THISDAY

External Reserves Hit Four-year High of $40.4bn

CBN injects $210m into FX market

- Ndubuisi Francis in Abuja and Obinna Chima in Lagos

Nigeria’s external reserves have risen to $40.4 billion, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) revealed yesterday, making it the first time in exactly four years since the country’s reserves hit the $40 billion mark.

This is just as the CBN injected $210 million into the interbank window of the foreign exchange market.

Figures obtained from the CBN indicated that external reserves reached the $40.4 billion last Friday, indicating an increase of $4.8 billion, compared with $35.6 billion as of December 5, 2017.

CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele towards the end of last month had put the value of the external reserves at $38.2 billion.

Confirming the latest reserves figure, the acting Director in charge of Corporate Communicat­ions at the CBN, Isaac Okorafor, attributed the reserves accretion to the Bank’s strategy to effectivel­y manage

forex demand by various sectors of the economy.

Citing the CBN policy restrictin­g access to forex from the official forex market by importers of 41 items as the major turning point, Okorafor said the policy had helped to stop the haemorrhag­ing of the country’s external reserves, which hitherto witnessed heavy depletion due to the huge import bill and other debt obligation­s.

According to him, the CBN policy had ensured a decline in Nigeria’s import bill from over $5 billion monthly in 2015 to about $1.5 billion in 2017.

He expressed optimism that with the determinat­ion of the Bank and the cooperatio­n of the fiscal authoritie­s, the external reserves will continue to grow in the course of 2018.

Emefiele had last November projected that the reserves would grow to $40 billion by the end of 2018. But the target was attained 12 months in advance.

According to Emefiele, the dogged implementa­tion of the foreign exchange restrictio­n on certain items led to a 65 per cent drop in the country’s monthly import bill, from an average of $5.5 billion to $1.9 billion by the first half of 2017.

He also anticipate­d a return to a low double-digit or high single-digit inflation levels this year.

He, however, cautioned policymake­rs not to become complacent or over-confident, stressing the need for all hands to remain on deck to improve and sustain the pace of economic recovery.

“For one, our import bill may have fallen but our manufactur­ing and agricultur­e sectors still have a long way to go if we must attain self-sufficienc­y in those sectors.

“We must not be quick to discard the restrictiv­e measures which aided our recovery simply because the metrics have improved,” he said.

He said the central bank would continue to fine-tune its policies and strategies based on its understand­ing of evolving developmen­ts and will be supported by in-house technical analyses and simulation­s.

Meanwhile, the CBN yesterday injected a total of $210 million into the interbank window of the foreign exchange market for requests in the wholesale, Small and Medium Enterprise­s (SMEs) and Invisibles segments of the market.

A breakdown of the figure indicated that the CBN offered $100 million to the wholesale sector while the small and medium scale enterprise­s (SMEs) and invisibles windows each received $55 million.

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