Naira Maintains Gain On Parallel Market

The Nigerian Naira appreciated on the parallel market on Tuesday, following the introduction of Travelex to the Bureau De Change segment last week.

The local currency rose N2 to N468 against the dollar from N470 it was traded on Monday. While, on the interbank market the Naira closed at N304.75 to the greenback.

Last week, Travelex commenced the sales of dollar to Bureau De Change operators in the country, and immediately started selling directly to travellers to further boost liquidity in the market and aid economic activities.

Samed Olukoya, a foreign exchange research analyst at Investors King Limited, said “If the CBN and Travelex can sustain the current arrangement it, will help fight speculation and gradually prop up the Naira value against the dollar.”

While, other experts have said the Naira was being battered by market speculators and that the N500 exchange rate to the dollar was not the true value of the local currency.

However, Aminu Gwadabe, the president of the Association of Bureau De Change Operators, said that the authority still have to review the selling price of the dollars to the Bureau De Change operators to encourage Nigerians in Diaspora, whose remittances was being sold to the Bureau De Change operators.

He further stated that the new improvement in the Naira value would discourage the patronage of unlicensed parallel market traders and likely impact the progress made thus far.

Naira Falls To N436/$ On Parallel Market As Dollar Scarcity Worsens

The naira fell to an all-time low of N436 to the dollar on the parallel market yesterday, as against N428 to the dollar from the previous day, as the perennial scarcity of the greenback in the market took a turn for the worse.

The effect of the dollar shortage was also felt on the interbank FX market where the spot rate of the naira also depreciated to N313.07 to the dollar Thursday, from N310.08 to a dollar the previous day.

This is just as Nigeria’s external reserves fell further to $24.759 billion as of September 21, 2016.
The situation on the parallel market was attributed to the refusal by banks to sell dollars to Bureau de Change (BDC) operators.

The President, Association of Bureau de Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Mr. Aminu Gwadabe, said none of his members were able to access dollars from banks as directed by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

“As I speak to you, no BDC has been able to access FX since Monday. It is very unfortunate that the liquidity in the market has dried up. That is too bad for the market,” the ABCON boss said in a phone chat.

Read More: thisdaylive

Naira Hits N420/$ At Parallel Market As CBN’s Interventions Eat Up Reserves

The value of the naira at the parallel market continued to decline hitting N420 to the dollar, as dollar sales by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) boosted liquidity at the interbank market where the naira closed at N306 to the dollar.

At the parallel market, the naira had weakened from N407 which it closed on Friday last week, indicating a 3.2 per cent decline within three days. Traders said dollar sales by the apex bank to some banks supported the currency at the official market.

The currency closed at  N306 to the dollar, reversing losses in early traded which saw it quoted at 317.09 to the dollar, but fell compared to the 305.50 naira closed the previous day. Bureaux de change operators however raised hope of a gradual appreciation of the local currency in the near term as the central bank licensed 11 new international money transfer operators to address the dollar supply side.

According to the president of the Association of Bureau de Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) Aminu Gwadabe, “Depending on the effective implementation of the central bank’s policy, the appointment of new international money transfer operators will ensure that banks will have more dollar to sell to bureaux de change and provide the needed liquidity in the market.”

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http://leadership.ng/news/548741/naira-hits-n420-at-parallel-market-as-cbns-interventions-eat-up-reserves

Naira Sells For N395/$ At Parallel Market

There was slight improvement in the value of the Naira Friday at the parallel market as it was sold for N395 to the US Dollar just  as two banks kick started the sale of foreign exchange to the Bureax de Change operators.
This translated to N5 gain to the local currency which had slumped to N400/$ at the black market on Thursday.
However, at the inter-bank market, the Naira depreciated further to N318.91 , down from the N315.06  to the dollar from the previous day.
Commenting on the latest development, the President of the Association of Bureau de Change (ABDC)Operators Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe,  who had earlier expressed optimism that the Naira would rebound, said:
“The exchange rate today(Friday) was N394, N395/$.As of today only two banks indicated interest to sell the proceeds of international money transfer which they were asked to sell to us. They said they would sell to us at the inter-bank rate plus one per cent. More banks said they would come by Monday(today).”
On the volume sold to them,  he said it was $15,000 per bid maximum, adding that “the bigger banks were unable to give because of logistics. That would be on Monday also for collection.”

