Naira crashes to 288/dollar at new official market
Gbnega/Funso
The naira plunged by 31 per cent to
288.85 against the United States dollar on Monday at the close of
trading at the newly established interbank market.
The local currency also depreciated at
the parallel market where it closed at 346 to the greenback, down from
around 330 and 335 on Friday.
The Central Bank of Nigeria had last
week introduced new guidelines for the nation’s foreign exchange market
with the adoption of a single structure through the interbank/autonomous
window.
The naira, which was pegged at 197-199
per dollar before the emergence of the new forex policy, closed at
288.85 to the dollar on Monday, with the forces of demand and supply
coming to play to determine the value of the nation’s currency after the
CBN allowed it to float freely.
The CBN said it cleared a total foreign
exchange demand backlog of $4bn with a dollar exchanging for N280 at the
foreign exchange market.
The apex bank, in a statement issued on
Monday by the Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Mr.
Isaac Okoroafor, expressed satisfaction with the performance of the
market on its first day.
The statement reads in part, “Nigeria’s
new foreign exchange market made a robust take-off on Monday, June 20,
2016, clearing all the backlog of $4bn pent-up demand for foreign
exchange, with the naira exchanging at 280 to the United States dollar.
“The objectives of the CBN to clear the
forex demand backlog, perform its role as strictly a market intervention
participant, and re-launch a functioning and efficient interbank market
were met.
“The CBN, in line with its desire to
promote a transparent, liquid and efficient market, and in order to
engender market confidence and ensure credible price formation,
intervened in the market through a special secondary market intervention
sales addressing the issue of the FX demand backlog by clearing $4.02bn
through spot and forward sales.
“This served in no small way to
stimulate price discovery, with the determination of a marginal rate of
$/280.00 through the special SMIS process. So, we can state to you
categorically that the FX demand backlog has now been cleared and behind
us for good.”
Okoroafor assured market participants
and the general public that the bank was committed to making the FX
market globally competitive, credible, transparent, liquid and
efficient.
Our correspondents gathered that the
naira was trading around 270 to a dollar in the early hours of trading
on Monday with no deals consummated by the banks as dealers were only
interested in buying.
A currency analyst at Ecobank, Mr. Kunle
Ezun, said when the market opened in the morning, the naira went up to
285 to the dollar and later came down to 255 to 260 before the CBN
intervened in the market by selling over $500m at the rate of N280 per
dollar.
He said, “We didn’t have any firm deals;
no deal was consummated until when the CBN intervened and gave the rate
at 280 and that became the rallying point for the market. We saw price
discovery; different banks were quoting on two-way quote for the naira
and dollar.
“We saw a lot of quotes today; banks
were willing to quote but everybody was willing to buy, not to sell
until the CBN came to the bank later in the day to sell. When the CBN
sells to you, you are expected to sell in the market. So that created
activity in the market.
“What we had today (Monday) is more like
a market depreciation of the naira to 280. Tomorrow (Tuesday), you may
see appreciation of the naira or further depreciation. It depends on how
much the CBN is willing to supply to the market. If they are able to
supply what they supplied today in two or three times consecutively, the
market will be calmed and the naira will appreciate in the next few
days.”
The Head, Research and Investment
Advisory, Sterling Capital, Mr. Sewa Wusu, said the naira closed at
288.85 after a little bit of oscillation, adding, “The interplay of
demand and supply has started. I think the proper value of the naira
will be determined as time goes on and more dollars will also come.”
He, however, said foreign portfolio
investors might still be on the sidelines to watch developments to see
how the current mechanism would play out before they would begin to have
some level of comfort on the level of dollar liquidity.
The President, Association of Bureau De
Change Operators of Nigeria, Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, said the naira fell
to 346 against the dollar at the parallel market, because “the interbank
market has not effectively taken off.”
He said, “There is no way demand can
reduce at the parallel market now because the 41 imported items are
still banned from accessing official forex market,” he said, adding that
the backlog of dollar demand was far higher than $4bn.
“Up untill now, many correspondent banks
have yet to send their unmet obligations to the Central Bank of
Nigeria. And for the foreign inflow that we are expecting, there is
still lack of confidence by the investors as to how liquidity is going
to be sustainable so that when they want to move out, they won’t have
the problem of dollar scarcity. So, they are watching to see how liquid
the market will be, and that will take a couple of weeks before this can
be unravelled,” Gwadabe explained.
There may be “higher volatility until the market becomes more functional,” Bloomberg
quoted the Head of Africa Strategy at Standard Chartered Bank Limited
in London, Samir Gadio, as saying in an e-mailed response to questions.

No comments:
Post a Comment