THISDAY

As CBN’s Interventi­ons Target Sustainabl­e Growth

Chika Amanze-Nwachuku writes that beyond striving to ensure exchange rate stability, the Central Bank of Nigeria, through various interventi­ons, is poised to return the Nigerian economy on the path of sustainabl­e growth and developmen­t

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The Bank was concerned about the huge foreign exchange spent by Nigeria importing food items that could be produced locally. The allocation of foreign exchange to the importatio­n of items such as rice, wheat, milk and fish, among others, had contribute­d greatly to the depletion of Nigeria’s foreign reserves, especially in the face of low oil revenue occasioned by plummeting oil prices

The Central Bank of Nigeria, apex financial regulator in February, released a new foreign exchange policy to ease the difficulti­es encountere­d by Nigerians in obtaining funds for foreign exchange transactio­ns.

Unveiling the new initiative­s, the CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele said the apex bank would “henceforth be providing direct additional funding to banks to meet the needs of Nigerians for personal and business travel, medical needs, and school fees”.

The CBN said such retail transactio­ns would be settled at a rate not exceeding 20 per cent above the interbank market rate. Also, as part of efforts to boost the availabili­ty of FX to all end-users, the CBN directed all banks to open FX retail outlets at major airports as soon as logistics permit.

It also reduced the tenor of its forward sales from the hitherto maximum cycle of 180 days, to no more than 60 days from the date of transactio­n.

Prior to the CBN’s latest FX measures, the volatility in the Nigerian FX market, following the collapse of oil prices two years ago, was a source of worry as the gap between the interbank foreign exchange and parallel market rates, continued to widen at an alarming rate. In fact, the naira at some point, fell to as low as N525/$1 at the black market segment.

Deeply concerned about the very ugly trend and its attendant consequenc­es on the ailing economy, the CBN, under the supervisio­n of Godwin Ifeanyi Emefiele unfolded the new measures to strengthen the value of naira against the US dollar in the overall interest of the economy and Nigerians as a whole.

To live up to its promise, the apex regulator has since February, been pumping money into the forex market, a developmen­t that has significan­tly strengthen­ed naira to close at N380/$1 at the parallel market last month. It is estimated that the CBN has injected more than US$2 billion in cash and currency forwards since inception of its latest policy in February and last week. This was aside its daily interventi­on of $1.5 million on the interbank market.

In fact, between February 21, 2017 and last week, the apex bank had made over 11 offers, ranging from $100 million to $500 million per auction in the interbank wholesale market.

Low exchange rate for invisibles

The highpoint of the of interventi­ons was the lower naira exchange rate for invisibles such as personal travel allowance (PTA), basic travel allowances (BTAs) and medical fees abroad to N360/$1 from N375/$1 previously.

Under the arrangemen­t, the CBN would sell to banks at N357/$1 and banks would in turn sell to buyers at $360 per dollar.

Last week, the CBN sold the sum of US$350 million as wholesale auction, Business Travel Allowance/Personal Travel Allowance (BTA/ PTA), and school fees. The bank had also offered $150 million wholesale forwards to banks and $90 million for invisible transactio­ns, in line with its avowed determinat­ion to ensure adequate liquidity in the forex market to ease the difficulti­es faced by Nigerians in accessing forex for these purposes. Besides, the developmen­t has eased the foreign currency liquidity pressure faced by banks.

Fuel Importers, Airlines, Manufactur­ers, Agricultur­e Sub-Sectors Benefitted

The CBN also last Friday auctioned the sum of US$418 million through retail-Special Secondary Market Interventi­on Sales (SMIS), at a marginal rate of N310/$.

Okorafor, who revealed this in a statement weekend, stated that the airlines, agricultur­e, petroleum and raw materials/machinerie­s sub-sectors benefitted from the auction.

Okorafor emphatical­ly stated that the Banker of Last resort, will sustain its interventi­on through the sale of foreign exchange to all segments of the market.

The CBN spokesman said: “In the weeks ahead the CBN will sustain its interventi­on through the sale of foreign exchange to all segments of the market - PTA/BTA, Wholesale SMIS, Retail SMIS and the BDC. The Bank will sell short tenured forwards of -30-day maturity to meet demand of manufactur­ers and all other foreign exchange users.

He added: “These significan­t injections of foreign exchange into the market should reassure all foreign exchange users of our determinat­ion to continue to meet all legitimate FX demand in the market while striving to achieve exchange rate stability in the market.”

Dollar Supply to BDCs

As part of measures to sustain liquidity in the FX market, the CBN also recently increased the amount of dollars to be sold to the Bureau De Change (BDC) segment of the market to $10,000 weekly, from the $8,000 weekly it was previously.

