CBN Defended Naira With $17.58bn In Six Months
Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Godwin Emefiele
In a bid to save the naira from further
depreciation, the Central Bank of Nigeria depleted the nation’s external
reserves by $17.58bn in the first half of this year as it battled to
maintain a stable exchange rate, investigation by our correspondent has
shown.
Calculations made from the figures
obtained from the CBN website on Wednesday revealed that the central
bank sold a cumulative sum of $17.58bn to 50 currency dealers at the
Retail Dutch Auction System between January and June this year.
According to the calculations, the
central bank sold the highest amount of dollar in the month of March,
offering $3.58bn; while it sold $2.58bn in May, the least for the period
under review.
The bank also sold $3.1bn in the month of
February, making it the second highest amount in the period; while it
sold $2.98bn in the month of January.
The statistics showed that $2.62bn was sold in April, while $2.75bn was sold in June.
In summary, the CBN sold $9.628bn during
the first quarter of the year and also sold the sum of $7.952bn in the
second quarter at the Foreign Exchange Dutch Auctions.
The $17.58bn sold in the first half of
the year is about 65 per cent higher than the $10.68bn sold in the
similar period of last year.
The amount the central bank sold at the
Wholesale Dutch Auction System in the first six months were January,
$833m; February, $1.2bn; March, $1.9bn; April, $2.15bn; May, $2.0bn; and
June, $2.65bn.
Financial and economic analysts said the
65 per cent increase in demand for foreign exchange during the first
half of the year was too enormous; pointing out that the unfortunate
situation was responsible for the huge depletion of the nation’s foreign
reserves.
The Head, Research and Intelligence, BGL
Plc, Mr. Femi Ademola, enumerated a number of reasons for the increased
demand for foreign exchange during the six-month period.
These, he explained, included the gradual
flow of funds from Nigeria to the United States by portfolio investors
owing to the quantitative easing in the US; the gradual dollarisation of
the economy by politicians as elections approach, which had fuelled an
increased the demand for the greenback; and fiscal leakages that had
made investing in Nigeria more risky for foreign investors, who were now
moving their funds overseas.
Others are increasing activities of Boko
Haram insurgents in the North-East that have also increased portfolio
outflows; and the stringent provisions of the Petroleum Industry Bill
that has made International Oil Companies to start divesting from
Nigeria, thereby making more forex to leave the country.
“The leadership crisis at the CBN during
the earlier part of the year made some investors to take their funds
overseas. This contributed to the demand for dollars during the first
part of the year,” Ademola added.
The Head, Research and Investment,
Sterling Capital, Mr. Sewa Wusu, while noting that the increase in
demand for foreign exchange at the RDAS during the first half of the
year had led to the depletion of the reserves, however, said there were
legitimate and illegitimate demands during the period.
He said, “The legitimate demands are from
genuine end-users who do so for the purpose of paying for importing
goods or paying for certain services overseas. This is because Nigeria
is an import-dependent economy.
“However, the illegitimate demands come
from the activities of politicians who may require it for the purpose of
funding election campaigns. This is among the reasons why the CBN is
trying to restructure the Bureau de Change segment of the forex market
in order to ascertain legitimate demands. The demand from that segment
of the market is increasing.”
Wusu equally observed that the activities
of speculators, who demanded for dollars for fear that the CBN wanted
to devalue the naira during the first half of the year, might have
caused the increase in demand.
He also hinted that money laundering activities that usually accompanied elections might have also contributed to the demand.
Wusu said the new CBN Governor, Mr.
Godwin Emefiele, who had committed himself to the defence of the
exchange rate, had started addressing the issues, especially with the
recent reforms in the BDC segment of the market.
In a bid to save the naira from
further devaluation last year, the CBN defended the currency with
approximately $26.6bn from the external reserves.
Source:punchng.com
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