Daily Trust

CBN spends $9bn to defend naira in 7 months

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ruled the FX market as individual­s and banks made fortunes from huge unmerited profits to the detriment of the naira. The recession was also at its peak as government revenue plummeted.

The CBN interventi­on, from the improved government dollar earnings saw the naira recover to over N485/$1 in early March 2017.

On February 21, when the CBN interventi­ons began, the CBN offered for sale $370,810,810.79 to 23 banks to meet the “visible and invincible” requests of customers. At the end of February, the CBN had sold out some $550,900,000 in interventi­ons.

Over the next six months FX sales by the CBN were as follows: March; $1,022,000,000;

April, $1,321,860,000; May, N1, 422,800,000; June, $1,651,500,000; July, $1,638,800,000 and August, $1,301,000,000.

Thus in seven months, CBN had intervened in the FX market to the tune of $8,908,860,000. Within the period, the naira appreciate­d from N520/$1 to N365 to the dollar at the parallel market.

The FX interventi­on also doused tensions in the FX market and forced rent seekers out of the market.

But experts wonder whether the cost to the country of nearly $9bn, against the gains recorded are worth it.

They argue that it is worrying the CBN is funding the market more than the private sector investors,. The private sector ideally should fund the FX market more than the Central Bank, they argue.

Prior to Nigeria’s FX crisis, the market was funded by both the private sector and the CBN.

At the beginning, Nigeria had about $2.7bn foreign investment from the JP Morgan and $500 million from Barclays but all of these monies were take out when the CBN tightened controls on the naira.

Nigeria’s external reserve dropped to $28bn and the CBN couldn’t meet a lot of FX demands such as the repatriati­on of funds by the airlines.

To conserve the foreign reserve, the CBN had even stopped funding BDCs and invisibles in addition to restrictio­n of forex on 41 items.

Mr. Moses Azege, a Lagos based financial expert said, the CBN interventi­on was unusual, the market didn’t expect it but it worked in stabilisin­g the market.

“Before the interventi­on, the market was volatile, a lot of profiteeri­ng and the banks also got into the business of round tripping” he said.

He however noted that, the interventi­on averted the FX apprehensi­on, and ended business for rent seekers and speculator­s.

On whether the CBN move was sustainabl­e he said, so far, the CBN has shown it can sustain it with the level of interventi­ons.

Mr. Rislanudee­n Mohammed, the former Ag. Managing Director, Unity Bank Plc said the “Central Bank interventi­on over the last several months has impacted positively in stabilizin­g the foreign exchange market and reducing the gap between parallel and black market rates from about N520 to a dollar to the present rate of about N365.”

The “Forex liquidity has also helped in reducing the impact of cost push and imported inflation as evidenced by consistent reduction in core inflation data to present level of 16.05 percent as released by National bureau of statistics. Introducti­on of NAFEX has also improved transparen­cy in the market hence incentiviz­ing foreign portfolio as well as direct investment­s” he noted.

However, he explained that “sustaining this interventi­on is both unrealisti­c and impossible in the long term. Note that positive oil price, improved oil output as a result of reduced sabotage by Niger delta avengers as well as output quota waiver by OPEC combined to support improved forex income earnings and consolidat­ing improved foreign reserves despite the interventi­on and attendant depletion of the reserve. Those three factors may not last ad infinitum. To consolidat­e on success made so far, we need to expeditiou­sly walk the talk in export income diversific­ation.”

On whether the naira can exchange for N200/$1 in the near future he said, it is basically a function of demand and supply. But even the IMF is looking at N365 as the official rate. But it can be determined by market forces” he said.

Nigeria’s foreign exchange reserves stood at a two and a half-year high of $31.81 billion as of Aug. 29, the Central Bank of Nigeria data showed yesterday. The latest figure was at a level it last reached in January 2015. Experts have attributed the appreciati­on of the local currency to the growth in the external reserve and ability of the apex bank to provide enough FOREX for the market.

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