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http://sunnewsonline.com/naira-sells-for-n395-at-parallel-market/

 

Naira Falls To N390/$1 On Parallel Market, Rises On Interbank

The naira crashed to N390 to the dollar on the parallel market Wednesday, lower than the N382 to a dollar from the previous day.

A currency analyst, who preferred to remain anonymous, blamed the continuing slide of the nation’s currency on the parallel market to demand pressure.

According to him, demand for FX for most of the 41 items that had been excluded from the interbank market was still being met with dollars bought from the parallel market.

The source also attributed the development to the fact that banks that act as agents of international money transfer operators were yet to comply with a Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) directive instructing them to sell foreign currency remittances to licensed bureau de change (BDC) operators.

On the interbank market, on the other hand, the naira strengthened to N311.03 to the dollar yesterday, higher than the N316.83 to a dollar from the previous day.

Credit: Thisday

Naira Sells At N322 To Dollar At Parallel Market

The Naira on Monday, traded at N322 to a dollar at the parallel market in Lagos. The currency was stable in the previous week, maintaining value of between N315 and N320 to a dollar.

However, the naira traded at N450 and N360 for Pound Sterling and the Euro respectively, at the day’s transaction.

The naira also maintained N197 at the official Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) rate. Traders at the parallel market said that the proposed currency swap deal between Nigeria and China would shore up the value of the naira when implemented.

Credit: vanguardngr

Naira Hits N335 To Dollar At Parallel Market

The naira on Friday exchanged at N335 to the dollar as the scarcity of the greenback worsened at the parallel market.

 

The naira lost N10 to exchange at N335 to the dollar, a depreciation of three per cent. It previously traded at N225 to the dollar.

 

Meanwhile, the official Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) exchange rate remained at N197 to the dollar.

 

Traders at the market expressed worry at the increasing shortage of the greenback and urged the government to take immediate steps to stem the tide.

Naira Dips By 0.7 % At Parallel Market

The Nigerian currency lost N2 to exchange at N297 to the dollar, from N295 it traded on Tuesday. It, however, traded at N197 to the dollar at the official interbank window.

Traders at the market said that the demand for the greenback by importers had continued to fuel the depreciation of the Naira at the market.

Meanwhile, some stakeholders at the forex market have expressed divergent views on the impact of the recent forex policy of the apex bank on the fate of the Naira.

The Association of Bureaux de Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), in a communiqué urged the CBN to reverse the ban of sale of forex to its members, adding that the ban would impact the value of the Naira negatively.

They called on the CBN to include them in taking decisions that would affect the foreign exchange market.

Credit: NAN

Naira Firms Up At Parallel Market

The naira yesterday made a sudden recovery in the parallel market, following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN’s) easing of forex policies. The naira appreciated to N295 against the dollar from N305 on Friday, after the apex bank lifted the ban on dollar transfers and allowed dollar deposits into domiciliary accounts.

The local currency has remained stable in the official market, exchanging for N199 to a dollar.

Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) President Aminu Gwadabe said the naira was exchanging at N291/293 against the dollar in the morning but closed later at N295.

He said although the CBN did not supply dollar to the market, its relaxation of forex restrictions that allowed banks to accept dollar deposits and transfer foreign currency deposits has helped shore up the value of the naira.

CBN Spokesman, Ibrahim Mu’azu, said the apex bank decided to reverse the policy because its finding shows that currency substitution by customers which made it enforce it in the first place has been tackled.

Credit: Nation

Naira Appreciates To N260/$1 On Parallel Market

The naira edged higher to about N260 to a dollar on the parallel market yesterday, compared with about N266 to a dollar it was before last week’s public holidays.

Findings from most of the parallel market traders at the Murtala Mohammed International Airport and other areas around Ikeja yesterday attributed this to an increase in supply of the greenback from autonomous market sources, especially from Nigerians abroad who visited the country for the yuletide.

The interbank official forex market which was shut down for the yuletide is expected to be re-opened on January 4, 2016. The naira had depreciated to about N280 to the dollar about three weeks ago as a result of dollar scarcity that hit the market.

The declining oil prices as well as the unwillingness of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to devalue the naira amidst constrained reserves has continued to worsen foreign exchange (forex) liquidity position of Nigerian banks, Renaissance Capital (RenCap), a financial advisory and research firm, stated.

However, RenCap opined that should the forex scarcity persists in a weak oil price environment, banks’ asset quality and international obligation default risks could be significant.

