s rate movement as a simple reflection of the state of dollar supply in the market.
“We are not fixing rates. The present
rate is a reflection of the level of dollar supply in the market,” the
CBN spokesman, Ibrahim Muazu, told Reuters.
Head, Investment and Research, Afrinvest
West Africa Limited, an investment research and advisory firm, Mr.
Ayodeji Ebo, said the CBN’s action might be linked to the relatively
reduced pressure on the external reserves.
“It is a rate adjustment but it is too
small to be called a revaluation. The adjustment is too small to cause
any pressure on the naira. The CBN feels the action will not affect its
defence of the naira,” he said.
A currency strategist, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the adjustment was too small to cause any change in the market.
“It is just about five kobo difference. That is not much. Nothing has changed in the market really,” the analyst said.
Another economist, however, said the move would hurt the country’s precarious forex reserves position.
“By lowering the central bank rate
offered to banks albeit very moderately, the central bank is adding to
pressures on forex reserves …equivalent to around 4.9 months of
imports,” the Head of Research at Ecobank, Angus Downie, said.
The nation’s external reserves had
fallen to $29.4bn as of June 2, down 20.1 per cent from a year ago as
the central bank burns cash to defend the local currency.
The naira has lost 8.5 per cent of its
value since the start of the year after sharp falls in the price of oil.
That forced the central bank into a de facto devaluation and fixing of
the exchange rate in February in order to protect its dwindling foreign
reserves.
The regulator also banned commercial
lenders from re-selling central bank dollars among themselves, which was
an attempt to curb speculation on the naira.
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