Nigeria’s foreign exchange market may have taken a new turn
as a rare movement in exchange rate happened between Monday and yesterday with
massive swing in the value of Naira in the interbank official market against
relative stability in the parallel market.
Vanguard learnt banks were forced to reverse their high bid
rates to rescue the Naira from a massive depreciation of almost 23 per cent to
all time low of N375/USD against the average N308/USD it had traded
consistently for over two months. Reuters had reported that the official
trading platform, FMDQ Plc, confirmed a single trade worth USD10,000 had been
made at a rate of N376.63/ USD early on Tuesday.
However, by the close of trading, it was forced back to N305
with dealers claiming the rate was false. The currency had traded within a band
of N304 and N308 to one USDollar for some months now before dropping to N310
last weekend.
But surprisingly, parallel market has remained stable with
the local currency appreciating marginally against the USDollar, closing at
N465/USD against N470 last weekend. The local currency had recovered from a low
of N490/USD in the parallel market in September this year.
Usually depreciation in the official interbank window is
followed by a corresponding depreciation in the parallel market windows, while
in many instances the parallel market depreciates even when there is stability
in the interbank window. This is the first time parallel market would be stable
while interbank depreciates.
Vanguard investigations revealed that uneasy calm had been
the climate in the interbank market in the past two months when banks began to
feel CBN was not transparent in managing demand and supply as well as placing
remote controls over exchange rates.
Consequently, according to one of the foreign exchange
dealers in a bank, several violations of the rules have been happening at the
background, with banks trading the officially sourced foreign currency at rates
far above the official interbank rate. He explained that the situation could
only be supressed for a while, adding that what happened yesterday was an
unveiling of the true market situation.
He also expressed concern that the rate may be forced back
to the controlled region, if it continues to trend in the direction of
depreciation, which may hit N400/USD. The development may be connected to the
speculation that the latest spike in interbank rate was triggered by the
purchase of USD60 million last week at N390/USD by a major bank, which in turn
sold the foreign currency at parallel market rate of over N450/USD.
Though other banks have been involved in various unwholesome
trades in foreign currencies at rates close to parallel market, the said transaction
last week appeared too glaring, according to dealers.
However, no bank has been sanctioned by CBN for such
transactions so far, a development which may have piled more pressure on the
Naira, while encouraging more underground dealings.
Source:Vanguard
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