Credit: Thisday

CBN To Pump $90m Into Parallel Market

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is expected to shut the official foreign exchange (forex) window for the year by Wednesday and pump $90 million into the parallel market, it was learnt yesterday.

 

This week’s parallel market intervention is expected to curb prevailing naira volatility in the market. The naira last week exchanged at N280 to a dollar after the CBN supplied only $23 million to Bureaux De Change (BDC) operators, $67 million short of the expected $90 million.

 

Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) President Aminu Gwadabe, who said he had heard about the plan, said the apex bank will meet this week’s forex demand to avoid a repeat of last week’s crisis.

 

“I think the CBN has learnt its lessons and will supply $90 million to the market. This translates to $30,000 for each of the 3,000 BDCs. That is the only way the naira will begin to rebound in the parallel market. It is currently exchanging at N263 to one dollar in Lagos and Abuja,” he said.

 

The parallel or black market has been sustained by the significant differences in the naira exchange rates against international currencies. With nearly N70 gap between the official and the parallel market rates, there has been a lot of room for players to make easy profit.

Though primarily funded by travellers and Nigerians living abroad who remit funds home, many banks have profited illegally by selling forex obtained through official sources to the black market through a process known as round tripping.

Gwadabe also said the high level of forex volatility recorded in the parallel market last week, was fuelled by the inconclusiveness of the CBN’s plans to permanently stop supplying dollar to the BDCs.

 

He disclosed that the market volatility was also worsened by banks recalling loans given to forex speculators as the year gradually runs to an end.

 

He attributed the naira rebound to people who kept large volume of dollars, but rushed to take advantage of high prices. It is estimated that about $5 billion are held by people waiting to take advantage of price changes.

 

CBN Director, Monetary Policy Department, Moses Tule, said the naira was under pressure because of the actions of speculators.

 

He said currency speculators are taking positions on the naira, with a view to making excess gain from currency trading.

 

Tule said currency speculators were determined to put severe pressure on the monetary authorities and make the apex bank buckle and further devalue the naira.

 

According to him, the CBN would not fold its arms while economic predators feast on the nation’s commonwealth through arbitrage.

 

While maintaining that the only rate in the currency market is N196.47 to dollar, he wondered why indigenous operators in the Bureau de Change (BDC) segment of the market chose to make huge profits at the expense of customers in genuine need of the currency.

 

Tule lamented that while international operators, such as Travelex, traded at not more than N7 above the rate, indigenous operators preferred to make excessive profits.

 

“We know what the fundamentals of the economy are and we will continue to take the right economic decisions on what to do and not when people sitting out there speculating on the currency think the naira should be devalued, so that they could make profit out of it,” he said.

 

“No country quotes its exchange rate with reference to the BDCs rates. The currency has a reference rate and that is the interbank exchange rate,” he said.

 

Tule urged Nigerians to be more patriotic in their dealings rather than engage in activities capable of undermining the integrity and value of the naira, adding that the media had a role to play in assisting the CBN to curb speculation on the naira.

 

 

Credit : The Nation

Naira Depreciates To N270/Dollar In Parallel Market

The Naira Wednesday depreciated further to N270 per dollar at the parallel market, following reduction of dollar sales to bureaux de change (BDCs) by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

Investigation revealed that from N260 per dollar at the close of business on Tuesday, the parallel market exchange rate rose sharply to N270 per dollar in Lagos, indicating N10 depreciation.

But in Abuja, the parallel market exchange rate rose from N262 per dollar to close at N273 per dollar, indicating N11 depreciation.

BDC operators, who confirmed this development, said that the sharp depreciation was due to further reduction in the weekly dollar sales by the CBN.

President, Association of Bureaux De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON), Alhaji Aminu Gwadabe, said that though the CBN increase the number of BDCs it sold dollars to from 1,170 last week to 2,270 this week, it however reduced the amount of dollars sold to each BDC by 60 percent from $30,000 to $10,000.

According to Mr. Harrison Owoh, Chief Executive Officer, H.J Trust BDC, the decision of the CBN aggravated the demand situation in the market.

“There is huge volume of unsatisfied demand in the market. We had to turn down lots of request for dollars because of there is no dollars to sell to them”, he said.

An Abuja based BDC operator, who spoke on condition of anonymity said, “The dollar is selling at N273 in Abuja this evening. It was N262 in the morning. We are surprised at the pace of depreciation, because we can’t explain why it just went up by such margin in one day”.

Credit: Vanguard