As CBN Pumps Another $221m, Analysts Expect USD’s Slide to N400
As part of efforts to sustain its defense of the naira, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Thursday
sold $221,371,218.04 to banks in its second special wholesale
intervention forwards since the new foreign exchange (FX) policy actions
were announced a week ago.
A
breakdown of the amount sold by the CBN showed that it auctioned
$162,850,000 to 10 banks in a transaction with 30 days tenor, while six
banks participated in a separate auction with 60 days tenor in which
$58,521,217.04 was sold.
Owing to the new measures introduced by the central bank last week, the naira which had fallen to as low as N525/$ penultimate Friday, strengthened remarkably by N75 in just five days, to close at N450/$ last Friday.
With
improved FX liquidity, some market analysts were cautiously optimistic
yesterday that the naira could climb to N400-N425 to a dollar in the
coming days.
Should this happen, the CBN would meet its objective of closing the gap between the interbank and parallel market rates.
The
acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, CBN, Mr. Isaac
Okorafor, said the CBN’s intermediation in the FX market through the
wholesale interventions was aimed at easing the pressure on Nigerians
who need to meet obligations that fall under visible and invisible
transactions.
While
expressing optimism that the wholesale intervention of the CBN would
substantially ease pressure on the FX market, Okorafor said the CBN
would continue to with the interventions based on qualified bids from
banks on the requests of their customers.
He
reiterated that the Bank was more than ready to support the interbank
market by ensuring liquidity and transparency to guarantee efficiency in
the FX market.
Renaissance
Capital (Rencap) Limited, in a note at the weekend, also confirmed that
rising oil prices and a deal with the Niger Delta militants had
addressed both the oil price and volume challenges that hurt the country
so much in mid-2016.
“FX
reserves have risen over 20 per cent to $29 billion,” which Rencap said
gave the CBN the comfort to announce changes to its FX policy and
injected more dollars into the local market.
It
added: “We think N450-500/$ would attract investors even without $20
billion of cheap International Monetary Fund (IMF)-led financing.
“One
of our Real Effective Exchange Rate (REER) models – the 22-year model
which corresponds to a period when oil averaged $55/bl – implies fair
value for the naira at N370/$, which via inflation should become N400/$
by end-2017.
“At
the parallel rate of NGN500/$, Nigeria has the cheapest currency in
Africa, and even at NGN450/$ it would still rival Egypt at EGP15.8/$
(the third cheapest in Africa).
“Given
this, a full float of the currency would likely attract billions of
dollars to Nigeria, similar to how Egypt has attracted $9 billion since
its float in November.
“The
vast majority of Nigerian and foreign potential investors ignored
Nigeria in 2016 due to exchange rate difficulties, but rising oil prices
and production (double the 0.9mbpd 2016 lows) suggest some
opportunities may emerge in 2017.
“A
best-case scenario is very unlikely, but some frontier investors may
well be able to find value in the country at an oil price of $55/bl and
an exchange rate of N450-500/$.”
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