The naira fell by four per cent against the dollar to 187.05 at the interbank foreign exchange
market on Wednesday. This is the highest fall in five years on a closing basis, according to analysts.
Foreign exchange
market dealers linked the development to the Central Bank of Nigeria’s
announcement that its Wednesday’s auction at the Retail Dutch Auction
System window was the last for the year.
It was learnt that traders and importers, who could not access the RDAS window, rushed to the interbank forex market
to place their demand.
This, dealers said, led to huge demand
for the greenback at the interbank market, forcing the interbank rate to
close at 187.05, down from 180.50 on Tuesday.
The CBN, however, said the official window of the foreign-exchange auctions would reopen on January 5, 2015.
Analysts said the central bank might need
to defend the naira at the interbank market regularly till the end of
the year to minimise pressure on the naira.
“Banks may start selling their stock of
dollars at high premium since the greenback is no longer available at
the RDAS window till next year,” the Head, Investment
Research, Afrinvest, a research and business advisory firm, Mr. Ayodeji Ebo, said.
“The CBN will need to keep intervening at the interbank market to keep the naira-dollar exchange rate
stable for that period,” he added.
A currency strategist at Ecobank Nigeria,
Mr. Kunle Ezun, said, “If the rate remains at this level tomorrow, we
expect the central bank to intervene in the interbank market with sales
of dollars.”
Meanwhile, the Brent crude oil price
No comments:
Post a Comment