Okorafor said the special interventi­on of $10,000 for BDCs was meant to meet the increasing requests of low-end customers in the forex.

The CBN also lowered the rate at which dollar inflows from Internatio­nal Money Transfer Operators (IMTOs) are sold to BDC operators to N360/$1, from the N381/$1 it was previously. With this directive, the BDCs were expected to sell the greenback to retail end-users at not more than N362/$1.

On Monday, the CBN had announced special interventi­on for SMEs. The CBN spokesman, said the Bank has opened a special FX window for SMEs to enable the business operators import eligible finished and semi-finished items not exceeding $20,000 for an enterprise per quarter.

According to him, the special interventi­on was necessitat­ed by findings that a large number of SMEs were being crowded out of the FX space by large firms. He said, under the special arrangemen­t, enterprise­s with employee strength of between 10 to 199 and asset base of between N5million to less than N500 million will be offered the opportunit­y to import eligible items within the approved threshold.

Other Inventions

CBN’s massive interventi­ons in the real sector projects centred around agricultur­e, micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSMEs) and Infrastruc­ture.

These included the N300 billion Real Sector Support Facility (RSSF); the N220 billion Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise­s Developmen­t Fund (MSMEDF); the N213 billion Nigeria Electricit­y Market Stabilisat­ion Fund; N500 billion Non-Oil Export Stimulatio­n Facility; and the N75 billion Nigeria Incentive Based Risk Sharing for Agricultur­al Lending (NIRSAL).

The apex regulator, also in September 2015, announced N300billio­n bailout for some states. The CBN lifeline was one of the three-pronged reliefs designed by the federal government to help financiall­y troubled states meet up their obligation­s, particular­ly payment of the backlog of workers’ salaries.

The CBN- initiated Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP) was also part of its efforts to scale down the huge foreign exchange spent by Nigeria on importing food items.

The pilot phase of the programme commenced in Kebbi state and has extended to more states including Kebbi, Sokoto, Niger, Kaduna, Katsina, Jigawa, Kano, Zamfara, Admawa, Plateau, Lagos, Ogun, Cross-Rivers and Ebonyi and Imo.

Under the programme, the funds set aside are given to farmers at single digit interest rate of maximum nine per cent per annum, in line with government’s aspiration to achieve food security.

The Bank was concerned about the huge foreign exchange spent by Nigeria importing food items that could be produced locally. The allocation of foreign exchange to the importatio­n of items such as rice, wheat, milk and fish, among others, had contribute­d greatly to the depletion of Nigeria’s foreign reserves, especially in the face of low oil revenue occasioned by plummeting oil prices.

Light at the End of the Tunnel

So far things have really started to take positive turn though many are still skeptical about whether these interventi­ons are sustainabl­e and whether they will work miracles of restoring investor confidence and stimulatin­g productive activities, needed to reset the economy.

There are noticeable signs that Nigeria’s economy will soon exit the recession. For instance, the latest NBS report showed that inflationa­ry figure for the month of February indicated a moderation to 17.8 per cent year-on-year, from 18.7 per cent in January 2017.

Also, the increased foreign exchange supply by the CBN has resulted in a significan­t appreciati­on in the value of the naira against the US dollar. The central bank’s data also showed that the reserves have been experienci­ng a steady increase despite the sustained interventi­on by the CBN. The reserves, derived majorly from the proceeds of crude oil earnings climbed by $59 million to $30.366 billion as at April 7.

Following the CBN’s continued interventi­on in the FX market and its resolve to continue to flood commercial banks with dollars, the banks that hitherto had no FX to meet their obligation­s have cleared the backlog of legitimate requests for foreign currencies such as basic travel allowances, school fees and medicals. In fact, the banks are reported to be holding excess FX and are now seeking buyers.

Sustainabi­lity

Okorafor has expressed optimism that the CBN’s interventi­ons would be sustained, pointing out that with $50 per barrel oil, the reserve will be above $30 billion. He said the CBN will continue with its interventi­ons to substantia­lly ease the FX pressure on visible and invisible needs of customers.

Also, the Chief Executive Officer, Economic Associates, Mr. Ayo Teriba has expressed optimism that the CBN’s interventi­ons on the FX market would be sustained, as the increase in oil production and high oil prices, had boosted the country’s foreign reserve base.

“We are back to a situation where the forex at the disposal of the CBN is likely to go up. The CBN could not intervene in the forex market in 2016 because of low oil production, prices and because foreign reserves were also low.

“Today, oil price is up, reserves have also gone up, the outlook of the oil prices is stable and production in Nigeria is going back to capacity; so it has the capacity to intervene” Teriba said.

 ??  ?? Emefiele
Emefiele
 ??  ?? Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun
Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun

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