As Naira came under fresh pressures in the parallel market
Wednesday, the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, issued more directives restricting
usage of domiciliary accounts by bank customers, apparently to stem the
pressures and improve official supply of foreign exchange to the interbank
market.
As a result of the pressure, Naira crashed to between N460
and N465/ USD1, against the opening rate of N445/USD1 in the parallel market
segment, though the interbank rate depreciated just marginally to N312.9/ USD1,
against N310 earlier in the week. Currency dealers at both segments of the
market attributed the renewed pressure on rates to a worsening supply gap at
all the segments, even as CBN’s intervention, according to them, has become too
thin to assuage the huge demand.
One of the dealers in a commercial bank said: “CBN may have
started finding it difficult to intervene with significant supply of foreign
currency to the interbank market. “On the other hand we have been having
increased demand from our customers but we are unable to source their
requirements for some weeks now.”
Against the backdrop of the huge supply and demand gap, CBN
appeared to have renewed its restriction measures on access and usage of
independent foreign exchange resources. Yesterday, some bank customers said
they had received messages from their banks warning them to desist from using
foreign exchange inflows in their domiciliary accounts for trading purposes.
The directives, according to a source in a bank, came
against the emergence of a thriving currency trade by some individuals with
their domiciliary accounts. An e-mail from one of the banks stated that CBN had
mandated that all customers of financial institutions were expected to utilize
their accounts within regulatory guidelines.
According to the e-mail, the guidelines stated: “All
customers of financial institutions are expected to only use their accounts for
their direct personal/company related transactions. “No customer of any
financial institution is permitted to engage in any activity that could be
perceived as international money remittance service (IMTO) or bureau de change
(BDC) activities without the express approval of the CBN.
“Any customer who
fails to adhere to these guidelines runs the risk of being reported not only to
the CBN but subsequently to the security agencies.’’ The bank, in the same
e-mail, encouraged customers to be mindful of these directives when using their
bank accounts, adding that it would continue to provide updates regarding the
proper use of domiciliary bank accounts.
Some of the banks’ account officers who spoke to Vanguard
believed the apex bank would follow up this directive with more stringent
control of access and usage of domiciliary accounts. Worried by these
developments, a financial analyst at CardinalStone Partners Limited, a
Lagos-based investment house, Tiffany Adugwe, told Vanguard that the primary
cause of the adversities and pressures on exchange rate was the increasing
supply gaps.
She stated: “There is no liquidity yet in the foreign
exchange market and the situation is worsening. We need emergency borrowings,
foreign exchange inflows as soon as yesterday. “The forex is not available at
the interbank market and that is why the demands are going into the parallel
market and hence the rate there is shooting up.”
Source:Vanguard
Source:Vanguard
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