Nigeria’s central bank adjusted its exchange rate peg to N196.95 to the
dollar from the 197 it set in February after the currency’s value was
eroded by the fall in oil prices, data on its website showed yesterday.
The bank adjusted the rate at which it sold hard currency this week,
dealers said, noting that the change was too small to be considered a
revaluation for the naira, particularly in the face of dwindling foreign
reserves.
Dealers said the central bank had been selling dollars to
the inter-bank market at its adjusted rate. The naira was trading at
198.95 to the dollar on the inter-bank market and between 215 to 218 in
the parallel market.
“By lowering the central bank rate offered to
banks albeit very moderately, the central bank is adding to pressures on
FX reserves … equivalent to around 4.9 months of imports,” Angus
Downie, head of research at Ecobank said.
Nigeria’s foreign reserves
fell to $29.4 billion by June 2, down 20.1 percent from a year ago as
the central bank burns cash to defend the local currency. The bank
merged its bi-weekly currency auctions market with the interbank market
in February and fixed the exchange rate, a move that amounted to a de
facto devaluation of the currency of Africa’s biggest economy.
The
regulator had also banned commercial lenders from re-selling central
bank dollars among themselves, which was an attempt to curb speculation
on the naira. The naira Non-Deliverable Forwards – currency derivatives
traded offshore – pointed to the local currency being priced at 221-225
to the greenback in six month’s time.
“Small changes in the rate
could possibly allow the central bank to gauge the changes in demand and
supply dynamics which would inform decisions on when and how best to
start lifting forex restrictions,” Cobus de Hart of South Africa’s NKC
Independent Economists aid.
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