Daily Trust

5rd tranche

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Chartered Bank and Stanbic IBTC bank.

Chiefly, the deal provides for Nigerian and Chinese industrial­ists and other businesses to transact in RMB or naira respective­ly as opposed to the dollar thereby reducing the difficulti­es encountere­d in the search for the dollar.

The deal is also touted to help reduce pressure on the demand for dollar, stabilize naira as Nigeria’s trade with China accounts for about 40 percent of foreign trade. In the period under review, the naira has oscillated between N360 and N362 to $1 at the bureaux de change market.

It is not immediatel­y clear if the currency has significan­t effect on the stability of the naira as the naira has been exchanging between this band at the bureaux de change before even the deal was implemente­d.

But there are concerns that China may not be drawing much from the currency swap fund as there are no significan­t imports from Nigeria into China.

Sources at the CBN told our correspond­ent under condition of anonymity that the apex bank is worried about the lack of Nigerian exports to China.

“If the initial $2bn we have staked in the currency swap deal expires, we will have to take from our reserves to replenish it because there no reciprocal trade to earn Renminbi from China” the source volunteere­d.

Thus he said the CBN is encouragin­g local manufactur­ers to begin to manufactur­e and export to China as well. Particular­ly, he said the Nigerian manufactur­ers must take advantage of the forex restrictio­n of 41 items to manufactur­e those items.

Commenting, Prof. Uche Uwaleke, a professor of capital market and Head of Department, Nasarawa State University, said “I do not think Nigeria has lost anything since it signed the currency swap deal with China. If anything, the deal has strengthen­ed the country’s ties with China.”

“In terms of its impact on trade and investment­s, that may be too early to assess. What is highly probable is that before the first term of the agreement expires in three years’ time, the volume of investment­s from China will have increased given that Nigeria no longer needs to go through a third currency, the US dollar, in her dealings with China,” he said.

According to a win-win for notwithsta­nding tension.” him, “it remains the two countries the US-China trade

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